Your Rights Are Under Attack – Legal Rights Audit and Commentary Playlist:
Your Rights Are Under Attack: These recorded audios are an ongoing series of analysis and discussion of important legal; rights you have as an American. Our police videos section will be coming soon be on the lookout here.
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Principle of Dialectical Seduction: How Rebellion Becomes Obedience
Principle of Dialectical Seduction: An idea can capture allegiance not through its truth, but through the illusion of shared struggle. When an intellectual praises populist vitality while secretly aligning with its negation, he transforms discourse into seduction — drawing minds toward rebellion only to reconcile them with authority. Thus, the appearance of dissent becomes the…
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Micro-Fame in the Age of Distributed Social Media
Micro-fame isn’t a glitch in the system—it’s the new architecture of online visibility. In a world where attention no longer flows from a few massive broadcasters but from thousands of overlapping micro-publics, visibility has become hyper-local, intensely personal, and often startlingly fragile. A creator can be virtually unknown to the wider world yet unmistakably famous…
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The Second Skin: The Revealing Raunch of Female Form-Fitting Clothing and Its Cultural Charge
In the early decades of the 21st century, a quiet revolution reshaped the public silhouette. What once belonged to boudoirs, gyms, and private fantasies moved boldly into daylight: leggings cleaving to the hips like liquid, yoga pants mapping curves with the accuracy of a CAD render, stretchy fabrics drawing the eye tracingly down the female…
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The Lawyer Sub-Aristocracy: A Sociological Look at Legal Status, Power, and Legitimacy
In a society that insists the law is neutral, the legal profession often operates like something else entirely: a status class that mediates power while claiming distance from it. This essay explores the “lawyer sub-aristocracy”—how prestige, credentials, networks, and courtroom culture create a professional layer that shapes who gets heard, who gets believed, and what…
- The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It includes expression, religion and the right to petition the government for grievances.
- The Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It includes guns and the right to bear arms, posses, sell, buy and use firearms. The discussions also include he ATF as an administrative agency, how gun purchases work, how denial of a gun purchase may change now that Chevron deference has been overturned ( the July 1, 20204 episode touches on Chevron Deference). What a self defense court trial looks like when you have to bear arms in self defense and some practical application of your other constitutional rights.
- The Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Discusses search, seizure and end runs around the law. Plus a discussion about the every day use by the cops compared to the public wanting true application of the The Fourth Amendment .
- The five Fifth Amendment rights: The right to a jury trial when you’re charged with a crime, protection against double jeopardy, protection against self-incrimination. The right to a fair trial, and protection against the taking of property by the government without compensation. Plus plus due process of law (you have to have notice of what you’ve done and a right to a hearing before a judge ).
- The five Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Includes rights include the rights to a fast and public trial by an impartial jury. Also, to be aware of the criminal charges, to confront witnesses during the trial, to have witnesses appear in the trial, and the right to legal representation.
- Section 1983, the Equal protection clause and civil suits against actors in violation of your civil rights.
- Tort (injury by others) for unreasonable, negligent, reckless, willful, intentional or evil behavior.

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