Feudalism
Resident/Minister
Treatise #7 of Beers's 11-treatise corpus. Argues that the legal terms 'resident' and 'minister' both describe persons subject to or serving under a foreign superior authority, and that the modern classification of Americans as 'residents' places them in a status historically associated with servitude.
Sovereignty
Treatise #4 of Beers's 11-treatise corpus. Argues that sovereignty is a foreign feudal concept — neither present in the Declaration of Independence nor part of the natural-order political philosophy of 1776 — imported into America via the Civil War as conquest, functioning today as the mechanism of enslavement.
Sovereignty as Conquest (Beers)
Byron Beers's structural claim that 'sovereignty' is a foreign feudal concept — neither present in the Declaration of Independence nor part of the natural-order political philosophy of 1776 — that was imported into American law via the Civil War as conquest event, and that operates as the legal-conceptual mechanism by which a free people are converted into subjects. The framework has roots in real political-philosophy traditions but treats settled questions as still open and contested questions as settled. This page defines the framework as Beers uses it; the operative claims (the no-peace-treaty inference, the sovereign-absent-from-Declaration inference) are verdicted in companion findings.