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446.55 MiB | 0 | 1 | 0 |
1. Adventures In Legal Land: law court legal win - by Mark Stevens
ImageIf you’ve ever felt there was something wrong with the world but you just couldn’t put your finger on it, then this is the book for you. Perhaps the most controversial, informative and entertaining book to see print in years, you need to read Marc Stevens' Adventures In Legal Land.
This unique book, while unreserved and outrageous, is also very amusing. Full of controversy, it will not only enlighten, but may jar you awake forever changing the way you look at the world, especially "law" and politics. Adventures has been called "Better than a law school education in 250 pages."
2. Take The Law Into Your Own Hands: The Grand Jury - Jonathan Burgess
This is Jonathan Burgess' revealing booklet Take The Law Into Your Own Hands - The Grand Jury in America which deals with the grand jury as an instrument against corruption in America. It contains the Federal grand jury handbook and the State grand jury handbook for Multnomah county. The author was told by the Federal court house in Portland, Oregon that he had to get written permission from the chief judge to even view a copy of the current grand jury handbook! As a result, he has published them after finally acquiring copies. Find out how the grand jury fell into disuse as judges, prosecutors and politicians systematically usurped power from the people. It is now time to take the law back into your own hands. 60 pages. A must read for everyone.
3. How To Live Safely In A Dangerous World
The most complete practical guide on self protection ever written!"
Review page here: http://www.lwcbooks.com/books/howtoliv.htm
It is a very useful book to read through, and it has many valuable tips and words of advice in it.
4. How To Master Secret Work
First published during the 'eighties as a series of articles in the SACP publication 'Umsebenzi'; later as a single pamphlet for underground operatives.
The title really says it all. It shows how to set up a secret network, communication, how to avoid failure, and more.
5. Invisible Resistance To Tyranny
Aww, I wish I had this book to release on the fourth...oh well .
Amazon.com Review: "What is invisible resistance to tyranny? It is an underground movement of secret freedom fighters, each acting individually and independently to ignore, evade, resist and thwart the increasingly heavy hand of government power. Invisible resisters do not join protest groups, stand on street corners making speeches or run with a mob throwing rocks at police vehicles. Rather, they make up a collective silent insurgency that tyrants won't be able to put down because they won't be able to find it. Government enforcers will fruitlessly look for organizations with no members, commanders who aren't there, secret headquarters that don't exist and couriers that carry no messages. Invisible Resistance to Tyranny is both a manifesto and manual for everyday citizens who are alarmed by the never-ending encroachment upon the individual freedoms recognized by the Bill of Rights and who want to do something about it now before it comes down to a choice between violent revolution and total submission. It outlines a progressive program of resistance that anyone can undertake without having to protest in the streets, go on hunger strikes or take up arms. It tells how to: ? be a "bad" citizen while still being a good neighbor. ? identify and nurture sympathizers and build a network of invisible resisters. ? confront and convert "government supremacists" to your side. ? disrespect politicians and bureaucrats without drawing attention to yourself. ? actively resist within today's system through such avenues as taxes, guns, juries and schools. It then provides ideas for the many paths of invisible resistance to tyranny - intelligence collection and dissemination, propaganda, support for active operations and, if it should ever come down to it, direct operations against a totalitarian regime." 144 pages, and a must read for the true American, who stands behind the true principles of this country.
6. Methods of Long Term Underground Storage
I'll say it a thousand times, but the title is basically what the book is about . Contents include what containers to use, chemicals used to help store items, and the location for a proper burial site. This is another invaluable book which I recommend for anyone to download and print it!
7. New Identity; Secrets For Getting A New Identity
GET A NEW IDENTITY THROUGH THE MAIL! Finally, an up to date, "how to" manual showing the reader an easy, straightfoward , step by step method for obtaining a complete new identity. This book is not the typical new identity book that merely explains the American identity system or rehashes obsolete information. The book shows the reader a system that is 100% effective using proven, reliable techniques. It shows the reader how to obtain a new birth certificate in any state, a new social security number and new drivers license. This manual also contains over 20 identity document samples, such as ID cards and birth certificates. If you are tired of your past holding you back need a new start this book should be your first step.
8. Sneak It Through- Smuggling Made Easier
This book explains what items you could hypothetically use (the smart ones got the joke) to hide items in, and how to avoid detection. It just goes in depth showing all of the places to hide stuff, to say it shortly. Enjoy.
9. Survive Martial Law - Important eBook for 2008
A very serious and terribly scary thing is happening right now, and it’s not even a secret, as it’s available to all who are awake enough to search it out. Even if you don't believe it now, hopefully you will after reading this piece. I am going to show you a way to survive the implementing of vicious Martial Law coming in 2008.
10. George Hayduke Prank Book Collection
These are the only two books I could find, so be thankful!
For those who do not know what this is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Hayduke
He is the author of various prank and revenge books, 2 of which are included in here:
-Getting Even
-Make 'Em Pay
11. History of Law - 19 assorted vols
An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law
by Roscoe Pound
series of lectures given in the William L. Storrs lecture series in 1921 at the Yale University Law School.
Ancient Law, Its Connection with the Early History of Society and its Relation to Modern Ideas
by Sir Henry Sumner Maine
A classic work on the history of law by one of the great English jurists of the 19th century. Another great English jurist, Sir Frederick Pollock wrote an introduction and extensive notes.
Babylonian and Assyrian Laws, Contracts and Letters
by Hammurabi
The book contains the code of Hammurabi, the prologue and epilogue, letters by Hammurabi and other political leaders, as well as a detailed discussion of the historical and legal background static/of Babylonian and Assyrian laws.
Dissertations on Early Law and Custom
by Sir Henry Sumner Maine
Volume consisting of Maine’s lectures at the University of Oxford. This volume is drawn from a number of his courses and deals with a range of topics as religion and the law, the Salic law, feudal property and the classification of property.
Institutes of Roman Law - 160 A.D.
by Gaius
An edition with Latin, English translations, and extensive editorial commentary. The Institutes of Roman Law is Gaius’ best known work which became the authoritative legal text during the late Roman Empire. It was the first systematic collection and analysis of Roman law which dealt with all aspects of Roman law: the legal status of persons (slaves, free persons, and citizens), property rights, contracts, and various legal actions.
Law in a Free State
by Wordsworth Donisthorpe
A collection of essays by a radical individualist political thinker on a range of topics which he called "the hardest nuts to crack", in other words, topics which pushed the theory of individual liberty to its limits. He discusses questions of libel, of cruelty to animals, of copyright, of adulteration, of the relation of the sexes, of rights over land, and of nuisance.
Lectures on the Early History of Institutions
by Sir Henry Sumner Maine
The sequel to his more famous book on *Ancient Law” in which Maine examines kinship, tribal society, early legal remedies and sovereignty.
Magna Carta: A Commentary on the Great Charter of King John, with an Historical Introduction
by William Sharp McKechnie
This is a detailed and meticulous edition of Magna Carta with each clause in the original Latin, followed by an English translation and heavily annotated by the editor.
Magna Carta Commemoration Essays
edited by Henry Elliot Malden
A collection of essays about the history and continuing significance of Magna Carta.
Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History vol. 1
Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History vol. 2
Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History vol. 3
by various authors, compiled and edited by a committee of the Association of American Law Schools, in three volumes
A massive three volume collection of essays by leading American and English legal experts which surveys the entire body of Anglo-American law.
Volume 1 is a general survey.
Volume 2 covers particular topics such as the sources of English law, the court system, procedure and equity
Volume 3 covers particular topics such as commercial law, torts, property, wills and marriage.
Studies in History and Jurisprudence, vol. 1
Studies in History and Jurisprudence, vol. 2
by Viscount James Bryce
Two volume collection of Bryce’s essays and articles on the Roman and British Empires, constitutional history and theory, obedience, sovereignty, the law of nature , and legal history.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of Citizens: A Contribution to Modern Constitutional History
by Georg Jellinek
An analysis of the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen showing the impact which American practice and theory had on French thinking about constitutional law.
The Genius of the Common Law
by Frederick Pollock
The Carpentier Lectures delivered at Columbia University in 1911. They are an introduction to the history and ideas behind the English Common Law.
The Ideal Element of Law
by Roscoe Pound
Roscoe Pound, former dean of Harvard Law School, delivered a series of lectures at the University of Calcutta in 1948. In these lectures, he criticized virtually every modern mode of interpreting the law because he believed the administration of justice had lost its grounding and recourse to enduring ideals. Now published in the U.S. for the first time, Pound’s lectures are collected in Liberty Fund’s The Ideal Element in Law, Pound’s most important contribution to the relationship between law and liberty. The Ideal Element in Law was a radical book for its time and is just as meaningful today as when Pound’s lectures were first delivered. Pound’s view of the welfare state as a means of expanding government power over the individual speaks to the front-page issues of the new millennium as clearly as it did to America in the mid-twentieth century. Pound argues that the theme of justice grounded in enduring ideals is critical for America. He views American courts as relying on sociological theories, political ends, or other objectives, and in so doing, divorcing the practice of law from the rule of law and the rule of law from the enduring ideal of law itself.
The Roots of Liberty: Magna Carta, Ancient Constitution, and the Anglo-American Tradition of Rule of Law,
edited by Ellis Sandoz
This is a critical collection of essays on the origin and nature of the idea of liberty. The authors explore the development of English ideas of liberty and the relationship those ideas hold to modern conceptions of rule of law. The essays address early medieval developments, encompassing such seminal issues as the common-law mind of the sixteenth century under the Tudor monarchs, the struggle for power and authority between the Stuart kings and Parliament in the seventeenth century, and the role of the ancient constitution in the momentous legal and constitutional debate that occurred between the Glorious Revolution and the American Declaration of Independence.
The Story of Law
by John Maxcy Zane
Written for the layman as well as the attorney, The Story of Law is the only complete outline history of the law ever published. Zane lucidly describes the growth and improvement of the law over thousands of years, and he points out that an increasing awareness of the individual as a person who is responsible for decision and action gradually transformed the law.
12. Jail Design Guide
Read the title . Topics include planning, construction, security, staffing, housing, and MUCH more. 402 pages, with lots of illustrations. And for the record, this is a professional legit book on building prisons.