Post by Administrator on Feb 22, 2024 16:33:38 GMT
Well 😮😮🤯🤯🤯 petitioning.history.ac.uk/resources/
So .. around the time of my legal case that was mid 2019
When i needed to prove my right to petition immunity, for the investigation....
I had done some research and study on it myself, the right. But at that time i was lacking all the historic evidence to prove what the process actually was in its legal standing and integrity in respect of the courts system, when challenged.
It seems that a group of researchers and historians had around that time in 2009 started to get funding to compile an archive and translate many types of petitions from around the separate sources.
The least remaining of all the sources are the House of Commons ones. But many survive from Quarter sessions around the UK, House of Lords, Privy council, London authorities and Magistrates courts, Assizes and so forth.
So they have built up an archive so we can better understand the whole thing in context and history and then better confirm our rights and legal position in the current modern situation taking into account applicable laws that are in force now and all provisions for rights.
This will point you in the right direction for learning
petitioning.history.ac.uk/blog/page/3/
I am still now making talks and adding my own opinions because there are many insights therefore to be had and understand in the interpretation of the laws and the rights.
Like the Tumultuous Petitioning act 1661 and better then in a position to fully understand the 1688 Bill of Rights and various Standing orders of parliament and how that then fits into current legislation and compatibility.
So basically this data was not fully available when i had my 2019 court case, they had just started to get funding and had begun it.... And they have been working on it through the lockdown and pandemic period and after . And i have now found it..
Now that i am pursuing resolution still and we have a situation with some very big petitions to Parliament..
Both in Wales with the 20mph petition over 400,000 signed that should be having a referendum...
And then the Stop Ulez campaigns in London with the 2x 200,000 signed petitions and also the Stonehenge tunnel opposition petition.
I dont know if the Judicial Conduct investigstion office are aware of this resource now.
But at least its all now accessible!! And we will not have to go to Kew Gardens National Archives aimlessly looking... Because many of the petitions and handwriting would be very difficult to read, so its great that they have transcribed a lot of the materiel now so we can understand it and read it!!
And we will be able to then make some confident legal claims and positions on the issue around this 1688 Immunity from prosecution and hopefully agree on a working legal model that then can be confirmed by the Judicial conduct investigstion office and actioned so people can obtain resolutions on their claims that were lawfully valid.
And also any now that being pursued.
I look forward to the reading! 😮
So .. around the time of my legal case that was mid 2019
When i needed to prove my right to petition immunity, for the investigation....
I had done some research and study on it myself, the right. But at that time i was lacking all the historic evidence to prove what the process actually was in its legal standing and integrity in respect of the courts system, when challenged.
It seems that a group of researchers and historians had around that time in 2009 started to get funding to compile an archive and translate many types of petitions from around the separate sources.
The least remaining of all the sources are the House of Commons ones. But many survive from Quarter sessions around the UK, House of Lords, Privy council, London authorities and Magistrates courts, Assizes and so forth.
So they have built up an archive so we can better understand the whole thing in context and history and then better confirm our rights and legal position in the current modern situation taking into account applicable laws that are in force now and all provisions for rights.
This will point you in the right direction for learning
petitioning.history.ac.uk/blog/page/3/
I am still now making talks and adding my own opinions because there are many insights therefore to be had and understand in the interpretation of the laws and the rights.
Like the Tumultuous Petitioning act 1661 and better then in a position to fully understand the 1688 Bill of Rights and various Standing orders of parliament and how that then fits into current legislation and compatibility.
So basically this data was not fully available when i had my 2019 court case, they had just started to get funding and had begun it.... And they have been working on it through the lockdown and pandemic period and after . And i have now found it..
Now that i am pursuing resolution still and we have a situation with some very big petitions to Parliament..
Both in Wales with the 20mph petition over 400,000 signed that should be having a referendum...
And then the Stop Ulez campaigns in London with the 2x 200,000 signed petitions and also the Stonehenge tunnel opposition petition.
I dont know if the Judicial Conduct investigstion office are aware of this resource now.
But at least its all now accessible!! And we will not have to go to Kew Gardens National Archives aimlessly looking... Because many of the petitions and handwriting would be very difficult to read, so its great that they have transcribed a lot of the materiel now so we can understand it and read it!!
And we will be able to then make some confident legal claims and positions on the issue around this 1688 Immunity from prosecution and hopefully agree on a working legal model that then can be confirmed by the Judicial conduct investigstion office and actioned so people can obtain resolutions on their claims that were lawfully valid.
And also any now that being pursued.
I look forward to the reading! 😮