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Owned by Zamari'El Anu-Ra Bey

Tamaquah Nation School of Law

9 members • $33/month

A private school for studying law, jurisdiction, and record-based remedies. Education only. No legal advice.

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5 contributions to Tamaquah Nation School of Law
CONSENT IS BEHAVIOR, NOT WORDS
Consent is rarely spoken. It’s shown through procedure. You consent when you: • answer instead of question • comply instead of condition • explain instead of require authority Daily Use: Before responding to any notice, ask: “What authority is being exercised— and where is it documented?” If authority isn’t shown, silence + record is often stronger than response.
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Welcome. Read This First.
Welcome to Tamaquah Nation School of Law. This space is structured and intentional. It exists for education—not debate, venting, or shortcuts. Before we begin lessons, let’s ground the room. 👇 Please introduce yourself in the comments: • What brought you here? • What are you hoping to better understand (law, jurisdiction, process, records, etc.)? No life stories needed. Keep it clear and concise. Start with the Orientation in the Classroom before posting questions. That sets the foundation for everything we’ll study here. Respect the process. Clarity will follow.
@Tony Reynolds Ase. I appreciate the overstanding. Discipline and procedure are the keys to unlocking that knowledge. Start with the Orientation and trust the process
@Jack Blu I’m sorry to hear about the loss of your home. Many people come to this work after experiencing real consequences not from wrongdoing, but from not being given or having access to procedural literacy. This school exists to build understanding of structure, jurisdiction, procedure, and record before action is taken, so future decisions are informed and intentional. We focus on how systems operate, what authority they rely on, and how process shapes outcomes. Start with the Orientation and move through the lessons in order. Ask questions as they arise within the material. Clarity comes through method, not rush. You’re welcome here.
JURISDICTION
As I'm going through the lesson, I'm starting to understand there's a difference between procedural awareness and procedural literacy. 💯
Exactly, Keith. That’s a key distinction. Procedural awareness is knowing the concepts exist. Procedural literacy is knowing how and when to apply them on the record. Jurisdiction turns on literacy not vibes, not beliefs. The system responds to properly executed process. You’re tracking it correctly. Keep going.
HOW PEOPLE CONSENT WITHOUT KNOWING IT
Most people think consent is verbal. In law, consent is procedural behavior. Here’s how consent is commonly given every day: • Responding without reserving rights • Answering questions you were never required to answer • Correcting facts instead of questioning authority • Signing “routine” paperwork without reading capacity language • Arguing what happened instead of who has authority Practical Use (Today): Before responding to any official email, form, call, or notice—pause and ask: “Am I being asked to provide information, or am I being asked to confirm authority?” If it’s authority—you don’t explain. You condition, qualify, or decline. Facts come after authority is established. Never before. That one shift alone saves people from waiving rights daily.
Acknowledged and overstood
I love it. Just finished the first class. So basically, Courts enforce order, role, authorization, and timing — not stories. Courts classify first, authorize second, enforce role third, and only then evaluate arguments. Nothing but jewels dropped. Gratitude my brother.
Exactly. You caught the core of it. Courts respond to order, role, authorization, and timing, not narratives. As you keep going, pay attention to where those elements show up procedurally. That’s usually where things either lock in or fall apart. Curious—out of those four, which one do you see people miss most often?
@Keith Murphy Well said. That’s exactly it. Law doesn’t reward correctness; it recognizes authorization. Standing determines who the court will even hear, long before facts or fairness come into play. Most people argue merits without first establishing the right to invoke the court’s power or to challenge it. Once authorization is missed, everything downstream becomes noise.
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Zamari'El Anu-Ra Bey X
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Founder | Tamaquah Nation Publications Law-based education on status, standing, and jurisdiction

Active 6h ago
Joined Jan 7, 2026