August 30th, 2010 by jillbrown
Upmart On Road Tolls.
Malcolm McClure founder of Upmart invites you to share his initiatives with as many people as possible. The Upmart Road Tolls kit is the result of transforming pain and hardship into opportunity and triumph. Each initiative reflects how he responds to, and then transformed the tyranny and injustice to which you and I and countless others within our community have been subjected into freedom. Malcolm and Upmart members want a better world. We stand and act for what we believe in and Malcolm creates and works accordingly to these beliefs and his understanding of the Universal Laws, which are the laws of God.
Read the famous UPMART petitions to find out why road tolls are illegal. Become a member of UPMART and receive your Road Tolls Exemption Kit. Read the story behind the famous City Link Flyer.
Watch this video: 
Malcolm McClure wears two hats, one as the Commonwealth Co-ordinator of V.O.I.C.E. of Australia and the other as the Head Co-ordinator of UPMART.
Would love it if you left a comment:
Tags: Australia, Co Ordinator, Commonwealth, Freedom, God, Hats, Initiative, Initiatives, Injustice, Love, Malcolm Mcclure, No Tolls, No Tolls meetings, Petitions, Road Tolls, Toll Exemption Kit, Triumph, Tyranny, Universal Laws, UPMART, Youtube
Posted in Common Law, Common Law Courses, Road Tolls | 1 Comment »
May 5th, 2010 by jillbrown
Malcolm’s pioneering and original work
His work has caused him to appear in all the jurisdictions in every state, except the courts in the NT. He’s been to the High Court and the Supreme Court. He has documentation on this dating back to 1998.
Malcolm McClure is a front liner and has done hundreds of cases, hundreds of flights, thousands of hours of relentless, and sometimes thankless work. Not many who have come after him can claim they are doing volunteer work full time for human rights. In this common Law community Malcolm McClure has exposed a lot of fraudulent material that was not in the best interest of human rights and has caused many changes to the system that has been for the betterment of the community as a whole.
For a brief list of Malcolm McClure’s pioneering accomplishments
See http://www.upmart.org
1998 – Malcolm McClure’s is the first to draft a Direct Democracy Act
1999 – He is the first to issue Toll Exemption Tickets
2000 – He has the first ever community referendum up and running for the people by the people and on GST and road Tolls

Malcolm McClure’s mission has always been for people to become self empowered at law and to know how to stand up against injustices. He is for community to unite on common causes to make a real change for the betterment of the community as a whole. We ask electors to get active by standing up for their inalienable human rights, or risk losing them.
See the flyer on the Common Law Course with a difference.
Tags: Act 1999, Anonymity, Antony, Apathy, Best Interest, Betterment, Bill Of Rights, Bill Of Rights 1688, Common Law, Corporate Profit, Democracy Act, Direct Democracy, Electors, Endurance, First Draft, Foundation Documents, Fraudulent Material, Freedom Fighters, Full Time, Gandhi, Gst, Human Nature, Human Rights, Imprisonment, Inalienable Human Rights, Injustice, Injustices, Jfk, Jurisdictions, Magna Carta, Malcolm Mcclure, Martin Luther, Multinationals, Pain And Suffering, People, Positive Changes, Referendum, Road Tolls, Rosa Parkes, Stanton, Supreme Court, True Facts, Tutor, UPMART, Volunteer Work, World Politicians
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
April 21st, 2010 by jillbrown
When a driving license (DL) is taken away due to a monetary reason and it is said that a person can no longer drive on the roads.
This is a human rights violation.
When private information collected by issuers of a driving license is sold and without the knowledge or consent of a person then this is a violation of that person’s rights. For instance road TOLL companies are private companies but they are able to obtain personal details on a motorist who does not pay a road toll. They obtain this information from the State company that issues driving licenses and vehicle registration.

Road tolls discriminate against the poor.
A right of passage is a right to drive.
A right of passage is a primary human right. It’s a primary right up there with a right to breathe.
After attending a UCLC many people realize that they may be unknowingly agreeing to human right violations by each year “renewing” vehicle registration and driving license.
Once you know how to drive, you know how to drive. “Why would anyone have to go back each year to pay for something they already know how to do?” M.M.
UPMART is an association for human rights and offers Common Law VR and DL.
Motorists do not have to pay road TOLLS.
By attending an UPMART Common Law Course I became aware of a human right of passage. Rights need to be claimed. “If you do not claim your rights you will lost them” Malcolm McClure, founder of UPMART. (said at a UCLC in 2005)
Human rights are at the foundation of the UPMART initiatives. Vehicle registration is included but is not limited to a, right of passage, right of privacy, right of free choice, right of self defense, constitutional rights per s92, s116, s117, right to political protest (s51 – 35) against bad laws surrounding vehicle registration. Political protest is lawful pursuant to: s51 – 35 of Australia’s Federal Constitution, s28 of the Federal Crimes Act 1914, and common law and natural law rights to protest. Common law vehicle registration purports to be nothing other than what it says to be, i.e. vehicle registration at common law.

Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth
The Constitution
The Federal Constitution says that, if State laws are inconsistent with the Commonwealth, than they were not a law at all. Section 109 of The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth says that: When a law of a State is inconsistent with a law of the Commonwealth, the latter shall prevail, and the former shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be invalid.
Departing from the RTA
My personal experience after attending a UCLC was that I decided to depart from the Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) of NSW. I opted to have an UPMART Common Law Driving License and Vehicle Registration. Having a once of registration and driving license payment made much more sense to me.
First I had to overcome fear.
Bad laws can only be implemented by having the victims in fear. Good laws that benefit the community are followed naturally so fear is not needed to make people obey them. .
Unfortunately for the motorist “Laws are being made just to take our money and the law was not meant for that”. Malcolm McClure.
To become eligible for common law driving license and vehicle registration I first needed to become an UPMART member and sign a petition. The petition is: A Humble Petition to the Senate giving personal assent to petitions of UPMART and the Australian Proclamation of Human Rights (2002
The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (Federal Constitution) can be purchased by contacting www.upmart.org or contact me, Jill on (02)9558 6231
Tags: Annotated Constitution, Assent, Australian Commonwealth, Common Law, Constitutional Rights, Contridiction, Crimes Act, Dl, Driving A Car, Driving Licenses, Extent, Fear, Federa, Federal Constitution, Federal Crimes, Fi, Fir, Free Choice, Human Rights, Human Rights Issues, Human Rights Violation, Human Rights Violations, Humble Petition, Inconsistency, Initiatives, Issuers, License Registration, Lost, Malcolm Mcclure, Many People, Money, Motorists, Participants, Paym, Petitions, Political Protest, Privacy Right, Private Companies, Proclaimation, Reason, Right Of Passage, Right Of Privacy, Roads And Traffic, Roads And Traffic Authority, Rta, S116, Section 109, Section 109 Of The Constitution, Self Defense, Senate, State Laws, UPMART, Vehicle Registration, Violation Of Human Rights, Vr
Posted in Common Law Courses | 3 Comments »
April 4th, 2010 by jillbrown
Next UCLC to be held in Sydney will most likely be held in May. If we have the numbers. A Common Law Course is held over a weekend. It runs all day Saturday and Sunday. Contact Jill, (02) 9558 6231

uclc
In the Upmart Common Law Courses among many other things we learn about:
Human Rights violations. One violation that is very important is to take away people’s driving license’s
Something to think about if you are ever in a position of losing your driving license.
What can you do if you think you are about to lose your driving license?
Loss of license could cause you to also lose your job. Many people are drivers for a living. On our roads we have:
* taxi drivers * truck drivers * bus drivers * couriers
* service vehicle drivers
Many types of professional drivers are on our roads and it could be devastating for them if they lost their license.
You may need your license to drive children to school, do the shopping, go on holidays. Losing your driving license is a common occurrence, it’s happening.
Some people are bad drivers and deserve to lose their license but does that fit the majority? In some jurisdictions drivers may lose their license for simply not paying a parking fine. Is this a justified consequence.
Is this subject something for consideration or is it just cut and dried?
If we were to go and sit in the local court we will notice that many people are in court due to minor traffic infringements
Questions to ask:
* Should we have to go back each year to pay for something we already know how to do.
* Is taking a driving license away a human rights violation
* Is suspending a license justified when no crime has been committed.
* Should we pay traffic fines when we know they are unjust
* Is the points system fair
“We are the Author and the cause of many changes to the law. We are the inspiration for the freedom movement within Australia”
…..Malcolm McClure
Winners at Law are about UPMART Common Law Courses
Tags: Bad Drivers, Bus Drivers, Caption, Common Law, Common Law Course, Consequence, Couriers, Human Rights, Human Rights Violation, Human Rights Violations, Inspi, Jurisdictions, Local Court, Minor Traffic, Occurrence, Professional Drivers, Saturday And Sunday, Taxi Drivers, Traffic Fines, Traffic Infringements, Truck Drivers, Vehicle Drivers
Posted in Common Law Courses, NSW | 12 Comments »