Magna Carta 1215

Restoring our common law constitution Magna Carta 1215

freedom

Awakening of the Unruled | Remembering Natural Law

A Conscious Call to Remember

From the moment we’re born, we are taught to obey.

By parents who were taught the same, and theirs before them. Obedience is passed down like an heirloom — not questioned, not examined. We are told that voting is our voice. That taxes are our duty. That “authority” is our protection. But when did you actually agree to be ruled?

When did you agree to be surveilled, licenced, fined, regulated, taxed — managed, as though you were incapable of managing yourself? Do you genuinely believe that you would choose this way of life if you were exposed to alternative models built from what you know to be true deep inside?

They tell you that voting is your power. But if none of the parties act in alignment with self-evident truth, is it really a choice — or a trap dressed up as freedom? A contract that no one can rightfully be bound to.

election

There is a higher standard — a set of moral laws that govern reality itself. Known as Natural Law, it does not bend to policy, vote, or force. It is rooted in objective truth, discoverable through conscience — and it cannot be revoked by man or government.

To be unruled is not to be lawless — it is to live in alignment with the only law that cannot be imposed: the law of conscience.” – Unknown.

The Illusion of Order

Let’s begin where the illusion begins — with the uniform.

You’ve felt it. That twinge of unease. That tightening in your chest when the sirens pass.

What if everything you were taught about law, order, and protection was upside down?

A police officer may beat, detain, or even kill under the shield of law. A person doing the same in self-defence is branded a criminal.

Let’s be honest: if a schoolboy were to drag someone by the collar, force them into a cage, or threaten them with weapons, we’d call it bullying or assault. But in a blue uniform? It’s procedure.

Truthfully, it is often the police who are the creators of violence, not the defenders of peace. We feel this instinctively — in the gut-wrenching tension of an unjust ticket, in the lingering fear of speaking too freely, in the way children flinch at those who trespass in the name of “authority.” These are not signs of freedom. They are symptoms of spiritual dissonance.

Even a child can feel it. A young schoolboy, provoked and defending himself through his intuitive connection to truth, justice, and natural morality, is punished — not because he was wrong, but because he disrupted the established order of obedience to hierarchical domination. Even his innocence is not enough to escape the rules of managed society.

Here, in Australia, we’ve been gaslit into thinking we’re too disorganised, too selfish, too divided to live in harmony without force. But it’s not true. The very existence of societies like Rojava, and the enduring legacy of Magna Carta 1215, prove otherwise. We just haven’t remembered yet.  We’ll touch on Rojava a little further on.

And without police? Without force? What would become of the “laws” we know today?

They would collapse under their own irrelevance.

police cops

Because without the badge, the weapons, and the silent threat of state force, the government’s rules would be meaningless. The police do not create peace — they ensure compliance. Their presence does not calm communities; it controls them. The harsh truth is, the root of violence isn’t found in the people — it is found in the enforcers who act on orders, not conscience.

“The enforcers wear badges, not because they serve you, but because they serve the illusion you were taught to call freedom.”

The Echo of Magna Carta 1215

There is a documented binding agreement, forged in struggle, that declared no man — not king, not premier, not party — may hold rightful authority over others. It is not a relic, nor a myth. It is a living covenant. Buried under centuries of distortion, its original heartbeat pulses still. It is called the Magna Carta of 1215.

Clause 61 remains one of its most vital truths — not a legal technicality, but a reminder of the timeless moral principle that if any person, group, or institution attempts to dominate through coercion, their claim carries no legitimacy. It is an act of criminality, not law, and can never hold the binding force of justice — only submission to violence.

magna carta 1215 clause 61

The 1215 Magna Carta wasn’t signed — it was sealed. And that seal has never been lawfully broken. Later versions were rewritten by the very people it was meant to restrain — not protectors of the people, but officeholders seeking to escape the limits of delegated power, and the personal accountability that comes with breaching the moral laws that govern reality.

Still, the original remains. It stands outside parliamentary law because it was never created by parliament. It exists under Natural Law — timeless, inherent, and unbreakable.

Rojava: Proof that Stateless Self-Governance Works

We don’t have to imagine a better system. It already exists.

In Northern Syria, the people of Rojava remembered what many of us forgot: that freedom is not gifted by governments—it is a birthright. In 2012, they chose a stateless, authentic democracy model grounded in the natural law principle of the moral autonomy of the individual. No rulers. No coercive police force. And yet — they thrive in communities where cooperation replaces coercion, and crime rates have fallen dramatically, showing that when moral autonomy is honoured, peace and justice naturally follow.

In a war-torn region once ravaged by ISIS, a stateless society has emerged — governed not by coercion, but by councils, consent, cooperation, and community self-defence. There are no standing armies, but decentralised people’s protection units made up of individuals from each community. No militarised police, but internal security units drawn from the people themselves — rotating regularly, not just to limit power, but to cultivate personal responsibility for self-governance and reduce the likelihood of complacency or abuse of delegated roles.

We want to live free, with our culture and beliefs respected… not ruled.” — Rojava community member.

Power was redistributed to local councils made up of individual community members. Justice is mediated through community-based processes rooted in accountability and compassion. Women hold equal leadership. Diverse cultures are respected. And while challenges remain, the transformation is undeniable.

Though not free from hardship — including ongoing conflict and limited resources — their model shows what becomes possible when people remember their power. They didn’t wait for permission, nor did they vote for change. They chose to live differently — and in doing so, they revealed a truth that cannot be unlearned.

If we don’t change the system, we remain the system.” — Rojava educator.

The people disarmed the illusion. They remembered.

rojava
rojava daanes

Remembering is the Revolution

The deepest act of claiming ones natural autonomy is remembrance. A moral assertion of natural rights to self-ownership. The systems we live under are only held up by manufactured ignorance, coopted as consent. Remove the police and watchdogs that enforce government “laws,” and those “laws” collapse. Because they were never rooted in truth. They were rooted in fear and deception.

You are not a subject. You are not a number. You were never meant to be ruled.

What the people of Rojava have shown — what Clause 61 still affirms — is that there is another way. Not as fantasy, but as remembering. A return.

To truth. To peace. To the living law that no man can revoke.

You Are Not Alone

Across this wide land, others have stirred too. They’ve questioned the stories, lifted the veils, and stepped away from the noise. Quietly, organically, they are living differently — not perfectly, but truthfully.

They don’t ask for your loyalty, your money, or your submission. They extend only a simple invitation: Come walk.

If your bones remember what freedom felt like… If your spirit longs for a world where peace isn’t policed, but practised… If you know, deep down, that you were never meant to live in silk chains made of rules and fines…

Then this is the sign you were waiting for.

If you’re commencing the journey of self-governance, I encourage you to explore the Frequent Q & A’s that unpack the Magna Carta not as a tool of consent, but as a historical reminder of the moral law that no man can revoke — not as a permission slip, but as a call to remember your inherent sovereignty.


Want to see what living unruled looks like in practice?

These two short videos explore real-world examples of moral autonomy and decentralised governance:

Inside Rojava: The Autonomous Region in Syria You’ve Never Heard Of — Discover how ordinary people created a society without rulers, built on cooperation, not coercion.

Rojava: An Experiment in Radical Direct Democracy — A deeper dive into the philosophy and structure of Rojava’s council-based system and the values that guide it.

These aren’t fantasies. They are remembrances in motion.

Truth doesn’t require permission. It requires practice.

If this resonates, share it with one soul still caught in the illusion — one soul who’s ready to remember.

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