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The System Isn’t What You Think: How Consent Became Control with Phil Mederi
In this deep-dive into the realms of law and self-governance, Phil Mederi breaks down equity jurisprudence—what it is, how it functions inside the modern legal and financial system, and why the distinction between public and private matters more than most people realize.
We explore the1933 monetary shift, the transition from gold-backed money to public credit, and how contracts, consent, and legal status shape modern obligations. Phil explains equity as a remedial system based on fairness, designed to make all parties whole—rather than a loophole, hack, or form of rebellion.
This conversation is not about gaming the system, refusing responsibility, or denying obligations. It’s about understanding how remedy, discharge, inquiry, and jurisdiction actually work, and what options exist for those seeking lawful, honorable resolution.
Watch on Odysee. Listen on Progressive Radio Network and podcast platforms everywhere.
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Show notes:
·Whatequity jurisprudenceactually means (and how it differs from statutory law)
·Why equity is described as themoral compass of the legal system
·The1933 monetary shiftand its long-term consequences
·Public vs private status: what those words mean in law, not ideology
·Consent, contracts, and how obligations are formed
·Why “payment” was replaced withdischargein the modern credit system
·How equity seeks to makeall parties whole, not evade responsibility
·The role of inquiry and burden of proof
·Why equity is private by nature—and how it interacts with public systems
·The difference between remedy and resistance