When I think about driver's licenses and car registration, I think about the billions and even trillions of dollars that the state has stolen from the people. A driver's license is unconstitutional for an American who is simply traveling from point A to point B and not conducting commerce, meaning they are not being compensated to drive from one place to another or to move goods from one place to another. People have paid for driver's licenses and car registrations unknowingly because the state told them they had to, but that is unconstitutional. The state knowingly continues to force people to have a driver's license to drive their automobile and to register their automobile with the state, which is totally unconstitutional for someone who is simply traveling as their constitutional right. What the state has done is taken a right (to travel) and turned it into a privilege (DRIVING), and then made us pay for it—plain and simple. Even traffic tickets and other types of traffic violations are unconstitutional for someone who is merely traveling.
Now, if you are conducting commerce—like if you're driving for Amazon, delivering packages, or you drive for FedEx, UPS, or even as a mail delivery driver—that's different. They are actually conducting commerce and are bound by those laws as a driver engaged in commerce. But a free, sovereign American traveler who is simply going from point A to point B to visit family or friends, or maybe to go to the grocery store or a doctor's appointment, is not in the same jurisdiction as a person conducting commerce.
The 202-page Common Law Traffic Binder that I just finished putting together explains all this. It references court cases, discusses our rights, and addresses the jurisdictional differences, as well as many other important topics regarding our rights and the legal jurisdictions in which we are operating.
Don't get me wrong—I have full respect and appreciation for the police and the service they provide every day. However, as I mentioned before, I respect them as individuals first and police officers second. I also expect them to respect me as an individual and to honor my rights. When they choose to violate my rights by stopping me and attempting to write me tickets for laws that do not apply to me because I am not conducting commerce, they are violating my rights, and that’s a problem. Furthermore, if they don’t have a Reasonable Articulable Suspicion (RAS) that I have committed a crime, and they do not have a Single Articulable Fact (SAF) indicating I have committed a crime, then they do not have probable cause to even stop me.