VI. Homo Sapien Life
6.2 Homo Sapien Newborn
Article 109 - Competence of Newborn
Competence of a newborn is defined according to both the concept of whether a newborn is fit, proper and qualified to produce and argue reason through knowledge and skill of Law, Logic and Rhetoric against opposing arguments and secondly whether a newborn possesses sufficient authority and qualification of standing within the limits of statutes of proper Law.
As the necessary tools of cognition required for mental competence develop after the age of seven (7) and do not mature until the end of youthhood from age nineteen (19) and above, a newborn is absolutely incapable of legitimately being considered mentally competent.
A newborn not yet reached the age of Majority is absolutely forbidden to be nominated, appointed or recognized as a Sovereign, Executor, Trustee or Administrator given their mental incompetency. Therefore, a newborn can never be considered legally competent.
Given all newborns are legally and mentally incompetent, it is absolutely forbidden to claim a newborn as party to any form of unilateral, bilateral or trilateral consensus including but not limited to any claimed contract, agreement, pact, pledge, promise, deed, indenture, covenant, treaty or any other legally binding instrument.
All existing bilateral or trilateral consensus where it is claimed a newborn is party is hereby null and void ab initio, having no force nor effect of law. Furthermore, all laws, statutes, regulations, decrees, bylaws and ordinances founded on the false and fraudulent premise that one or more newborn or unborn were party to one or more bilateral or trilateral consensus are hereby null and voice ab initio, having no validity, force or effect.


