|
Internet Guide to Beating City Hall is a collection of Internet strategies used by ordinary people (non lawyers) in successfully asserting their legal rights in battling unreasonable traffic tickets, the IRS, homeowner's associations, insurance companies, consumer issues, and more. The work:
- Identifies strategies to resolve each issue in your favor
- Breaks the strategies down into executable topics
- Identifies web sites with the information which support each strategy
- Determines what power we do have
- Illustrates by example the process to exercise this power
The U.S. system of government and business establishes fundamental rights for citizens, however, without any mechanism for enforcement. No one will stand up for your rights the way the IRS supports the government's tax collection efforts, or the courts' enforcement of traffic tickets. However, using the power of the Internet, understanding and enforcing your rights just became several orders of magnitude easier.
The evolution of government and business over time has caused them to lose sight of these rights, which erodes individual freedom. Fundamental rights have not changed. What has changed is their perception. Government and business need to be reminded to respect these rights, and the Internet is perhaps the most powerful instrument of our time to help enforce this end.
Surprisingly few people know their rights, and even fewer know how to assert them (even lawyers!). This book illustrates how to use the Internet to discover individual rights, and how to apply them to decrease the erosion of freedom, and to help government and business keep their commitment.
|