Brief History of Private Member (PMA)

Voluntary private member associates are the oldest form of self-organizing society to benefit others, easily traced to the 1800's that are referenced in modern times.

PMAs exist within the Private domain and are based on Natural Law (God's law) and are outside government interference or overreach (public domain- man made law)

What is a Private Member Association?

A private member association (PMA) is-men and women collectively asserting and standing upon their unalienable God/Creator/Universal rights and freedoms for a common cause or community.

  • Unalienable rights are the rights that can never be given up or taken away. They're:
  • Fundamental rights every man or woman has claim to being human.
  • The basis for moral interactions between men and women, and are irrevocable.

Every man and woman is born in the private with these fundamental God/Creator/Universal-given rights such as:

  • Absolute authority and control over his/her health and body, mind and spirit. 
  • Associate and assemble with other men and women of their choosing.
  • Hold his/her own beliefs and thoughts.
  • Express his/her thoughts and opinions.

Being a member of a PMHA

  • Requires a mindset change - deprogramming from always seeking permission from outside authorities.
  • Is a declaration of living in the private and not a "burden to the public" (not expecting government public protection or benefits related to the purpose of the PMA).
  • Requires member support and participation.

What is a Protected or Lawful PMHA?

  • A lawful PMHA must have paperwork in place that clearly outlines:
  • The benefits of joining the PMHA.
  • The expected behaviour of its members - rules, code of conduct identified in the PMHA Constitution.
  • What to expect if the member violates these rules or codes.
  • How the administration will hold themselves accountable to the members of the PMHA.
  • That members are voluntarily in the private capacity as a man or woman and comprehend same by autographing the member agreement.

Public

  • Government (statutes, acts, mandates)
  • Permission required (permits, licenses, certificates)
  • Controls imposed via threats, coercion, violence
  • No rights only privileges granted
  • Relinquish self-governance
  • Created by the government to "parent" the public as people need to be protected from each other
  • Based on obligation (must)

Public and Private Domains

the differences between

Private

  • Self-governance and self-responsibility
  • No permission needed
  • Naturally follow ethical and moral rules
  • All have equal rights and freedoms
  • Assume responsibility for your own actions
  • Naturally help and support each other, live according to moral and ethical actions of do no harm
  • Voluntary engagement (choice)