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      At one point in the movie "Raiders of the Lost Ark", Indiana Jones has just escaped from an Egyptian temple and is attempting to flee a Nazi encampment by stealing an airplane when he is spotted and ends up being forced to box with an absolutely humongous Nazi. After being punched a few times he ends up lying dazed on the ground while the Nazi towers over him, and it seems as though Indy's luck has finally run out, but fortunately the Nazi has forgotten about the spinning propeller of the plane they are fighting under. The prop ends up killing the Nazi and Indy escapes.



      If it hadn't been for that propeller, the Nazi would have been able to kill Indy. In a one-on-one fight with no weapons, the Nazi had a tremendous advantage. But because of this third element, because of this particular environment in which they were fighting, Indy was victorious. In this case Indy didn't intentionally try to guide the Nazi into the propeller, but it would have been a smart way to try to win the fight.



      I think that the law can be seen as analogous to the propeller in Indy's fight. When you walk into a bar and are attacked by an absolutely humongous MMA aficionado, the law is like an invisible propeller spinning next to you both, limiting what kinds of actions you can take without suffering severe consequences. Millions of people in the United States train in various martial arts using various conventional weapons (grappling, striking, using guns, tazers, knives, etc.), but neglect to train for the modern environment in which they will be using those skills. They're ignoring the prop.



      I see at least two main aspects of Law-Fu:


      1. Offensive - Using the law as a means of achieving your goal. [Figuring out the best way to guide someone into the propeller]


      2. Defensive - Avoiding negative consequences of the law while using the law or some other means to achieve your goal. [Figuring out how to avoid the propeller yourself while using the propeller or some other means to win the fight.]




 


      - The ACLU hands out wallet-sized folding cards that explain what your rights are when stopped by a police officer.




 


      - I spoke to a personal injury attorney who said that the trouble with Law-Fu is that most situations are very fact-specific; juries are asked to apply a "reasonable person" standard (ie ask what a reasonable person would have done) when judging behavior. Juries can also be unpredictable. He became more convinced of the idea's merit when I mentioned that the idea already existed in the form of ACLU cards explaining your rights.




 


      ATM my guess is that the best way to learn Law-Fu is to 1) have a basic understanding of how the legal systems in your country, state, and town work, 2) know the statutes in those legal systems that relate to particular situations you may encounter in the future, 3) know how courts and police officers will likely interpret (enforce) those statutes, 4) create and memorize automatic-responses for how you will respond to particular threats with your newfound legal knowledge.




 

 


 

 


 

 


 


      You can find the US Code here:


http://uscode.house.gov/

      You can find links to the statutes of all US states at the link below:


http://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.html

      As for county and town code, I'm not aware of any single database that has links to all counties and towns (maybe Westlaw / LexisNexis?). Your best bet is to look on Google.




 

 

      You can use Westlaw or LexisNexis to search for cases that have interpreted that statute.



      You can look in "Annotated Code" books, which you may find at a nearby library (ex: Michie's Annotated Code of Maryland).



      Learn about "shepherding", in which a legal database looks at cases that have overruled certain cases that interpreted a statute. I didn't quite understand what this meant.



 

 

      Harrassment




 

 

Dealing with the police

Reneging on oral agreements





Flopping
http://www.rappler.com/sports/by-sport/ ... goes-viral

       




Discouraging employees from discussing their pay

2014.07.15 - The Atlantic - When the Boss Says, 'Don't Tell Your Coworkers How Much You Get Paid'
http://m.theatlantic.com/business/archi ... id/374467/



Swatting



Fight parking tickets with Fixed (a startup)
http://techcrunch.com/2014/01/15/fight- ... fb&ncid=fb



Book - How to Sue a Telemarketer
http://www.amazon.com/How-Sue-Telemarke ... r-mr-title


2013.08.08 - Priceonomics - How Sergey Aleynikov Learned Never to Talk to the Police
http://priceonomics.com/how-sergey-aley ... lk-to-the/











      Protecting your assets from lawsuits:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust_law
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/re ... z1olRcY5Tc
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_disobedience
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westboro_Baptist_Church - the tactics these guys use could be used to harass someone legally

Books:
Law For Dummies
Law 101
Legal Research for Beginners
You and the Police!
Arrest-Proof Yourself
Games Criminals Pay

NOTACON 8: Hacking The Man: Your Guide to the Courtroom
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=tCC4m3sRu9U
Law-Fu idea: a bumper sticker that says "I FIGHT ALL TICKETS"
- you can represent yourself if you aren't a lawyer, but you can't represent someone else
- He says court clerks become much more friendly when you say you aren't a lawyer, because they associate lawyers with demanding jerks who are getting paid way more.
- He says judges hate pro se litigants because so many of them are kooky. Apparently half of the petitions they get are hand-written.
- He says don't lie, but you're allowed to ask questions that have implications.
- He says the legal system sucks for teaching people a lesson.
- He says that when you're filing a brief, you can't just write stuff based on common sense; you need to cite stuff.
- He says nobody cares about your clever idea about how the system should work. All they care about is what the rule is, and how it applies in your case.
- He says to shut up when you talk to a cop, give as little info as possible.
- He says the best line to use is "I do not consent to any search". He says there's an ACLU video about it.
- He says the second best line is "Am I free to go?" He says that if they say "No", they have to decide to arrest you.
- "Circumstances are paramount when deciding what to say; everything in law depends on the circumstances."
- When it's worth getting pro help: Ask yourself, "What's the worst that could happen"? (29:00) Any disputes under a few thousand dollars.
- He said it's really important to take stuff off the table ASAP.
- He said now every contract he writes has a liability limit that says "At the MOST, I owe you your money back."
- DON'T call the judge, it makes you seem crazy.
- DON'T use fancy language in court to try to sound impressive.
- DO have a point when you're going to dispute something that the other party has said.
- The rules are not what you think they should be, what you heard they were, or whatever. The rules are what are in the book.
- You can find the local rules on Google.
- You can't appeal any issue that you didn't raise at trial, except with something called "plain error", which is an extremely aggregious, like the judge imposed the maximum penalty b/c he was pissed off at you, and you can prove it by looking his behavior in other cases.
- If you lose the lower decision and they tell you to pay the fine, and you want to contest it, DON'T PAY THE FINE. He almost lost his case b/c he did pay it.
- He says doing legal research is almost exactly like doing research for a math proof.
- 38:00 - CREXAC - Conclusion, Rule, EXplanation, Application, Conclusion
- Sheppard's Citations (40:40) - this lets you check if a case you want to use was superseded
- prosecutor tried to bargain him down to a chipped windshield and accidentally said "I tried to offer him a lesser offense, he's a pretty good driver."
- Around 43 mins in he gives a GREAT description of how he'd been able to get the officer to screw over the prosecutor's case.
- 45:30 - the only reason he was able to appeal was because he was "still serving his sentence" b/c he had his points.

Prenda Law
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prenda_Law
- This company was running an extortion racket in a superficially-legal way.

Forum Discussions

HackerNews Discussion after Google Glass wearer was harassed by police
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7093369



Product Ideas

Keep it simple!

- A CD / DVD / software / iPhone app that would show you a first-person view of a particular situation and would test you to see if you could produce the correct response.
- Sell it at Wal-Mart for a few dollars near the checkout aisle or near the UFC stuff.
- Ask Dr. Lewis from Shark Tank how he got his sales so high for that wall-fixer thing he invented.
Here's his website, it doesn't have to be that fancy! - http://walldoctor.com/


Individual ideas

Cameras are the new guns

Joël Franusic ‏@jf Sep 21
The camera phone is mightier than the gun.



Get a person fired, or ruin their career / reputation


Hiring / using lawyers


Lawsuits


Vehicle-related interactions with the police


Avoid legal trouble

Examples of how legal trouble can affect how you are treated in future disputes

LA Times - Costco shopper punched in fight over samples: 'He hit me, and the blood started'

He has been charged with one count of elder abuse, as well as a special allegation that he inflicted great bodily harm on the elderly man, prosecutors said. If convicted, he faces up to 11 years in state prison.

Gharabighi has a history of criminal convictions.

In the last three years, he was convicted twice for trespassing, and earlier this year he was convicted of petty theft and drug possession for sale, according to Los Angeles Superior Court records.