01/09/2026
When Arrest Becomes Casual, Freedom Becomes Conditional
A Quick, Truth-Only Breakdown of A Treatise on Arrest and False Imprisonment
“This isn’t about beating the system. This is about remembering that liberty was never supposed to be easy to take. The moment arrest became casual freedom became conditional.”
I made the full treatise available so you can read the law for yourself.
📄 Link In comments.
That statement describes conditioning in real time. When restraint is normalized, obedience becomes automatic, not because people agree, but because they have been trained to comply.
The Definitions
Conditioning is repeated exposure to authority that trains a person’s reactions until compliance becomes instinctive, even in the absence of force.
Arrest
An arrest is the restraint of a person’s liberty by asserted authority to which the person submits because they do not believe they are free to leave.
Restraint
Restraint is any limitation placed upon a person’s freedom of movement by command, presence, or authority, regardless of physical contact.
Liberty
Liberty is the natural right of personal freedom and movement, recognized by law as one of the highest interests requiring protection.
Breach of the Peace
A breach of the peace is conduct involving violence, threatened violence, or immediate public disorder that justifies urgent intervention.
False Imprisonment
False imprisonment is the unlawful restraint of a person’s liberty without legal authority, regardless of duration or location.
Chapter 1 — Liberty Is the First Target
Power controls people by controlling movement; when liberty falls, everything else follows.
Chapter 2 — “False” Means Unlawful
Imprisonment becomes false the moment lawful authority is missing.
Chapter 3 — Seconds Still Count
Time does not legalize restraint; even a moment without authority violates liberty.
Chapter 4 — Arrest Does Not Require Touch
Submission to authority, not physical force, creates an arrest.
Chapter 5 — Restraint Is the Real Weapon
Control does not need violence; limitation alone is enough.
Chapter 6 — Breach of the Peace Has a Narrow Meaning
Disorder justifies intervention, not disobedience or silence.
Chapter 7 — Authority Is the Difference
False imprisonment is unlawful restraint; malicious prosecution is abuse of lawful process.
Chapter 8 — Damages Exist Because Liberty Has Weight
The law recognizes harm because loss of freedom leaves real human scars.
Closing Truth
“This isn’t about beating the system. This is about remembering that liberty was never supposed to be easy to take. The moment arrest became casual freedom became conditional.”
That is the full circle: conditioning leads to programming; programming produces obedience.
When restraint becomes normal, people cooperate with their own loss of freedom and call it order.