We all want to be heard.
We want others to hear and respond to us when we speak.
That’s what we mean when we say we want to be heard.
Crowds carrying signs in our streets want to be heard. They want to be heard by powerful people in positions of authority who will respond to their cause, take action, and make change happen.
They don’t know any other way to be heard, so they carry signs. Others send emails, create websites, post flyers, and do a host of other things seeking to be heard by powerful people in positions of authority who can make change happen.
Sometimes it works.
Most times it doesn’t.
Most people seeking change remain un-heard. They don’t make change happen. They don’t know how to command people in positions of authority to make change happen.
We all want change. We want lower taxes. We want schools to teach what we believe in. We want to be protected from false criminal charges. We want to prevent losing our children when someone lies about us. We want to keep our homes safe from foreclosure. We want the power of the law to work for us.
Most, however, don’t get all the things they want. They silently endure “lives of quiet desperation” as Thoreau wrote in his Walden.
There’s another way.
You can communicate your causes to powerful people in positions of authority who must hear you and make things happen.
You will be heard!
You will not be ignored … if you use this method properly.
You will make things happen.
Most have no idea how to use this method, so they carry signs in the street, create websites, send emails, and sometimes destroy private property in a vain attempt to be heard by powerful people in positions of authority who usually ignore them.
Jurisdictionary® converts street noise nobody acts upon into powerful, persuasive words that move mountains.
It starts with one simple document (a complaint or affirmative defense) in which you allege the facts of your cause.
Simple discovery tactics gather the evidence you need to prove the facts you alleged are true.
Simple motions command judges to sign orders that make change happen!
Court orders can require someone to do something (like pay you money for damage they cause or release you from jail) or they can prevent someone from doing things (like foreclosing on your home or taking your children away).
Power that belongs to you!
Power you didn’t know you had.
Power to open courthouse doors for the 4 out of 5 of you who can’t afford a lawyer.
Power to make things happen.
Jurisdictionary® Power!
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