Part 1: Rights: Principles for Describing Law
Law is anchored upon individual rights. Where rights come from and what they consist of. Rights are delimited only by their equality they are the same for each person and they are the sole principle and justification of law. Law does not dictate any other kind of thing or activity. Law is solely concerned with political boundaries, not personal, ethnic, social or religious preferences, tastes, or ethics.
Part 2: Liberty: Principles for Structuring Government
The individual is sovereign and by agreement to a given form of government structure sanctions that form. The appropriateness of that form to the human being depends on natural laws, not whimsical choices. Freedom signals an absence of impediment in regard to the possession and exercise of our rights. Freedom is created by reciprocal respect for the rights of one another. The agency of government is a creation of our political agreement, not a party to the contract. Representative government is preceded by an agreement to the principles and purpose of government. Individual sovereignty describes natural reality, but this is contrary to the priorities of social groups. Polity is instituted distinct from social priorities, values, beliefs, goals, on behalf of the individual. Defense of sovereignty finds form in rights, defined by their equality and reciprocity.
Part 3: Justice: Principles for Enforcing Law
Rights are inalienable and may not be sold or bartered one may not agree to slavery or other violations of one's rights. Punishment brutalizes people and no person or agency has the authority to violate the rights of human beings, to punish them, to perpetrate crimes. Penalty (for breach of a political contract) is a restriction on certain of our liberties, delimited by the contract. The point of justice is not retribution or vengeance, but to "right the wrong" insofar as possible using restitution and penalty. An enforcement agency (police and judiciary) is designed to enforce the law of individual rights regardless of individual, group or social feelings in a particular case it is rule based on the principle of the inviolability of individual rights.
Part 4: Democracy: Principles for Practicing Government
Various subjects discussed, in part anticipating and explaining the Constitution in Part Five. Some of the details of representation, voting, jury duty, taxes, and participation in the military. Voluntary associations in lieu of government for infrastructure and social goals. Education as the responsibility of the parents, not government. Government (the contract of polity) needs to be supported by the citizen in one of two ways, participation or taxation. Real property discussed and a system outlined that does not make people serfs to the land or slaves through dispossession. Monitoring business is the responsibility of the citizen/customer. A corporation is a mythical, unaccountable entity (a creation of dominance government) and cannot coexist with liberty. A free marketplace is a consequence of individual rights liberty, not something added on.
Part 5: Constitution: Application of Principles
Section One, a legal code created from the principle of the inviolability of equal, individual rights. In four parts.
Section Two, the structure of government. How the branches of government function and procedures for various aspects of government, including representation, voting, legislating, monitoring agencies, constitutional revision, territorial union and secession, taxation, immigration, citizenship, customs, patents and copyrights, property and vehicular registration, military, police, courts and judicial structure, prisons, and census.