Unchained Frequency: Breaking Legal, Mental & Spiritual Chains Titelbild

Unchained Frequency: Breaking Legal, Mental & Spiritual Chains

Unchained Frequency: Breaking Legal, Mental & Spiritual Chains

Von: Malik Liberty
Jetzt kostenlos hören, ohne Abo

ZEITLICH BEGRENZTES ANGEBOT. Nur 0,99 € pro Monat für die ersten 3 Monate. 3 Monate für 0,99 €/Monat, danach 9,95 €/Monat. Bedingungen gelten. Jetzt starten.

Über diesen Titel

Unchained Frequency is a podcast dedicated to breaking the chains—legal, mental, and spiritual—that hold us back. Hosted by Malik Liberty, this show dives into the truths that courts, systems, and even unseen forces don’t want you to know.

Topics include the Right to Travel and what the Constitution says, the Right of Rescission under the UCC, without prejudice 1-308 (formerly 1-207) spiritual warfare in modern times, emotional strength, and how faith, knowledge, and resilience can shield you from oppression.

Each episode blends practical legal awareness with deep spiritual insight. You’ll hear about constitutional principles, case law, remedies, and the struggles of overcoming isolation, hardship, and health challenges.

Unchained Frequency is for the truth-seeker, the freedom-minded, and anyone striving to reclaim their God-given rights in a world full of distractions, deception, and chains.

Join Malik as he records straight from his room with nothing more than faith, a mic, and the will to expose truth.

📌 Subscribe and tune in weekly, biweekly for short, powerful episodes that equip you with the tools to defend yourself mentally, lawfully, and spiritually.

"If you benefited, share this with someone else who needs it."

https://subscribepage.io/rt6gBB

Malik Liberty 2025
Politik & Regierungen
  • Saenz v. Roe (1999): Deepening the Right to Travel Wednesday Upload
    Oct 29 2025

    Malik Liberty unpacks Saenz v. Roe (526 U.S. 489, 1999), the landmark Supreme Court decision that fortifies Americans’ freedom to move and guarantees equal treatment for new state residents. Learn how Saenz build on Shapiro, why it remains relevant in 2025, and how you can use it to confront state overreach.

    Show Notes/ Footnotes:

    Saenz v. Roe, 526 U.S. 489 (1999) - U.S. Supreme Court

    Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code section 11450.03 — California’s statute

    Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U.S. 618 (1969)

    Edward’s v. California, 314 U.S. 160 (1941)

    Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.S. 330 (1972)

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    11 Min.
  • Special Update: Saenz v. Roe Coming Soon
    Oct 28 2025

    This short update from Malik Liberty of Unchained Frequency lets listeners know that Episode 4 — “Saenz v. Roe: The Right to Travel Unchained” — is coming soon.

    Malik explains the importance of accuracy and truth when covering constitutional cases, ensuring every episode is backed by facts and solid legal precedent.

    🎧 Stay tuned for Wednesday morning’s full episode.

    Follow Unchained Frequency on RSS.com and Substack to get notified the moment it drops.

    ⚖️ Truth. Law. Liberty. — Unchained Frequency

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Min.
  • The Roots of the Right to Travel
    Oct 14 2025

    Welcome back, Free Movement Nation — this is Unchained Frequency, your show decoding lawful rights and exposing the systems that bind them.

    In Series 1, Episode 2: “Right to Travel — The True Meaning of ‘Driver’,” host Malik Liberty digs into how the Constitution and early American courts laid the foundation for your Right to Travel — long before modern licensing or highway laws even existed.

    We’ll walk through:

    1. Article IV, Section 2 — Privileges & Immunities Clause
    2. Corfield v. Coryell (1823) — defining fundamental rights
    3. Crandall v. Nevada (1867) — protecting your right to exit a state
    4. Edwards v. California (1941) — linking travel to national citizenship
    5. Bouvier’s & Black’s Law Definitions of “Driver” — exposing how words like driver, individual, motor vehicle, and person are commercial terms that shift jurisdiction from private to public.

    💡 Key takeaway:

    Words matter. When you call yourself a “driver,” you enter a commercial contract. When you travel privately, you stand in your natural, God-given liberty — not under commercial law.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    14 Min.
Noch keine Rezensionen vorhanden