myrkul... you keep talking about contracts with one or more people. Why don't you consider the agreement with the government to follow the law a contract? Isn't that part of being a citizen of a country is about? Have you renounced your citizenship yet to void that contract?
So, wait, you're saying that all I have to do is renounce a designation that has been arbitrarily placed upon me, without my consent, based on the fact that I was born inside of a certain arbitrarily-selected region of the planet earth?
Well, holy shit. Can you guarantee that if I do renounce this designation -which I never consented to in the first place, have been able to negotiate on, or address any terms of in any meaningful way - that i won't have men with guns shooting me for no longer accepting the 'benefits' of this designation based on the location of my birth?
Oh, wait.......
Contracts need the following:
offer, acceptance, intention to create legal relations, and consideration.
Was citizenship an offer? Nope - Imposed at birth without consent.
Did I have the opportunity, or will I have the opportunity, to accept or reject this alleged "contract"? I can reject it, but then if I attempt to keep going about my life I will be locked in a cage or killed. So I must "accept" it under threat of violence i.e. under duress. (
consensus ad idem is the absolute foundation for all contracts in order to be valid, for the record)
Consideration essentially means that both parties are bringing something of value to the contract (or one party is limiting himself to the benefit of the counterparty, etc.). One could make the childish argument that some of the things that violent nation-states do are of "benefit", however the key point of the contract is that consideration must be done by both parties. I have not received consideration because I have not been able to address the terms or negotiate a counter offer. Nobody can be forced to accept a contract, only forced to act within the confines of a contract which they have already accepted.
Consideration has to be sufficient, meaning that both parties WANT what is being offered (even if that mean I sell you my house for a penny). I do not want what is being offered, and did not have any opportunity to express this.
I never intended to engage in legal relations with the counterparty to this alleged contract.
a party must have capacity to contract;
the purpose of the contract must be lawful;
the form of the contract must be legal;
the parties must intend to create a legal relationship; and
the parties must consent.
I did not have the capacity to contract at the time, or even to authorize an agent to do so on my behalf.
Under common law, most of the things that are legislated are immoral and unlawful.
"legal" just means whatever those writing the legalese want it to mean, so this can be gotten away with.
Intent must be proven - I could not have had an intent at the time, or authorized anyone to do so on my behalf
I did not consent, do not consent, and will not ever consent.
misrepresentation is a valid defense against the legal binding of a contract - the terms have been changed since I signed the contract, and added to, therefore the contract is null and void even if I did intend to enter into it once upon a time.
Incapacity - including infancy, this is a valid lawful argument, as I was incapable of engaging in any form of contract at the time
Duress - I'll let you figure that one out....
Now, all this to say, anyone who could possibly entertain the modern slavery notion of a "social contract" needs to have their head examined. Please, do the world a favor and study the history of societies that adopted such "morality". Even just read the damned body counts. They are not low. Statism is the most destructive religion in the history of the human race. Talk about believing in unicorns (that happen to kill 100 MILLION people in the 20th century)!