You're not helping. You are forgetting that *proper nouns* are capitalized in English. There are about 30 reasons a word will be capitalized in the middle of a sentence. I have Grammar books, I know. I also have taught the subject of proper nouns several times to my own children and in a Homeschool Co-op.
Also, one thing a lot of people don't know or remember is that the word "the" is capitalized in Honorable Titles and in book titles. Its not "the Messiah", its "The Messiah". Its not "the Torah", its "The Torah".
Ok, let me show you the FACTS:
Case 1: Cyberstalking (2016) DISMISSED because: Criminal statute, civilian can't file
Case 2: Recovery of Child Support (2016) DISMISSED because: Did not reach $75,000 threshold
Case 3: Constitutional violations by CPS (2017) DISMISSED because: Eleventh Amendment Immunity
*First in the Fourth District to bring this subject to the table
Case 4: Constitutional violations by VA DMAS (201

DISMISSED because: Eleventh Amendment Immunity
Case 4: Fair Housing violations by landlord (201

DISMISSED because: Rule 5.2
Case 5: Scott v Moon (Defamation) (201

DISMISSED because: "Rhetoric hyperbole"
Case 6: Scott v Moon (Tort) (201

DISMISSED because: CDA 230 Immunity
Case 7: Scott v Moon (Injunction) (2017) DISMISSED because: Prosecutor implies Victim's rights
*First in the Fourth district to invoke this law
Case 8: Scott v Carlson (Video Copyright) (201

DISMISSED because: No registration of copyright
*This case was the first in the Fourth District to bring this subject to the table
Case 9: ?
Case 10: Pending
Okay, so if you look:
--My cases in 2016, I was really "green" and new on this stuff. I made very basic errors like filing amount statutes and not filing using a criminal statute.
--My cases in 2017 and 2018 had *3* cases where there was no case law to refer to, the judge was setting new precedents. I knocked on their door and asked and got their rulings down for those particular laws.
--The others that fall under "failure to state a claim" were for DIFFERENT reasons in DIFFERENT areas of law. "Failure to state a claim" is a broad term that can mean many things. The reasons mine were dismissed were (a) a Rule 5.2 error (b) Eleventh Amendment Immunity issues and (c) "rhetoric hyperbole". Not because I didn't allege facts that I had my constitutional rights violated or proper facts in general.
That's Paul, not The Torah. Your false messiah can say whatever he wants, I don't give a damn.