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Morally Wrong, and Legally Actionable
Crystal George 1/26/26 Crystal George 1/26/26

Morally Wrong, and Legally Actionable

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Justice Without Villains
Crystal George 1/25/26 Crystal George 1/25/26

Justice Without Villains

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What “Consenting to a Magistrate Judge” Actually Means
Crystal George 1/14/26 Crystal George 1/14/26

What “Consenting to a Magistrate Judge” Actually Means

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A Court Document First-Read Ritual: How to Read Court Papers Without Panicking
Crystal George 1/11/26 Crystal George 1/11/26

A Court Document First-Read Ritual: How to Read Court Papers Without Panicking

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Thinking With AI While Representing Yourself
Crystal George 1/10/26 Crystal George 1/10/26

Thinking With AI While Representing Yourself

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What Judicial Silence Really Means — and Why It Isn’t Neutral
Crystal George 1/6/26 Crystal George 1/6/26

What Judicial Silence Really Means — and Why It Isn’t Neutral

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Eviction Court Isn’t Neutral — Here’s How to Stay Oriented
Crystal George 1/6/26 Crystal George 1/6/26

Eviction Court Isn’t Neutral — Here’s How to Stay Oriented

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Court Language, Explained
Crystal George 1/6/26 Crystal George 1/6/26

Court Language, Explained

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Fairness Under the Law — and What It Feels Like to Enter Without a Lawyer
Crystal George 1/6/26 Crystal George 1/6/26

Fairness Under the Law — and What It Feels Like to Enter Without a Lawyer

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When a Lease Feels Like the Final Word
Crystal George 1/4/26 Crystal George 1/4/26

When a Lease Feels Like the Final Word

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When Judges Get It Wrong — Bias, Fallibility, and the Role of Appeal
Crystal George 1/4/26 Crystal George 1/4/26

When Judges Get It Wrong — Bias, Fallibility, and the Role of Appeal

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Accountability: Lawsuits, Settlements, and Staying Whole
Crystal George 1/4/26 Crystal George 1/4/26

Accountability: Lawsuits, Settlements, and Staying Whole

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Crystal M. George holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from Mississippi State University, where she studied governmental systems, law, and public institutions. She also spent four years as an Income Maintenance Caseworker with the Buncombe County Department of Health and Human Services in Asheville, North Carolina, and another 4 years as a health and wellness coach at Noom, a tech start-up. Together with her own experience navigating the civil justice system without an attorney, this work shaped a practical understanding of what self-represented individuals often need to stay engaged inside complex systems.

Collective Pro Se provides non-legal, educational, and procedural support only. We do not provide legal advice, legal opinions, or legal representation.

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