More importantly, you can't cherry pick sentences out of a legal decision. Miranda v Arizona, for example is something like 30 or 40 pages long, as I recall. Without looking at the text of the ruling you cannot know what is being said. Additionally, many of the quotes above are unsourced; that makes hard to evaluate what they may actually be saying. (Consider, you could cherry pick the last line of my post above about ownership rights in your license to support that you have a right to a license -- which is not the message of the post.)
The bottom line is that NO court of the United States has held that you have a right to drive upon the highways without complying with the rules, regulations, and laws that are appropriately established by that state to obtain the privilege to do so. That's it. You don't believe it, tell you what. We can make arrangements for you to drive, without being issued a driver's license, and meet up with an officer who will happily cite you for the offense. As long it's within his authority to do so -- you'll be released then and there, but will have to come to court. Where you can try your quotes on a judge. Once you're convicted, you can appeal -- and try them on a new judge. You may then attempt to appeal your conviction all the way to the US Supreme Court, assuming that each appellate court grants certiorari all the way up the chain. (I rather doubt that your appeals will go beyond the first court of record... It's a rather well settled issue.)
The bottom line is that NO court of the United States has held that you have a right to drive upon the highways without complying with the rules, regulations, and laws that are appropriately established by that state to obtain the privilege to do so. That's it. You don't believe it, tell you what. We can make arrangements for you to drive, without being issued a driver's license, and meet up with an officer who will happily cite you for the offense. As long it's within his authority to do so -- you'll be released then and there, but will have to come to court. Where you can try your quotes on a judge. Once you're convicted, you can appeal -- and try them on a new judge. You may then attempt to appeal your conviction all the way to the US Supreme Court, assuming that each appellate court grants certiorari all the way up the chain. (I rather doubt that your appeals will go beyond the first court of record... It's a rather well settled issue.)