If you’re truly interested in the topic, this lady does an excellent job researching. It’s also a fascinating look into old school constitutional republic type stuff:
Maybe things weren’t always this fucked up. That’s the hope that drives this. And that we don’t have to throw everything away to fix our nation, just get back to basics.
She does that and plenty more if you take the time to go through her site. If that’s too hard for you, look her up (Anna von Reitz) on YouTube. She includes scans and citations of original documents and court cases there too.
I dunno dude. It’s not like your gonna find the deed to the US, signed by the Queen of England, just sitting around. That’s kinda the point. These people have spent decades, if not centuries, covering their tracks in archaic legal proceedings and corporate transfers. There are hundreds of other sources and videos on this. I just gave you a link. If that’s not up to your standard of excellence, I guess you can head on down to the National Archives and start going through the stacks for yourself. Report back to us after 20 years of research like she did. But remember, don’t speculate and be concise, because random dudes on the internet won’t settle for anything shy of serious textual analysis.
If you’re truly interested in the topic, this lady does an excellent job researching. It’s also a fascinating look into old school constitutional republic type stuff:
http://www.annavonreitz.com/index.html
Maybe things weren’t always this fucked up. That’s the hope that drives this. And that we don’t have to throw everything away to fix our nation, just get back to basics.
She does that and plenty more if you take the time to go through her site. If that’s too hard for you, look her up (Anna von Reitz) on YouTube. She includes scans and citations of original documents and court cases there too.
I dunno dude. It’s not like your gonna find the deed to the US, signed by the Queen of England, just sitting around. That’s kinda the point. These people have spent decades, if not centuries, covering their tracks in archaic legal proceedings and corporate transfers. There are hundreds of other sources and videos on this. I just gave you a link. If that’s not up to your standard of excellence, I guess you can head on down to the National Archives and start going through the stacks for yourself. Report back to us after 20 years of research like she did. But remember, don’t speculate and be concise, because random dudes on the internet won’t settle for anything shy of serious textual analysis.