It ties back to Admiralty Law. Loosely stated, a hospital is a "ship" where your birth vessel, aka Mom, "delivers" another "vessel," aka you, to be "birthed" at. Once the mother signs her acceptance for treatment away to the "ship's commander," aka the hospital's Director, it is then under the sole jurisdiction of a "sovereign" "ship" on dry land. They then issue a "record of birth" to the mother, officially stating to the various govts that a new "vessel" has been "birthed." Without this, it's almost impossible for parents to legally register the child in the Fed Govts "birth registry."
It's a lot more complicated than that, but that's the "nutshell" gist of the situation. And it all goes back to the adoption of the "corporate""CONSTITUTION" takeover started in 1881 and basically ratified by 1878.
It ties back to Admiralty Law. Loosely stated, a hospital is a "ship" where your birth vessel, aka Mom, "delivers" another "vessel," aka you, to be "birthed" at. Once the mother signs her acceptance for treatment away to the "ship's commander," aka the hospital's Director, it is then under the sole jurisdiction of a "sovereign" "ship" on dry land. They then issue a "record of birth" to the mother, officially stating to the various govts that a new "vessel" has been "birthed." Without this, it's almost impossible for parents to legally register the child in the Fed Govts "birth registry."
It's a lot more complicated than that, but that's the "nutshell" gist of the situation. And it all goes back to the adoption of the "corporate""CONSTITUTION" takeover started in 1881 and basically ratified by 1878.
Then how do people with home births do it? I was kinda with you until that point.
You register for birth certificate at home; the midwives help with that