Help Me Anons! The Organic Act of 1871 (see link) from my reading, does not contain the words "United States Corporation.' The Act is shady AF, but where can I find the authority that Congress created a "Corporation of the United States" or "the United States Corporation." Thanks
(www.youhavetheright.com)
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Having a DUNS number doesn't prove it's incorporated. I used to work for a company that did government contract work and they required everyone bidding to have a DUNS number. It was just the system they used and because of that they had a number in the system as well so that bidders could reference that number.
Have you ever applied for a DUNS number? You do not get one without being a corporate entity or other licensed place business. Fact remains, the federal government is incorporated. Many municipalities do it, why do you think its not possible for a larger government entity to do so?
28 U.S. Code § 3002 - Section 15 A
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/28/3002
There are federal corporations. Page 15 of this doc claims to list them all. But note, they aren't really corporations... they are chartered entities that are called corporations.
https://sgp.fas.org/crs/misc/RL30365.pdf
The link you posted is just a list of definitions to clarify what the code refers to when it uses certain words. It doesn't "define the US as a corporation" broadly, it just defines what the code means when it uses the term "United States". It only applies in the context of that code, which only outlines the procedures for federal debt collection. People can owe money to a federal corporation (the Tennessee Valley Authority is one example) and that code explains how the federal government connects those debts.