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)
🧐 Research Wanted 🤔
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https://youtu.be/QprXXvsNGIY?si=h2kB6DIszywRf6fD
This guy explains from his research:
There are two separate entities. The District of Columbia and the United States. They are not the same thing.
Both are fictional entities and neither is the "Republic". The District of Columbia is the entity that was altered and turned into a municipal corporation for the purpose of contracting.
The video explains that the corporation is an instrument created by a Trust. That is the United States Trust.
Everything is a Trust at its core. The corporations that we see are only the instruments that they use to do business.
The elites have got it all figured out right down to the last period at the end of the sentence so they don't have to pay taxes and contribute like the rest of us. I bet they get out of paying sales taxes somehow, that is how locked up they got it. They hide their money behind trusts ect. Maybe we should all do the same. Set up a trust or two, then set up a corporation or two and shield us from any and all government intrusion. If we do that we'd might end up wealthy and able to afford lawyers to keep the government busy for decades. That is exactly what the Overclass elites do.
If you have a good enough lawyer (meaning $$$), and have enough money yourself, you can easily get out of paying taxes.
President Trump does it, and brags about it. I don't blame him at all for it, either.
But why is it ok for him to do it, and not the other "elites" who have the money to pay for good lawyers to do the same thing?
Seems a bit hypocritical to me to cheer Trump doing it, but demonize others for the same thing.
That's actually the right way, but it's not easy. Trusts are extremely complicated. And private trusts are even more insane. Even if you get a real Trust from a licensed attorney, that's still a statutory trust, so not immune from government.
What is the difference between a trust and a private trust. Never heard of a private trust because I thought all trusts were private.
I'm not an expert but the book that is considered the textbook manual is called The Art of Passing The Buck. It lays out it great detail how trusts have evolved over time and how to set up a private family trust that can last for generations. You don't need a lawyer, you just need to know how to do it.
When you have a lawyer do it, that is how the state gets involved. Because the state sets the rules for how licensed attorneys must set up the trusts in a certain way in case the trustees can't be found or some other issue arises that needs to be handled and there are no trustees available.
Basically, a private trust is a legal entity that is not registered or administered by any government entity. It can own property, open bank accounts, create corporations and LLCs that do business with government, but the trust itself remains private. You might register certificates with state entities to let them know that it exists and what property belongs to it, but the actual original document with full details would be kept in a binder in a safe, next to your gold bars and such.