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 🤔
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (84)
sorted by:
"sovereign citizen" is bullshit but that doesn't mean there isn't any truth to it. I hate that term because it's an oxymoron. You can't be both sovereign AND a citizen. They are mutually exclusive.
But the state national is real. I have done it and had success so I can say it does work.
Are you able to give more details without doxing yourself? Did you refuse to pay federal taxes?
Taxes are complicated but I did look into how to do that. Essentially it all boils down to contracts. Not legal advice
As a sovereign individual being / soul, we all have free will to act or not act.
The law cannot violate one's free will by imposing obligations without consent.
Everyone "consents" to paying taxes when they fill out a W-2 and file paperwork with the IRS.
Income tax is actually payroll tax and is technically the responsibility of the employer to pay, but common practice is to split the difference 50/50 with the employee.
You can request your employer not withhold taxes from your paycheck. The only reason they do that is to "make it easier" to file each year, but there is nothing illegal about taking your whole paycheck and promising to "pay what you owe" later.
If one does not file paperwork or interact with the IRS at all, there is no contract with them. The contract is between the IRS and the employer.
So, the thing about not paying taxes is they will get you if you try to file dodgy paperwork or say you made less then you really did, because then you are contracting with them and being dishonest. On the other hand, if you simply never file paperwork, and don't acknowledge that they have any authority over your financial matters, there is nothing they can do.
Again, not legal advice but I've been doing things this way for years and nothing has happened.
But, this is also kinda separate from the state national deal.
What I did was submit a passport application with an explanatory statement citing SCOTUS rulings on the 14th Amendment, definitions of "citizen", use of SSN, the US Postal Manual, where it defines each state as a separate nation unto itself, and my birth certificate which is from a state. They accepted it and I got my passport a few weeks later.
Since then I use that as my ID everywhere. I've been pulled over with no license, show passport, cop flips out, writes ticket, go to court, dismissed.
No, you don't argue with cops on the side of the road, they are trained to treat you like a terrorist if you start pulling "SovCit" crap. Just understand they don't have power unless you give it to them.
Thanks for the clear writeup, it made for an interesting read.
Ticket for not having a license dismissed, as well as the infraction?
And how do you feel about benefitting from federally subsidized programs, defense budget for example, while not contributing to them?
LOL. That's a guilt trip fallacy pushed by the left to justify stealing from poor innocent people.
First of all, I did contribute 4 years of my life to that under false pretenses and now get treated like a criminal for exercising the rights we were supposedly protecting.
Second of all, all fiat currency is printed out of thin air. It costs nothing to produce a new dollar and put it in circulation. So why do we pay taxes at all? Why do they need to steal dollars from us when they have an unlimited printing press? The only reason I can think of is to keep people from getting too wealthy, because when people have plenty of money and start getting leisure time to study new subjects, they tend to figure out they are getting screwed.
Regarding the ticket and stuff, it always depends how you play it. I messed up the first few times it happened and got my license suspended, then pulled over again and again for "driving after suspension". Never got a real chance to go to court over it because cases were backlogged due to covid.
But earlier this year I was pulled over, it was 2am, no traffic, going downhill and supposedly went over the speed limit of 35. Cop asks for my license, I hand her my passport, she asks why I don't have a license. I just say I don't participate in that system. She says to hold on. Makes me wait 20 mins. Comes back with a ticket for no license. I sign with a scribble and "V.C." above my mark. She let's me go.
Weeks go by. I never get anything in the mail, I go to court on the date written on the ticket with documents prepared and the clerk can't find my case, says it was never filed. That was months ago. Haven't heard a peep.
Can I say definitively that its all because of my passport and what I wrote on the ticket? No, but it's an interesting coincidence.