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Newsgroups: misc.legal
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From: jim@irvine.com (James)
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Subject: SSNs, taxes, legal jurisdictions, and citizenship
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Organization: Irvine Compiler Corp., Irvine, California, USA
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Date: Sat, 16 Jan 1993 02:03:16 GMT
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Message-ID: <C0xCDH.n2K@irvine.com>
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Lines: 394
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I've come across claims that there is another class of citizenship in
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these United States, and that members of that class do not have to
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file taxes and hence do not have to obtain a Social Security Number
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for any reason.
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I would very much like to obtain informed opinions and citings from
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legal decisions in support for or against, as I don't yet have all the
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facts.
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To kick off the discussion, I'll offer what I've learned so far. But,
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please: I'm primarily interested in the legal aspects. Discussing the
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philosophical or social implications would be fun, but only as asides
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to the legal aspects. Also, I'm not especially interested in the
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tax consequences so much as I'm interested in the overall issue of
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individual Sovereignty and the loss thereof.
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* * *
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0. The Issue
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With respect to US citizenship and SSNs, there are two claims made:
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1) that US citizens are required to file taxes and the IRS requires
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taxpayers to obtain an SSN; and 2) that there is another class of
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citizenship whose members do not have to file taxes and are not
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subject to most federal regulations.
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The first claim is undeniably true. US citizens must definitely file
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taxes and the IRS definitely requires taxpayers to obtain SSNs.
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A summary of the argument for the second claim follows. I am trying
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to track down all supporting information---court decisions in
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particular---to determine its veracity.
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Where I've wished to add supporting evidence or personal interjections,
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I've placed references in square brackets [] to a Notes section.
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1. The Argument In Favor of Claim 2
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1.1. Classes of Citizenship
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There are two distinct and separate classes of citizenship: 1) State
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Citizenship, which has existed since before and after the Union was
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formed; and 2) US citizenship, which has existed only since the 14th
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Amendment (which actually created the class of US citizenship).
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By Common Law birthright everyone who is born in a State is a
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Sovereign Citizen of the State in which they were born.
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1.2. Common Law
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Common Law is the basis of the U.S. Constitution and the various State
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constitutions. Common Law derives from English law, and is largely
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uncodified. Common Law is approached as axiomatic, and provides that
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persons have inalienable (or "natural") rights that cannot be taken
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away by governmental entities. [1]
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1.3. The Nature of Sovereignty
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The term Sovereign has very special meaning in law. It is from Common
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Law and derives from the body of law applicable to Kings (Sovereigns).
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A Sovereign is not necessarily subject to any higher authority.
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However, if one is not a Sovereign then one is subject to some higher
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authority.
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There are three classes of Sovereigns in the United States: "We The
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People", the State Governments, and the Federal Government. Hence, a
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State Citizen is a Sovereign.
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Each Sovereign State Citizen, with respect to every other Sovereign
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State Citizen, is a Sovereign. Each State, with respect to every
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other State, is a Sovereign. The United States of America ("the US"),
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as a country, is a Sovereign with respect to every other country in
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the world.
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The Sovereign "We The People" created the States. The States are
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subject to the Sovereign We The People that created them. The
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Sovereign States created the US. The US is subject to the Sovereign
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States that created it.
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1.4. Classes of Constitutions
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Each State has two constitutions: 1) an original Common Law
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constitution with which the State, as a Sovereign Country whose form
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of government was required to be a Republic (not quite the same thing
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as a Democracy), entered into the Union; and 2) a Corporate
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constitution created sometime after the State entered into the Union
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and had incorporated.
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California, for example, has two Constitutions: the original Common
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Law constitution of 1849, and the statutory law ("Corporate")
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constitution of 1879. Both constitutions are still in effect. The
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Corporate constitution cites the original Common Law constitution and
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is a substitute for it. The term substitute has special meaning in
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law. It does not mean "to replace" or "to supersede". [2]
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The State Constitutions and the Federal Constitution are documents
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specifically creating and delineating the powers and restrictions of
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the created government. All other powers are to remain with the
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People and all powers granted to the government are from the People.
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The Constitutions give a Sovereign Citizen no rights whatsoever,
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because a Sovereign Citizen already possessed all rights possible:
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the Citizen was and is the ultimate Sovereign in this country.
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The Constitutions simply acknowledge and state the preexistence of
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these "inalienable rights" and guarantee that the government will not
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in any way infringe or take away these rights.
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Among other things, the various Constitutions state that any
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government shall not infringe on the right of individuals to enter
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into contracts.
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1.5. The Nature of the District of Columbia
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Each State in the Union is a separate Country. This is stated by US
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Supreme Court Cases and Congressional Record, most recently in 1968.
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Late in the 18th century, 13 separate countries agreed to form a Union
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and to create a 14th separate country called the District Of Columbia.
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The land for the Federal District of Columbia was taken from the
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country of Maryland. [3]
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Washington D.C. and all States are separate countries with respect to
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each other. Therefore, any entity, whether a person or a corporation,
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while residing in another country, is a foreigner (an "alien").
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The US Government (of the District of Columbia) is a foreign/alien
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corporation with respect to each State.
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1.6. Classes of Citizenship Revisited
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Sovereign State Citizenship is a Common Law birthright. That status
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was not and is not created by the State or the United States; it is
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axiomatic.
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US citizenship was created by the 14th amendment to the Constitution,
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hence US citizens are subject to the US government.
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A Sovereign State Citizen (or briefly, a State Citizen) is not subject
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to the US government in the same way that a US citizen is. A State
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Citizen has the full protections of all of the restrictions on the US
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Government that the US constitution provides.
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State Citizens are Citizens of exactly one State. The US Constitution
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guarantees that every State shall treat Citizens of every other State
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while within that State as if they were Citizens of their State.
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US citizens are citizens only of the District Of Columbia. They are
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not State Citizens of the State in which they reside. They are
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technically Franchises of the Corporation called the US Government.
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Any US citizen residing in one of the 50 states is considered to be a
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resident alien of that state, and not a Citizen of that state---and,
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as a special point in law, is "residing" in that State, as opposed to
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being "domiciled" there.
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A State Citizen is subject to common law and the original state
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constitution. The Common Law constitution can be invoked in court by
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a State Citizen. The Corporate constitution does not apply to a State
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Citizen. [4]
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The Corporate constitution of a State does apply to a resident/alien.
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All modifications to the original Common Law constitution contained
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in the Corporate constitution do apply to residents/aliens.
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1.7. The Nature of Income Taxes
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Both the US Constitution and the State Constitutions do allow for
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excise taxes.
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The 16th Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that
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Congress may impose taxes on income. [5]
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The US Supreme Court has ruled that the income tax is an excise tax
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because it is a tax on the earnings of corporate franchises (i.e. US
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citizens) and hence is an excise tax. [6]
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Because a US citizen is a Franchise of a foreign corporation with
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respect to the State, and is residing in the State, that citizen pays
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some income taxes to a special state entity. In California, that
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entity is the Franchise Tax Board and the tax is called the Resident
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Income Tax.
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State Citizens are not subject to the Resident Income Tax since they
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are not residents of the State and are not aliens with respect to the
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State. [7]
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State Citizens are not citizens of the District Of Columbia and therefore
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they are not subject to the District Of Columbia's income tax.
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1.8. The Nature of the Social Security Tax
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Social Security was first implemented in 1935, originally not as a tax
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per se. The Social Security Act of 1935 was repealed in 1938 and
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reenacted as a direct tax on all US citizens. It is a direct tax
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because the Social Security Act of 1938 states that the revenues can
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be used for "any other purposes". [8]
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The Social Security tax today is a direct tax called FICA, and the
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revenue collected from payees is directly given to recipients.
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However, the revenue is considered part of the general tax revenues
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(e.g. those collected from taxes on incomes and other sources),
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and can be spent in any way specified by Congress.
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The courts have ruled that Social Security disbursements are "gifts"
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from the government. However, the US Government is free to do with
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the monies whatever it wishes.
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Social Security taxes are not refundable.
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Since State Citizens are not US citizens they are not subject to
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social security tax. The social security tax is voluntary.
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2. Notes.
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[1] I wanted to compare Common Law and Statutory Law, but my
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understanding of the nature of Statutory Law needs improvement.
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[2] Each Sovereign State after entering into the Union eventually
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incorporated. Each State has two flags: the Sovereign State flag
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and the Corporate State flag. The Corporate constitution is the
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constitution that is full of all of the Statutory "laws" that
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apply to its residents. Anything the Corporate State creates is
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subject to it. The US Government is also a Corporation.
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The US also has two flags: the Sovereign United States flag and
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the Federal Corporate flag which, with Gold fringe, is also a
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military or martial law flag.
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[3] The District of Columbia cannot become a state, because the land
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belongs to Maryland.
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[4] If one examines many of the "laws" on the books and the Corporate
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Constitution of a State one will find that they are carefully written
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so as not to apply to State Citizens. They are written to apply to all
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the residents/foreigners/aliens/corporations (aka "Persons", i.e.
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non-State Citizens) residing in the state. Of course, virtually
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everyone in every state is a resident alien ("Person") since they
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are all citizens of the US. (State Citizens are "Sovereigns,"
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and, under statutory law, not "Persons".)
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[5] The tax laws, as written by the US Congress, are not actually Laws
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(with a capital L) at all but are codes (or contract laws).
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The laws most certainly are valid for US citizens. Persons who
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claim the tax laws are unconstitutional are also wrong:
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there are US Supreme Court cases stating in clear and certain terms
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that the "income tax" is actually an excise and hence is not
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unconstitutional. In addition there are US Supreme Court cases
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stating in clear and certain terms that the tax laws apply to US
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citizens even if they earn all of their income outside of the US
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with no direct or indirect economic involvement with US.
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The mere fact that one is a US citizen empowers the IRS to determine
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one's Federal income tax liability. The IRS usually forces
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US citizens to "voluntarily" determine that liability themselves.
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[6] There are court rulings stating that the income tax as it now
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stands has nothing to do with---and never has had anything to do
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with---the 16th amendment.
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[7] Do Citizens of Thailand (a foreign country) pay their taxes to the US
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Government? No. State Citizens are considered non-resident
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aliens with respect to the District of Columbia. There is an IRS
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form W-8, "non-resident alien declaration", that exempts one from
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the Federal Income tax. If one files a W-8, the IRS will
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eventually send one a letter stating that one is exempt from all
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Federal tax liability. I have yet to actually see such a letter though.
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[8] Many persons today, especially older persons, still claim that the
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Social Security tax is not a direct tax and is like an account into
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which they have paid and from which they expect all of "their" invested
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money back plus some. But that is only as it was originally
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implemented and stated to the American People, and has not applied
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since 1938.
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3. Analysis
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3.1. Questions of Status and Jurisdiction
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The key legal issue seems to be one of Status. Is one's status under
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law Sovereign or Subject? Status is critical to any legal proceeding
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so that proper and legal jurisdiction can be determined. It is
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beginning to look like the outcome of any given case, whether argued
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before the US Supreme Court or some other court, is ultimately
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affected by Status and Jurisdiction. Another key legal issue which
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ultimately affects Status are the terms "domiciled in/living in" and
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"resides in/residing in". According to law a citizen of his own
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country is domiciled in or lives in his country. A foreigner/alien or
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diplomat while "living in" a country not his own resides in or is
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residing in that country.
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The question then in court is which constitution one can invoke. The
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constitution that one can invoke is totally dependent upon one's
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Status.
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3.2. Contracts and Social Security
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A State Citizen or US citizen is entering into a contract by obtaining
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a driver's license, a credit card, a bank account, a social security
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card, by filing income tax returns, etc. Once one is party to a
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contract the terms of that contract are in full effect and actually
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are law for the parties of the contract and fully enforcible to the
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full extent of the Law.
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The governments and courts must make sure the terms of the contract
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are followed to the letter. This is what the Federal Government and
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State Governments are supposed to do and are doing with great effect.
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They enforce the terms of contracts voluntarily and non-fraudulently
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entered into by two or more parties.
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A State Citizen, by obtaining a social security number, is signing a
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contract. The terms of a contract can constrain or supersede any of
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the rights the Sovereign previously held. And those terms are fully
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enforcible by the courts.
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The social security contract binds the parties to the laws and
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statutes regarding social security.
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The social security contract also makes one a US citizen and hence
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makes one subject to the 14th amendment and to any other laws that
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apply to US citizens. One is still a State Citizen, but all the
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Federal laws, income tax laws, social security laws, etc., constrain
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one's rights contractually.
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3.3. Rights of US citizens vs. Rights of State Citizens
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All US citizens are subject to the US Government and have "civil
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rights," but have neither "inalienable" rights nor rights guaranteed
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by the Constitutions. The rights that US citizens hold are only those
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granted to them by the US Government.
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Civil rights can be removed or changed at will by legislation. For
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example, US citizens were given the right to a trial by jury only in
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1968. Previously, US citizens might be given trials by jury but the
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guaranteed right to a jury trial did not exist for them. In contrast,
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State Citizens have had that right guaranteed by the State and US
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Constitutions since their existence.
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A State Citizen has absolutely no need of civil rights. A State
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Citizen already holds all rights as inalienable.
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No challenges regarding constitutionality may be mounted by
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aliens/foreigners and US citizens since they did not create the US
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constitution---instead they are created constructs of the US
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constitution. Sovereign State Citizens can challenge the
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constitutionality of laws, codes, or statutes. This is why US citizen
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tax-protesters get slam-dunked when they stand before the US Supreme
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Court (or the Tax Court for that matter) and claim that the income tax
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is unconstitutional. They are wrong twice: they cannot legally even
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present the challenge, and the income tax is an excise tax and is
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constitutional.
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4. Conclusions
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Some individuals now claim to be State Citizens by virtue of having
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obtained letters from the states in which they are domiciled
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acknowledging their Citizenships in those States. Also, to deny
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Federal jurisdiction, these Citizens have attempted to break all
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contractual ties with the US Government, by returning their Social
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Security cards, by submitting IRS W-8 forms and by closing all
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financial accounts with members of the Federal Reserve System (credit
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cards, bank accounts, loans) etc. In addition, to deny Corporate
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State jurisdiction, these Citizens have returned their driver's
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licenses, vehicle registrations, and license plates.
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These Citizens claim that Federal Statutory laws, statutes, codes,
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etc., and the state Corporate constitutions, do not apply to
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them---and have never applied to them---and also that none of the
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State Statutory laws, statutes, codes, etc., apply to them.
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In traffic and tax cases, the state courts are upholding these claims
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so far, but not without a huge fight per individual case. I have yet
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to actually sit in on a case to see this happen, but I have read some
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of the decisions rendered on such cases. Most cases against State
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Citizens are eventually dismissed, because the courts appear not to
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want more legal precedents set.
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The above is a summary of most of the support that I have found so far
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for claim 2. I have not verified all of this. This is what I am
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trying to do right now. So: does anyone have informed opinions about
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this matter? Can anyone point to solid legal work that secures or
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refutes the correctness of claim 2?
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--James Zarbock
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