Title: In What state do you reside? Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Jul 15, 2011 Author:Me Post Date:2011-07-15 20:26:49 by Lod Keywords:None Views:786 Comments:78
Poster Comment:
While getting some Rife therapy from titiorite's machine this afternoon, we were trying to name all the members and their state of residence. If anyone's willing to give it up, that would be great. Thanks. (I'm in Austin, TX)
hehe. when i first saw the title, i thought it was a trick question surrounding the word "reside"....can't remember the ramifications of the word at the moment, though.
i thought it was a trick question surrounding the word "reside"....can't remember the ramifications of the word at the moment, though.
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res-ident = the thing's identity
res = thing
Thanks...that's pretty sick, but a good way to remember it!
THE TRUTH ABOUT THE 14TH AMENDMENT
[EXCERPT]
".... Constitution of the United States of America
14th Amendment (1868). Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any States deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Notice the wording of this amendment carefully. If they were talking about Citizens of the 50 states, then it would read "and subject to the jurisdiction(s) thereof". Jurisdictions would be plural if it applied to more than one entity. But since it applies only to the United States government, singular, is also shows the jurisdiction to be singular. Jurisdiction, not jurisdictions.
Several other things to notice here. This section 1 of the amendment has two parts.
The first part has to do with the citizenship of 'persons', subjects.
The second part has to do with the states being required to protect the privileges and immunities of the United States citizen. We will look at the first part first.
The first part of this amendment says that 'persons' born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States, and of the state wherein they reside. We just learned that jurisdiction implies superiority of power, so is a United States citizen superior to the government? NO! The roles are reversed. Notice this does not say they are citizens of the United States 'of America'. Just the 'United States'. Is there a difference? Let's check it out.
First, what is a 'person'? There are legally two kinds of 'persons'. First there is the 'natural person' with inalienable rights. This is a flesh and blood human being, the sovereign individual. Second, there is just the term 'person'. When just the term 'person' is used, and not 'natural person', it means an artificial person, such as a corporation, trust, government, etc. A human being can be both a natural person and an artificial person at the same time. How do you tell the difference? It is as simple as whether you spell your name in all capital letters or not. More on this in a bit. The important thing to remember at this point is that artificial persons are property. Property in Latin is res. Property located in a certain territory, would be its place of residence. So property (res) belonging to and located in the State of Colorado, would be 'resident' of the state. Are you a resident of a state or of the United States?
Important point. Since a government is an artificial person, according to the Supreme Court, does an artificial person have jurisdiction over the sovereign that created the artificial person? No. Does the artificial person (government) have jurisdiction over any new artificial persons, or property, created by the government? Yes. A government has complete power over its subjects and its own property. Remember, the Constitution is just a power of attorney from the sovereign people to the government. That power of attorney extends to anything the government, as an artificial person, creates or owns.
So a 'resident' would be an artificial 'person' (property) located within the jurisdiction of a certain government. Almost all state and federal statutes apply to 'persons' who are citizens and residents, and are subject to the jurisdiction thereof. They rarely apply to 'natural persons'....."
Having no written (signed) contract/agreement with the FED is the best advice I could give. (That includes a SSN). The birth cert is not signed by the infant and amounts to hearsay.