By Anna Von Reitz
Unincorporated = Sovereign.
Unincorporated = Sovereign.
Unincorporated = Sovereign.
Here are the niceties: a man is not a name. A name is a "person".
A
man is naturally unincorporated and sovereign in nature. He does not
depend on recognition or written charters or agreements for his
existence. He doesn't even have a name when he starts out, and when he
acquires a name after being born, that name is "corporate" but not
"incorporated".
A
Given Name is a Trade Name operating within the international land
jurisdiction. "John Mark Doe" is a person that belongs to one of the
people. It is a possession or gift given to us by our parents, just
like a bicycle or a hope chest. Such a name is "corporate" but not
"incorporated".
For
example, we often see business names like "Fletcher and Sons" and
"Bo-Peep's Sheep Yarns" that are not incorporated entities. These small
businesses are corporate, fictional entities, but they are not chartered
by any government or parent corporation, receive no special privileges,
are not franchises and owe nobody but their owners for their
existence.
In
the same way, "John Mark Doe" is a fictional entity apart from the man
who uses it ---the name is not the man--- so it is corporate, but since
"he" is not chartered by any government or parent corporation, receives
no special privileges, isn't a franchise, and owes nobody but God and
his parents for his existence, he is not incorporated. The Trade Name,
like the living man, is unincorporated and sovereign.
This same rule applies to all business and trade organizations that are corporate, but not incorporated.
Thus,
Santa Clara County, Unincorporated, is a sovereign entity. It's
corporate in that it is fictional, but it isn't incorporated; it does
not owe its existence to some other entity and is not receiving its
right to exist or any special privileges from any other entity. It
operates on the land and soil of California, Unincorporated, which is
also a sovereign entity.
Sovereign
states and counties can't go bankrupt, have no "corporate veil" to
protect stockholders, and don't receive any special benefits or
privileges (like the ability to go bankrupt) from any sponsoring
organization or parent corporation.
The
County of Santa Clara and the State of California are totally
different, non-sovereign incorporated franchises of Territorial United
States corporations. They are like Dairy Queen or Burger King
franchises. They all operate under constitutions that comply with The
Constitution of the United States of America. They all receive
privileges from and operating capital from parent corporations that
sponsor them and which are responsible for their existence and for
granting them privileges.
So,
when a state like California incorporates and forms a State of
California territorial franchise or a STATE OF CALIFORNIA municipal
franchise, it loses its sovereignty and devolves to being equivalent to
any other such incorporated entity. It is no different than P.J. Mudd's
BBQ, Inc. or J.C. PENNY, INC.
This is underlined and confirmed by The Clearfield Doctrine.
California
(Unincorporated) functions in the capacity of a sovereign state. Santa
Clara County (Unincorporated) functions in the capacity of a sovereign
county. State of California is just a local incorporated franchise of
the territorial USA, Inc. STATE OF CALIFORNIA is a local incorporated
franchise of the municipal UNITED STATES, INC. County of Santa Clara is
just a franchise of a franchise: the State of California. These all
function in the capacity of incorporated franchises that owe their
existence to and receive privileges from foreign governments and foreign
parent corporations.
Think
in terms of the French-chartered Target, Inc. stores that dot the
landscape. These are all foreign corporations. They are all
incorporated franchises of the parent corporation --Target
International, Inc.
So,
ask yourselves--- how could you be subject to the rules imposed by a
Target store? -- because in essence, that is the nature of the "State
of California" and the "STATE OF CALIFORNIA", too. They are local
incorporated franchises of foreign parent corporations. Just like
Target.
If
you are employed by Target, you obviously have to follow its corporate
policies, wear its uniforms, etc. If you volunteer to enter a Target
store, you have to follow their rules inside their store, too, or
their private security guards will keep you from running up and down the
escalators.
It's
no different, folks--- except that these foreign commercial corporation
franchises have bamboozled you into thinking that they are or that they
represent the actual California state, when all they really are is an
incorporated business providing government services.
Ask
yourselves what happens when you organize your unincorporated counties
and your unincorporated states---- which are all sovereign entities?
Ah, so, then we get back to the actual states and the actual people and
the Law of the Land. This is the missing link. This is where the power
lies--- in being unincorporated.
Unincorporated = sovereign.
----------------------------
See this article and over 800 others on Anna's website here: www.annavonreitz.com
No comments:
Post a Comment