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SovereignCitizen

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Aug 23rd, 2016
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  1. Who owns you? Let me explain the birth certificate; what it is, what it entails.
  2. At birth, the first gift that was given to you by your parents was your name, or "given name", while you inherited your surname, or "family name". At this point in time, your parents signed a statement of live birth, registering your birth with the government. Your parent's signature on this document brings into effect a trust, where you become the beneficiary and your parents become the trustees of your name, also known as your title. Henceforth, you are to be recognized "through" your name.
  3. The will of a legislature is to recognize you as a citizen through your name. Keep in mind, by definition of law: birth registration transfers no interest in property. Rather, it's simply a legal recording that is meant to protect your interest in the property of your title. One cannot do anything "freely" in a society, under such a legislature, without citizenship through their title.
  4. Now, when your parents sent the government the legal title that was granted to them at your birth, a legal fiction was then created in your name. How was your fictitious name created? First, you will need to understand how a trust is created, and the jurisidictions that govern them.
  5. Specifically, there are two titles to property: legal and equitable. A trust occurs when these two titles are split by the trustor. The holder of a legal title is the trustee, while the holder of an equitable title is the beneficiary. The definition of a trust is "A relationship created at the direction of an individual, in which one or more persons hold the individual's property subject to certain duties to use and protect it for the benefit of others."
  6. Your person is governed under two separate jurisdictions, natural and juridical, by common law and civil law respectively. You are the administrator/beneficiary of your legal name written in proper form (eg. "John Doe") which you can use on any official document as a signature. Then, after accepting the birth certificate given to you, the government becomes the administrator/beneficiary of your fictitious name, treated as a corporation and always written in capital letters (eg. "JOHN DOE").
  7. You become the trustee of your legal fiction, meaning: you have the capacity to enter into contracts, own property, sue or be sued. Additionally, you are subject to taxes, fees, bills or fines with your fictitious name on them. Your birth certificate provides proof of this trust agreement between you and (in Commonwealth nations) the Registrar General, whose signature also appears on this official document. You'll also note that your fictitious name is on this document, written only in capital letters, as it is in all legal documents, including your bills.
  8. The government then becomes the usufructuary of this agreement, whereby they use the evidence of your birth through a legal claim to administrate in your benefit, thus seizing your inherent birth rights and replacing them with statutory rights, also known as your legal rights. The definition of usufruct is "The right to use and enjoy the profits and advantages of something belonging to another as long as the property is not damaged or altered in any way."
  9. One of the rights given to government through your title could be to conduct commerce on your behalf, leveraging your title on securities exchanges, holding your person and property against the national debt. This inflates bond valuation, reducing interest rates due to a lowered credit risk, manipulating the yield curve. Governments rely on the yield curve to manage their finances, much like we rely on our line of credit to obtain a loan.
  10. Countries would typically leverage natural resources and precious metals such as gold against their debts. When an economy failed, the gold that was being leveraged through the bond market was then taken. Today's economies use fiat money, valued only because a government has control of its property, and its laws declare what is legal tender.
  11. What does that entail for us, if for whatever reason the economy was to stop producing equitable returns on the bond market, what would happen to our person or property? Here we must beg the question: "who owns you?" And, if we are the chips on the table, what happens if our owners fail us in this reckless gamble?
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