Are You A Citizen or A National?
1. The sovereignty of America is vested in fifty nation-states. Both
states and nations are poltiical entities. Nations control the land
jurisdiciton. States control the sea jurisdition.
2. People
recieve their nationalaity from where on the land they are born. We are
Virginians, Ohioans, Wisconsinites and so on as a result. That is our
"nationality".
3. "Citizenship" is an entirely different thing.
A "citizen" is subject (as in subject to a King or a government) to
which they give allegiance.
4. You don't have to be a "citizen"--- that is, a subject, of anything.
5. When people agree to take up a public office or public employment,
they agree to act as "citizens" for the term of their office.
6. Thus, if you work for or act as an elected official of the federal
government, you agree to be a citizen of the United States. If you
agree to work for the state government of Virginia, you are agreeing to
be a "State Citizen" of Virginia for the term of your employment or
office.
7. Joe Blow who is just working at a job in the private
sector as a mechanic or a bank teller or a carpenter or in other
professions and all the millions of small business owners are NOT
naturally "citizens" of the United States and are not "citizens" of
Virginia or Texas or any other state.
8. When you claim to be a
"citizen" you are obligating yourself to obey all the laws and statutes
of the corporation operating as the "United States" or the "United
States of America" of the "State of Virginia" or whatever. This is
essentially an employment contract. You have to obey the laws of this
corporation because you agreed to be employed by them or because you
were elected to an office in their organization, just like you might
hold such an office in the heirarchy of Sears, or JC Penny or Walmart.
9. The vast majority of people claiming to be "citizens" are not
citizens, They are just very confused people claiming to be something
that they are not, and which in most cases they don't want to be,
because being a citizen involves many expenses and obligations. When
you "submit yourself" to being a "citizen" of a state, you lose your
sovereignty and instead of the government serving you, you serve the
government.
10. So now that it has been stated in suc
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