Corporate Government Exposed: America as a Federal Corporation

Jul 24, 2011 | Globalist Corporations, WAR: By Design

Corporate control and government structure symbolism

Is the United States Actually a Federal Corporation?

According to Title 28 of the United States Code, Section 3002(15), the term “United States” is defined as “(A) a Federal corporation.” This legal definition has led researchers to argue that what most people consider their national government is, in structural terms, a corporate entity — with the President serving as its chief executive and citizens functioning as its workforce.

Colonial Roots: The Virginia Company Connection

In 1604, an enterprise known as the Virginia Company was established ahead of large-scale European settlement in North America. King James I held the largest stake, and the original charter was finalized by April 10, 1606.

Under this arrangement, the Virginia Company — controlled by the British Crown and allied aristocratic families — claimed 50 percent of all gold and silver extracted from its territories, along with percentages of other minerals, raw materials, and 5 percent of profits from all additional ventures.

Land granted to the colonies operated under a Deed of Trust, meaning colonists received perpetual use rights that could pass to heirs but never constituted true ownership. Title remained with the British Crown.

Legal dictionaries define a “monster” as a human being by birth who in some part resembles a lower animal, noting that such a being “hath no inheritable blood and cannot be heir to any land.” Senate Document 43 from the 73rd Congress, 1st Session, designates property holders as “Tenants” rather than owners.

During the Virginia Company’s first 21 years, all duties, imposts, and excises generated by colonial trade were paid directly to the British Crown through the Crown treasurer.

Social Security, Taxation, and British Sovereignty Claims

Statutory Instrument 1997 No. 1778 suggests that the British monarchy retains a measure of control over amendments to the U.S. Social Security system. IRS Publication 6209 has been cited by researchers who contend that the 1040 tax form represents tribute paid to Britain.

Court cases including Tillman v. Roberts (108 So. 62), Van Koten v. Van Koten (154 N.E. 146), and Wynehammer v. People (13 NY REP 378, 481), alongside Senate Document 43 of the 73rd Congress, are referenced by those who argue that American citizens hold no true property rights under this framework.

The rulings in Helvering v. Davis (301 US 619) and Steward Co. v. Davis (301 US 548) established that Social Security does not constitute insurance, a contract, or a trust fund in the traditional sense.

Admiralty Law vs. Common Law in American Courts

Criminal courts operating on Virginia Company lands followed Admiralty Law — the legal system of maritime commerce — while civil courts operated under Common Law, the traditional law of the land. This distinction carries significant implications for how modern courts function.

Padelford, Fay & Co. v. The Mayor and Alderman of the City of Savannah (14 Georgia 438, 520) is cited for the proposition that individuals cannot invoke the Constitution for personal defense because they are not parties to that document.

Barron v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore (32 U.S. 243) has been interpreted to suggest that “The People” referenced in founding documents does not encompass ordinary U.S. citizens.

The Act of 1871 and the District of Columbia

The Act of 1871 created a distinct governmental structure for the District of Columbia — a ten-mile-square territory governed under British Admiralty Law and the Uniform Commercial Code. This legislation appears in the Acts of the Forty-First Congress, Section 34, Session III, chapters 61 and 62.

When Americans obtain a Social Security number, some legal scholars argue they effectively surrender individual sovereignty and become franchises of the United States corporation. The distinction between the constitutional republic and the corporate entity is one that most people never encounter.

The Upper-Case Name and Corporate Personhood

Government correspondence, financial documents, driver’s licenses, stock portfolios, and legal notices consistently render personal names in all capital letters. Legal researchers contend this is no accident — the upper-case version represents a corporate trust established by the government through the Treasury Department at the time of each birth.

Legal dictionaries distinguish between a “person” (which includes corporations treated as having individual rights and obligations), a “natural person” (an actual human being as opposed to a fictitious corporate person), and a “corporation” (an organization approved by government to function as an artificial person).

Executive Orders and Human Capital

Executive Order 12803 authorized the sale of national infrastructure — roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, prisons, and airports. Executive Order 13037 designated Americans as “human capital.”

The recognizable Stars and Stripes is classified as a military flag. A separate civil flag exists for peacetime use. The Amendatory Act to the Trading with the Enemy Act of October 6, 1917, and the Emergency Banking Relief Act of March 9, 1933, legally redefined the American populace as enemies of the United States Government following the national bankruptcy, through which the private Federal Reserve System effectively assumed governmental authority.

The gold fringe appearing on national flags in courts, federal buildings, and military uniforms signals jurisdiction under commercial law — also called British Maritime Law or the Uniform Commercial Code.

Police, Courts, and the Corporate Framework

Court rulings in Sapp v. Tallahassee (348 So. 2nd 363), Reiff v. City of Philadelphia (477 F.Supp 1262), and Lynch v. N.C. Dept of Justice (376 S.E. 2nd 247) have been cited for the claim that U.S. police forces exist to protect the corporate entity and enforce its codes rather than to safeguard individual citizens.

FRC v. GE (281 US 464) and Keller v. PE (261 US 428) are referenced alongside 1 Stat. 138-178 to support the argument that no true judicial courts have operated in America since 1789 — only executive administrators enforcing statutes and codes.

The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania (42 Pa.C.S.A. 502) has been described as the most powerful court in the nation, with Pennsylvania designated as the Keystone State for reasons extending beyond geography.

Federal Agencies and Constitutional Independence

Agencies including the FCC, CIA, FBI, and NASA were never formally part of the United States government, according to U.S. v. Strang (254 US 491) and Lewis v. US (680 F.2d 1239), even though the government held shares of stock in these organizations.

The entire American legal and governmental system operates under commercial law rather than constitutional common law — a framework designed to circumvent the checks and balances that common law provides.

The Vatican Connection and Historical Roots

The Treaty of 1213 is cited as evidence that Britain itself is owned by the Vatican. According to Elements of Ecclesiastical Law (Vol. 1, pp. 53-54), the Pope holds authority to abolish any law in the United States. Bened. XIV, De Syn. Dioec (lib. ix, c. vii, n. 4, Prati, 1844) and the Syllabus (propositions 28, 29, 44) assert that papal laws are obligatory on all people.

Under this interpretation, American citizens generate revenue (like livestock), the IRS collects it, the United States corporation manages the population, and the British Crown serves as the ultimate owner — with the entire arrangement held in allodium by the papacy. These structures trace back through Roman law to Babylonian and Sumerian legal systems, maintained across centuries by interconnected ruling bloodlines and enforced through the papacy, monarchies, and institutional religion.

Corporations Worth Investigating

Those seeking to understand the depth of corporate influence over government and society should research organizations including Amtrak, Amway, Anheuser Busch, Archer Daniels Midland, ARCO, AT&T, Bechtel, Bertelsmann, Blackwater (Xe), Boeing, BP, Burger King, the Carlyle Group, CBS/Viacom, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Corning, Daimler/Chrysler, Deere, Disney/ABC, Dow Chemical, DynCorp International, Eli Lilly & Company, Enron, Exxon-Mobil, GE, GlaxoSmithKline, Halliburton, IBM, In-Q-Tel, ITT, Lockheed/Skunkworks, McDonald’s, Microsoft, Monsanto, Motorola, Nabisco, NBC, the New York Times, News Corporation, Newsweek, Northrop Grumman, PBS, Pfizer, Philip Morris, RAND, Raytheon, Reuters, SAIC, Serco, Shell Oil, Tenneco, Texaco, Texas Utilities, TimeWarner/AOL/CNN, TRW, Unisys, Visible Technologies, the Wall Street Journal, Walmart, the Washington Post, and the Washington Times.


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