see4
Well-Known Member
Oops. Misread.
Done in a sense, is not actually "done". When you renounce citizenship, you are literally no longer a citizen of the United States and therefore have no rights under it, and are considered an illegal alien. What you are currently claiming is a pseudo-version of that to satisfy your needs. Am I wrong?
An implied authority without full acceptance is certainly considered coercion. However, it falls apart for you when you use the internet, drive on city roads, drink city water, stay on land that is protected by a military, and on and on. By staying here and doing the things I just listed, you are in fact accepting implied authority by the government.These are the questions I wanted you to answer.
Can you show me any agreements that I or other people made with the purported "leaders" where we agreed to be subjects in the first place?
If you can't wouldn't their assumed authority over me be then based in an assumption they are my superiors and that I have no rights at all?
Show me those agreements please.
Now, I'll answer your question.
Its my belief and also a fact, my "citizenship" and the claimed "citizenship" of many others is not based on a consensual interaction or relationship with the people that claim us as their subject.
So, to renounce them and make a claim of self ownership is something I've already done in a sense. The fact is I do comply under duress with some things they insist upon, not because I want to, because I know they will harm me if I do otherwise. This too is irrefutable, unless you get absurd.
Done in a sense, is not actually "done". When you renounce citizenship, you are literally no longer a citizen of the United States and therefore have no rights under it, and are considered an illegal alien. What you are currently claiming is a pseudo-version of that to satisfy your needs. Am I wrong?
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