Governments are Corporations: Reclaim Your Sovereignty with AI

6 months ago
36

The video discusses governments as corporations and the reclaiming of Moorish nationality amidst legal implications of race-based citizenship.
[07:32-08:14]
The chapter highlights the understanding that governments, courts, and police departments function as for-profit corporations and explores concepts like silence as consent and AI's role in legal empowerment.
Governments are private corporations. Many people are now realizing that governments, courts and police departments are registered as for-profit corporations, not sovereign entities. Consent by Silence The system operates on contract law, meaning people are bound to government rules because they never explicitly say no. Silence is taken as consent, which is why governments can enforce taxes, fines, and mandates. Legal Name Fraud Some are challenging court jurisdiction by refusing to contract under the corporate name, exposing how courts rely on deception to gain control. AI is helping people break down UCC codes, decode legal dictionaries like Black's Law Dictionary, and draft sovereignty declarations.
[08:14-09:02]
The chapter addresses the reclaiming of Moorish nationality, the implications of race-based citizenship, and how many Moors are asserting their sovereignty against corporate legal frameworks.
3, the Moorish nationality and the deception of race-based citizenship. Many Moors and other indigenous peoples are reclaiming their nationality and realizing that Black is a legal status, not an ethnicity. Black equals no rights. Under US law, black was legally defined as a status without nationality, making a person stateless and subject to government rule. This is why mores argue that calling oneself black legally means forfeiting sovereign status. Moore's as indigenous Americans. Many are using historical treaties like the 1787 Treaty of Peace and Friendship to argue that they are not U.S. citizens but members of a separate nation. Corporate courts versus common law. AI is helping Moore's and sovereigns find ways to assert their rights under common law rather than corporate statutes.

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