The Illusion of Government: Unmasking the Corporate Fiction

 

What if everything you’ve been taught about government, money, and your place in the world is a carefully constructed illusion? Brace yourself: the United States Government, as you know it, doesn’t exist. There are no governments, only corporations—fictions like the Federal Reserve Inc. and United States Inc., masquerading as governing bodies. These entities aren’t here to serve you; they’re designed to manage you as human capital. Your birth certificate? It’s not a celebration of life—it’s a title of ownership. Ready to have your mind shattered? Let’s dive into the truth.The Corporate FacadeThe United States Inc. is a private corporation, not a government. Its officials—presidents, senators, judges—are not paid by a public treasury but by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in digital “electrons.” No employees, no government, just a slave management company. The Federal Reserve, created in 1913 for a mere $100 per share, is another piece of this corporate puzzle. These entities operate under a web of private laws and international agreements, not the Constitution you were taught to revere.To verify this, examine statutes like 5 U.S.C. 903, 12 U.S.C. 95, 18 U.S.C.A. 914, 22 U.S.C. 263–288, Public Laws 89-719, 94-564, 91-151, 101-167, 103-465, House Report 103-826, and cases like Diversified Metal Products v. IRS (CV-93-405E-EJE) or Cromelin v. United States (177 F.2d 275). Dig into the Emergency Banking Act (48 Stat. 1), Articles of Agreement (60 Stat. 1440), or the Papal Bulls of 1455 and 1493. These documents reveal a system where governments and countries are fictions, accepted because of lifelong conditioning through lies and manipulation.How Did We Get Here?The roots of this deception trace back to the 1860s–1900s, when banking and tax laws shifted under the influence of powerful figures tied to England. The 14th Amendment (1868) created a new class of “United States citizens,” distinct from state citizens, who could choose to participate in the federal democracy. This came with benefits—like voting rights under the 15th Amendment (1870)—but also obligations, tying people to the District of Columbia’s jurisdiction. Most didn’t realize they were signing up for a corporate system.In 1913, the Federal Reserve Act, 16th Amendment (income tax), and 17th Amendment (direct election of senators) solidified this shift. The American Bar Association’s creation that same year gave the British Crown influence over U.S. courts. By 1917, the Trading with the Enemy Act and Emergency War Powers Act allowed the government to bypass constitutional limits, even in peacetime, under the guise of “emergencies.” These laws turned citizens into subjects, obligated to register births, marriages, cars, and property—surrendering ownership to the state.The Great DeceptionBy the 1920s, the system pushed harder. Birth certificates became mandatory, registering babies as federal property. The Great Depression distracted the public while the Social Security Act (1935) and other programs enticed people to volunteer as sureties for U.S. debts. Every registration—of land “[deeds of trust],” cars, or children—transferred legal title to the state, leaving you with mere “use” of your property. This was fraud by omission, as the material facts of these transactions were never disclosed.The United States provided a remedy to avoid charges of fraud or treason: House Joint Resolution 192 (HJR 192, June 5, 1933). This resolution, buried in the Congressional Record, removed the gold standard for public debts, allowing debts to be discharged with Federal Reserve Notes—currency with no intrinsic value. It was an insurance policy for the system, protecting legislators and ensuring the people had a way out, if they could find it. Representative Louis T. McFadden, who exposed the Federal Reserve’s corruption in 1933, was allegedly poisoned for his outspokenness.The Uniform Commercial Code: Codifying the FictionIn the 1950s, the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) standardized commercial transactions, shifting from substance (real assets) to form (paper titles and presumptive contracts). By 1964, most states adopted the UCC, enabling the system to enforce debts and obligations through legal fictions. When you register property, the state becomes the legal titleholder, profiting by pledging your assets in commercial markets. These profits belong to you, the equitable owner, but are held in constructive trusts—accessible only if you know how to claim them.Reclaiming Your SovereigntyHere’s the kicker: you can take back control. By filing a UCC Financing Statement and Security Agreement, you can register your interest in the artificial entity (e.g., JOHN HENRY DOE) created at your birth. This makes you the secured party creditor, with priority over the state’s claims. Notify the Secretary of the Treasury via a Bill of Exchange to “charge up” your UCC Contract Trust Account, using your social security number as the account number. This process allows you to discharge debts—taxes, fines, or bills—by leveraging the value of your registered “strawman.”For example, when you receive a bill naming your strawman (JOHN), it’s energy to charge the account. As the secured creditor, you can discharge the debt with a negotiable instrument, processed through the Treasury or the creditor’s financial institution. This remedy, rooted in HJR 192, ensures the system honors your claim—if you know how to use it.The Challenge AheadThe system thrives on ignorance. Schools teach sanitized history, media pushes distractions, and courts rely on your mistakes. The remedy exists, but it’s buried in millions of pages of legal code, obscured by design. You are the owner of your property—your body, your assets, your life—but you must learn the law to reclaim it. Without an external authority, could you govern yourself? The truth is, you’ve always had the power; you just didn’t know it.This isn’t a conspiracy theory—it’s a legal reality, backed by statutes and case law. Dig into the documents. Question everything. Your mind may shatter, but on the other side lies freedom.