This article explores the crucial legal distinctions between a State Citizen and a U.S. citizen (14th Amendment subject) by analyzing the Supreme Court case Wong Kim Ark v. United States and the jurisdictional implications of the Buck Act of 1940. It reveals how federal jurisdiction is not based on geography, but on consent and contractual participation in federal benefit programs. Through detailed legal reasoning, it explains how one can owe allegiance to the United States as a constitutional Republic without being subject to its corporate statutory codes. The piece provides actionable remedies for rebutting federal presumptions and restoring lawful State Citizenship.
"Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship" is an executive order signed by President Donald Trump on January 20, 2025. This order seeks to reinterpret the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, aiming to end birthright citizenship for certain individuals born in the United States.
This explanation clarifies the distinction between state citizens and nationals in the context of U.S. law, emphasizing that individuals born in a state are primarily state citizens with allegiance to their state, not to the federal United States, which is defined as a federal corporation occupying only 10 square miles. It highlights the absence of explicit references to "state citizen" in official documentation and how this ambiguity may be intentionally designed to centralize federal control. Understanding these distinctions can illuminate the complexities of citizenship and legal identity within the U.S. legal framework.
In order for you to understand the full import of what is happening, I must explain certain laws to you. […]
Private Citizen – is someone who is private and not governed by any de facto corporation like the U.S. […]
Before the 14th amendment [sic] in 1868: A citizen of any one of the States of the union, is […]
Certificates of Non Citizen Nationality The Department of State occasionally receives requests for certificates of non-citizen national status pursuant to […]
Download Copy. 829 Case No. 14,459. 24FED.CAS.—53 UNITED STATES V. ANTHONY. [11 Blatchf. 200; 5 Chi. Leg. News. 462, 493; […]
“If any citizen of the United States shall accept, claim, receive, or retain any title of nobility or honour, or […]