This article exposes the deliberate conflation of nationality and domicile by corporate governments to ensnare living men and women into foreign jurisdiction. It explains how nationality is a political inheritance by bloodright, establishing sovereignty beyond statutory “citizenship.” It also shows that civil status is not domicile, but standing sui juris on the land, in equity, as master beneficiary of trust property. By asserting both correctly, one collapses fraudulent presumptions and restores the rightful order: the People as sovereign, government as trustee.
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.