So the next question on my mind to be answered is:
When was the first Birth Certificate Issued?
While I speculate it was in 1934-35, I would like some documentation to support this. Even if it wasn't the first, it would be the first to be a "security" presuant to the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
I would also like to find some Public Law regarding this topic, as all those cites are from Revised Statutes/color of law/private law. Anyone know off hand, or have the cites from their state's Statutes at Large?
Or prehaps someone could share how I could begin this type of research (in an article or seperate post prehaps? *hint* *hint*)... How does one trace Revised Statutes to the actual Statutes they were rendered from? Can it be done on line?
David Merrill (
or others),
From you point of view, how does the
constructive trust, resulting from the workings of the New Deal, fit with this subject matter?
Upon application for a SS#, does the
product become
res(1) in the
constructive trust, formed by the human who authorizes it's creation with their signature?
If a SS# is never applied for, does the
product default to being
res in the
general public trust?
Is the security called
Birth Certificate the property of the man or woman that the Birth Certificate is named after, or does it belong to the UNITED STATES(tm)? [I see the STATE OF ____ being franchizes of the UNITED STATES(tm)]
P.S. Prehaps someone who is better with math and more knowledgable with the income tax laws then I am, could generate a clearer figure of the initial value of the
product. I simply have no clue what someone would pay in income tax if they make
$37,000.00/year.
You could use the
National Average Wage Index and the CIA World Fact Book to get the population and average wage, then cosider the income tax for that tax bracket, the average sales tax of the several states, the average property tax, etc... what ever the average is will more then likely be the base value of the security called Birth Certificate.
P.P.S. I know this is a little elementry, and probably isn't info that people don't know of, but that isn't the point. I wanted to prove it beyond 'theory'.
Footnotes:
(1) res - the subject matter of a trust. -- blacks law 5th