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Originally Posted by Dillon Hunt
How about signing “without” the “United States” in accordance with 28 U.S.C. §1746(1) ?
This enhances my position and their lack of jurisdiction !
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28 USC Sec. 1746(1) contemplates geography not jurisdiction, because if it did, it would be a non sensical impossibility. The USC is a corporate code and only concerns corporate matters.
Whatever you sign, in whatever manner, within a specific jurisdiction, admits the jurisdiction.
The trick isn't to deny your STRAWMAN, because he is there whether you like it or not, but to control his actions in your favor.
Example; You need electricity so you sign up at your local utility as Dillon Hunt. Your first statement is addressed to your STRAWMAN, DILLON HUNT. Did you authorize this, of course not, but that is the only way they will do business with you. They presumed you did and because you need electricity you allow the relationship to continue. Jurisdiction is admitted.
They need to deal with your STRAWMAN for tax purposes. If you skip out on your bill they can write it off. If Dillon Hunt skips out, they have to sue you. Its a limited liability issue. Fortunes must be made and ledgers balanced, lawsuits add friction to the machine.
Whatever corp. government document you sign will be governed within that jurisdiction.
Solution; Don't sign corp. government documents unless you're prepared to deal with the consequences.
gldskr