jaydee wrote:The Fourteenth Amendment clearly separates the two conditions and makes that distinction, Famspear. You must meet BOTH conditions to be a citizen.
So that is precisely what I am saying.
Yes, but you pretty much said that before. And I'm telling you that under the law, if you were born in the United States you are a citizen of the United States AND subject to the jurisdiction thereof, regardless of whether you like it or not or agree with it or not.
When I was born, I had no cognitive abilities, whatsoever. Neither did any of you, nor anyone in the history of the world. Newborn babies cannot decide things for themselves. But when we are born, we do not have a serial number and the words "PROPERTY OF THE UNITED STATES" branded on our backsides. No: We are born free and sovereign.
You were born free. You were not born "sovereign" in the sense in which I think you mean. You as an individual are not legally "sovereign" under U.S. law. You yourself as an individual, for example, cannot make legally binding treaties with foreign countries. You yourself as an individual cannot legally set up your own government, just to govern you, with your own little rules and your own little court system.
There is a saying in the United States that "the people" are "sovereign." To the extent that this is true, it's important to recognize that
you yourself are not "the people". I am
not the people either. The "people" is a plural concept. You and I as individuals are not "the people," you and I as individuals are not "sovereign," you and I as individuals are not recognized by any law of any country as having the legal power to declare war, to make peace, to contract alliances with foreign countries, to enter treaties with foreign countries, or to make our own internal laws for ourselves.
. . . . why would anyone, being fully informed on the subject, want to be a Unites [sic] States citizen?
Who cares? You are a citizen by law, whether you like it or not.
Furthermore, no one can be forced to be a United States citizen, because the Thirteenth Amendment prohibits involuntary servitude.
No, that's Baloney #1.
You are either making this up as you go along, or you are reading too much crap. The Thirteenth Amendment prohibition against involuntary servitude does not change the legal point that under the Fourteenth Amendment, a person born here is generally a citizen. And if you want to legally renounce your citizenship, you can do so (it's a bit difficult to do, but it can be done). I believe the process has already been explained.
That is why it is clearly stated in the Fourteenth Amendment that you have to be "subject to the jurisdiction thereof"; it is a voluntary condition.
No, that's Baloney #2.
Nothing in the Fourteenth Amendment says that being "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" is a "voluntary condition" or involves a "voluntary condition" or that you are not subject to the jurisdiction unless you "volunteer" to be subject to the jurisdiction. How old are you, anyway? Did you sleep through that ninth grade civics/government class?
Let's look at it this way:
Does any one man have the authority to command any other man what to do? No. Of course not.
No, let's not look at it that way. Let's look at it this way: Lots of men have the legal authority to command other men what to do. That's the way life works. Whatever problems you had with your parents, your Authority Figures, you cannot escape the fact that everyone in the United States of America (even the President, a member of Congress, or a federal judge) is legally answerable to someone else.
So governments, which are nothing more than a creation in the minds of men, have no more authority than those men that created it.
Bingo!
The United States government is only an artificial creation of men that does not exist in nature.
Correct, basically!
It [the U.S. government] has no authority over anyone who does not agree to be subject to that artificial entity.
No, that's Baloney #3.
This was clearly recognized and is why they created the Thirteenth Amendment.
No, that's Baloney #4.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides for the government to classify those over whom they are going to have authority. It is voluntary. It MUST be voluntary.
No, that's Baloney #5.
So if they cannot show how I volunteered into their jurisdiction, they have no authority to tax me.
No, that's Baloney #6.
Now, find a court case where someone made the baloney arguments you are making, and
the court ruled in favor of those baloney arguments. This is your big chance.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet