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palani
29th January 2012, 01:00 PM
http://sovereigntyinternational.info/The%20US%20citizen.html


“A “US Citizen” upon leaving the District of Columbia becomes involved in “interstate commerce”, as a “resident” does not have the common-law right to travel, of a Citizen of one of the several states.” Hendrick v. Maryland S.C. Reporter’s Rd. 610-625. (1914)

"Therefore, the U.S. citizens [citizens of the District of Columbia] residing in one of the states of the union, are classified as property and franchises of the federal government as an "individual entity."
Wheeling Steel Corp. v. Fox, 298 U.S. 193, 80 L.Ed. 1143, 56 S.Ct. 773.

"The only absolute and unqualified right of a United States citizen is to residence within the territorial boundaries of the United States," US vs. Valentine 288 F. Supp. 957

"...the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States do not necessarily include all the rights protected by the first eight amendments to the Federal constitution against the powers of the Federal government." Maxwell v Dow, 20 S.C.R. 448, at pg 455;

If these don't get you thinking nothing will.

PatColo
29th January 2012, 09:39 PM
@ Makow:

Resist Biometrics - Your Liberty Depends on It (http://www.henrymakow.com/refuse_biometrics.html)


Sunday, 29 January 2012 11:30


http://www.davidicke.com/images/stories/January201294/biometrics.jpg



'It's official. The biometric cataloging of the human race has begun. India's intent to record it's entire nations' 1.2 billion people by iris and fingerprint scans signals a devious high tech human monitoring and control agenda.

Although no one ever asks for such systems, biometrics will be sold to the populace as cool, sexy, convenient, safe and secure but will eventually prove to be a living hell for everyone on planet earth. Most just don't know it yet.'



Read more: Resist Biometrics - Your Liberty Depends on It (http://www.henrymakow.com/refuse_biometrics.html)

palani
30th January 2012, 06:15 AM
Resist Biometrics
The passport as currently implemented is a de facto national ID. It is required of U.S. citizens for even ventures into Mexico or Canada and represents an intermediate step toward requiring ID of everyone.

Regarding passports I have decided it makes more sense to request one from the country that is being visited. These foreign governments are after all the entities that would be protecting you while you are in their territory. What sense does it make to ask the U.S. to protect you no matter where you roam when their protection does not extend into foreign territory?

PatColo
30th January 2012, 06:43 AM
yeah, credit cards, DL, "club cards", pports, phones. this co http://www.idstronghold.com sells rfid blocking wallets & pport carriers.

and there's this jobee for phones,

I've been wanting something like this too

http://image.dhgate.com/albu_102024301_00/1.0x0.jpg
http://www.spysource.net/cellblockerbag.htm

That's something I'd get if I had a mobile.

gunDriller
30th January 2012, 08:36 AM
yeah, credit cards, DL, "club cards", pports, phones. this co http://www.idstronghold.com sells rfid blocking wallets & pport carriers.

and there's this jobee for phones,

That's something I'd get if I had a mobile.

a metal tin, like the one Altoids comes in, will work about the same.

the trick is finding a tin that's the right size.

aluminum foil will attenuate the signal too.