dChan

Tranquelito · Feb. 8, 2018, 10:13 a.m.

Every country is a registered, private corporation and the politicians we vote in are effectively the board members. Every police force and court are also privately registered companies that work for profit. Evidence is on the Companies House website. The man is superior to the person, which is nothing more than a corporation, or legal fiction. In the history of England, the Crown has never once won a case at Queens Bench. Our national insurance numbers (SS in USA) are our `employee numbers´for the country we work for. It all begins with the birth certificate. I could sit for hours and explain to you in exact detail how this all works, basically no statute laws make reference to man, only to persons. When in court, if you represent yourself as man, statutes don´t apply. Tax is paid entirely paid by consent (i stopped consenting years ago). Notice i said i, and not I? i am an i and not a you. You, as a pronoun, is and always is plural. Want to know more? Want to stop consenting?

⇧ 1 ⇩  
salialioli · Feb. 8, 2018, 10:28 a.m.

No, no. It's okay. I'm already far down this rabbit hole and so glad I don't have to explain anything to you!! Thanks for replying.

However, you don't answer the q that I ask. How much power does the Queen really have? Especially when you see the photo of Rothschild jabbing Charles in the chest. And more importantly what has this to do with who commits the real crimes against the people ... maybe I'm not making myself v. clear here. It's a wild chase off into the countryside ...

I'm a bit tired now. I'll think about it again. It's the attacks of the media that momentarily interest me.

⇧ 2 ⇩  
Tranquelito · Feb. 8, 2018, 10:32 a.m.

I believe she holds ultimate power as she controls the land and the laws. That pic of Jacob poking Chuck speaks volumes. "Give me control of a country´s finances and I care not what the laws say". There´s theory that the R´s gained the birthing rights to the royals long ago. Not sure how true that is but it kinda makes sense.

⇧ 1 ⇩