First published at 17:59 UTC on June 16th, 2024.
Music Created By: BankerCatKatz "Bought Sold Traded" © Copyright
Birth certificates, often perceived as mere records of one's birth, hold a more profound implication within the financial and legal frameworks of the United States. The…
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Music Created By: BankerCatKatz "Bought Sold Traded" © Copyright
Birth certificates, often perceived as mere records of one's birth, hold a more profound implication within the financial and legal frameworks of the United States. These documents are, in fact, treated as financial instruments. They are printed on banknote paper and bear a CUSIP (Committee on Uniform Securities Identification Procedures) number, indicating their status as securities. This number facilitates their trading on the stock market, primarily managed by the Federal Reserve Bank. Each birth certificate signifies a bond, an asset, bought and sold by one of the twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks. The back of every Social Security card reveals the corresponding Federal Reserve Bank, establishing an individual's economic value within this system.
James Traficant, a former U.S. Congressman, famously highlighted the implications of such financial mechanisms in his speech addressing the nation's bankruptcy. He argued that the United States operates under a financial state where individuals are effectively commodified. The use of birth certificates as tradable securities underscores the nation's deep entanglement with debt and financial manipulation, revealing a complex and often obscured interplay between personal identity and national economic strategy.
This system, rooted in historical and legislative developments, demonstrates how citizens are inadvertently woven into the fabric of national and international finance. Birth certificates, thus, are not just vital records but also instruments reflecting the intricate and often controversial relationship between governance, economics, and individual identity.
https://irp.cdn-website.com/23365c5a/files/uploaded/James%20Traficant%20US%20Bankruptcy%20speech-2dfcef43.pdf
https://www.supremecourt.ohio.gov/pdf_viewer/pdf_viewer.aspx?pdf=828836.pdf&subdirectory=2017-1094%5CDocketItems&source=DL_Clerk
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