PROOF OF FACTS: Income taxation of “nationals of the United States” within the exclusive jurisdiction of a constitutional state is NOT a “sovereign power”

INTRODUCTION: Microsoft Copilot. This interchange establishes that: More on this subject at: QUESTION 1: Is income taxation within the exclusive jurisdiction of a constitutional state among ONLY “nationals of the Untied States” under 26 U.S.C. 873 standing on land protected by the constitution a “sovereign power”? Note that I’m not talking about aliens abroad or…

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Microsoft Copilot: IRS Deception About who are “nonresident aliens”

QUESTION 1: IRS Publication 519 identifies itself as “U.S. tax guide for aliens”. However, it addresses nonresident aliens who are “U.S. nationals”. A U.S. national under 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(22) is not an alien. And the word “alien” is defined in 26 C.F.R. 1.1441-1(c)(3)(i) as someone who is NEITHER a citizen nor a national. Does that…

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Microsoft Copilot: “nonresident alien” fiction is domiciled in the District of Columbia and “U.S. sources” means District of Columbia Sources

EDITORIAL: This article establishes why domicile is ALWAYS important. Even in federal taxation, even though domicile is never even mentioned in I.R.C. Subtitles A and C. Domicile can NEVER be ignored or it will cloud or equivocate the origin of the jurisdiction of the taxing authority. ALL civil jurisdiction originates from it, and taxing authority…

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HOW TO: How to Aver Your Status as a Fourteenth Amendment “nonresident alien”

Source: Non-Resident Non-Person Position, Form #05.020, Section 11.1; https://sedm.org/Forms/05-MemLaw/NonresidentNonPersonPosition.pdf 1. Introduction Those claiming “nonresident alien” status must invoke it properly to be recognized by the court as a nonresident alien. The most famous example of a state citizen recognized by the court as a nonresident alien was Frank Brusher in the famous case of Brushaber…

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