Proof All Americans Are Nationals - NOT Subjects
In-Depth Summary: Why All Americans Are State Nationals (Nonresident Aliens)
1. Nearly every American, by birth, is an American National—a status distinct from the statutory “U.S. person” created by the Internal Revenue Code (IRC).
It claims that when viewed under constitutional law, Americans are nonresident aliens for federal income tax purposes unless they voluntarily elect otherwise. The two defining cases that define the term U.S. Person are:
Dread vs Scott
&
The Slaughterhouse Cases (which overturned Dread vs Scott.)
Key 🔑 revelations as stated by Cheif Justice Miller:
“It is quite clear, then, that there is a citizenship of the United States, and a citizenship of a state, which are distinct from each other, and which depend upon different characteristics or circumstances in the individual.“
To learn more on this historic case click here:
2. Defining the Key Terms
  • American National: A person born in or naturalized into one of the 50 states of the Union, owing allegiance to that state and the organic Constitution, not to the federal corporation domiciled in the District of Columbia.
  • Nonresident Alien: Under IRC §7701(b)(1)(B), anyone who is not a U.S. citizen and does not pass the “substantial presence” tests tied to federal jurisdiction. The book emphasizes that this “alien” label is about domicile, not about nationality.
  • U.S. Person: A statutory creation under IRC §7701(a)(30). By default, this category includes corporations and officers tied to federal territory—but not, the book claims, state nationals living in the Union.
3. The Facts in a Nutshell
  • By birthright, Americans are both citizens of their state and constitutional citizens of the Union, but not federal “U.S. persons.”
  • The federal tax code operates as a franchise or property management agreement. To be bound by it, one must consent—such as by filing as a U.S. person or acting as a public officer.
  • Unless that consent is given, the individual remains a nonresident alien relative to federal jurisdiction.
4. Evidence Presented
The text supports its claims through:
  • Case law: Including Minor v. Happersett (1874) and Wong Kim Ark (1898), emphasizing distinctions between nationality, domicile, and jurisdiction.
  • Statutory definitions: Showing that “foreign” in tax law often means foreign domicile rather than foreign citizenship. (Outside the District of Columbia = The Corporate United States)
  • IRS and Treasury forms: W-8BEN and other “foreign person” designations are framed as acknowledgments that many Americans can claim nonresident alien status.
  • SSA NUMIDENT records: Allegedly concealing distinctions between nationality and domicile, further blurring the public’s awareness .
5. Advantages of “Foreign” (Nonresident Alien) Status
Properly declaring oneself as an American National/nonresident alien:
  • Limits liability to taxes on only certain types of U.S.-sourced income under IRC §§871–872.
  • Places the burden of proof on the government to show jurisdiction before applying statutory definitions.
  • Reaffirms one’s standing outside of federal franchises, agencies, and benefits systems.
6. How the “Citizen” Confusion Is Maintained
The text claims the government deliberately hides or obfuscates these distinctions:
  • By using ambiguous definitions of “United States,” “alien,” and “resident” within the IRC.
  • By avoiding the term domicile in statutes, even though domicile is the true basis of tax jurisdiction .
  • By conflating political citizenship with statutory taxpayer status through administrative agencies, courts, and private institutions.
7. The Burden of Proof
The government bears the burden to prove:
  • That a given individual has voluntarily converted private property or status into public (franchise) property;
  • That statutory definitions apply to that individual before enforcing taxation .
8. Bottom Line
The overarching claim is that:
  • All Americans born in the states are American Nationals first.
  • Unless they voluntarily act as federal officers, employees, or franchise participants, they remain nonresident aliens in relation to the federal tax code.
  • The IRS, courts, and private industry discourage recognition of this reality, because acknowledging it would upend the tax system’s assumptions and revenue base.
Please see diagram and attachments below. I summarize the long one for you guys :)
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Solomon Joseph
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Proof All Americans Are Nationals - NOT Subjects
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