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[1] [24] Supposed procedures for using the nonexistent "strawman" funds include: Filing a UCC-1 financing statement or UCC-3 amended statement against the strawman [27] Passing a birth certificate or other official document as if it were a bond [28] Submitting documents to the Secretary of the Treasury [27] Asserting copyright on a name [29]
After each person's strawman is created through their birth certificate, a loan is taken out in the name of the strawman. The proceeds are then deposited into the secret government account associated with the fictitious person’s name. [14] Proponents of the theory believe the evidence is found on the birth certificate itself.
Sovereign citizens are known to create their own irregular, pseudolegal documents, including false passports, license plates, or birth certificates. [99] Sovereign citizen documents may include unusual formalities, such as maxims written in Latin , thumbprints , or stamps in certain places, as well as unconventional, sometimes incomprehensible ...
A UCC-1 financing statement (an abbreviation for Uniform Commercial Code-1) is a United States legal form that a creditor files to give notice that it has or may have an interest in the personal property of a debtor (a person who owes a debt to the creditor as typically specified in the agreement creating the debt).
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The official 2007 edition of the UCC. The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), first published in 1952, is one of a number of uniform acts that have been established as law with the goal of harmonizing the laws of sales and other commercial transactions across the United States through UCC adoption by all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the Territories of the United States.
Also prominent in Trump followers’ bios were Bible verses: Psalm 23:4, John 15:13, Matthew 19:26, Romans 1:16, Luke 1:37, and most popularly, Joshua 1:9 (“Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go”). Clinton followers, by comparison, were less biblically inclined.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.