Page 203 - Anna Von Reitz
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The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
Section 58 — Reading the Constitutions Correctly
Most Americans have been taught to revere the Constitutions. Generations of military and civil
service workers have been indoctrinated to “defend the Constitution (whichever one they work
under) from all Enemies foreign and domestic.” Many Americans mistakenly think that their
rights come from the Constitutions, but in fact, the Constitutions merely limit the federal
government so that the people can enjoy their freedoms unencumbered by government.
Most Americans don’t know that there are three (3) Constitutions — the actual Federal
Constitution called “The Constitution for the united States of America”, the Territorial
Constitution called “The Constitution of the United States of America” and the Municipal
Constitution called “The Constitution of the United States”.
Many people also assume that everyone in this country is protected under the Constitutions, but
this has never been so. Territorial Citizens known as United States Citizens, and Municipal
United States Citizens known as Citizens of the United States have never enjoyed any
constitutional guarantees. That’s why when you are acting as a “United States Citizen” or
“Citizen of the United States” you are told that the Constitution doesn’t apply. It doesn’t. And
that’s just one reason that “US Citizenship” is not a prized status.
Another wrong assumption is that the Constitutions are so “special” and “sacred”, when in fact,
they are just commercial services agreements mandated as part of the settlement of the War of
Independence. If you read The Definitive Treaty of Peace (1783) you will see that exactly the
same verbiage is used in the Constitutions.
When you see the words as in Article 1, Section 2, Clause 2: “No Person (Legal Person/
Municipal Officer — not acting as one of the People)…“Citizen of the United States” (Federal
Civil Service Employee)…an inhabitant (temporary foreign resident) of that State…” this is all
language directly derived from The Definitive Treaty of Peace (1783) and has all the same
meanings.
With these meanings in place, this is how Article 1, Section 2, Clause 2 actually reads:
“No Municipal United States Officer shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the
Age of twenty-five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the Municipal United States, and
who shall not, when elected, be a temporary foreign resident of that State in which he shall be
chosen.…”
This is telling you the requirements that foreign Municipal United States Officers acting as
Citizens of the United States (the Municipal Government) have to meet before they can be
elected to “represent” the other Citizens of the United States living on a temporary basis in one
of our States of the Union.
It says nothing at all about us or about us being represented in their Municipal Congress —
nothing about us at all. It is talking about the internal affairs of the foreign Municipal
Government and its citizenry that is on our shores to provide us with the services of the
Municipal Federal Civil Service.
Our States agreed to receive certain enumerated services from the respective service providers
doing business as “the” States of America, “the” United States of America, and “the” United
States. These are just doing-business-as names of commercial corporations in the business of
providing “essential government services” per Article IV. They are acting “for” our actual
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 199 of 209