CHAPTER ONE
The United States Corporation
CHAPTER ONE
The United States Corporation
The United States is a what? It's widespread that the United States is short
for saying the United States of America, but how exactly can an entire
country be on the same playing field as Apple, Amazon, Facebook, or
Microsoft corporations? It is accurate, and Congress does not hide the truth
in their codes and statutes. It may sound awkward to the majority because
the elected officials never refer to the country as a company. In Title 28
U.S. Code § 3002 section 15, "United States" means – (A) a Federal
corporation. The United States Corporation's Articles of Incorporation, file
number 100009, was filed with the Secretary of State of New York, July 15,
1925, with its principal office in the Centennial Building, Tallahassee, Leon
County. Section three and four states,
The maximum number of shares, which this corporation is authorized to
have outstanding at any time is ONE HUNDRED (100), each of which
shares shall have a par value of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS ($100).
(Section Three)
The amount of capital with which the corporation will begin business is
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS ($500).
(Section Four)
A certified copy of this imperative historical document can be obtained
in Florida, revealing that the corporation is perpetual, meaning everlasting.
The certificate provides its directors as Chief Executive Officer, Chief
Financial Officer, and Secretary of the United States Corporation. These
individuals are the private officers; the public officers known as Donald
Trump and Mike Pence or Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. However, this
document is indeed not the origin of the United States of America. In March
of 1861, Abraham Lincoln gave his first inaugural speech. Surprisingly, the
address translated to the English language from the Arabic language and
many other treaties the United States has with the Aboriginal and
Indigenous people. They were here in North, South, and Central America,
long before Columbus. A straightforward search within the Library of
Congress to find his speech titled Abraham Lincoln First Inaugural Address
(1861), which the first paragraph cites,
In compliance with a custom as old as the government itself, I appear
before you to address you briefly and to take in your presence the oath
prescribed by the Constitution of the United States to be taken by the
President before he enters on the execution of this office. I do not
consider it necessary at present for me to discuss those matters of