The Social Security Act of 1935

What is its effect?

On application on an SS-5 form, the Social Security Administration creates a name and number and registers them in a database along with relevant information regarding the respective application.  They then print said name and number on a pre-printed Social Security card and send a package including the card to its recipient.  The recipient receives the package.  The contents of the package (sometimes the card itself) plainly reserves that the card does not belong to the recipient; rather it is the property of Corp. U.S.  The package also plainly instructs the recipient that the Social Security Administration would like the recipient to hold the card until such time as its owner wants the card returned.  If the recipient is willing to so hold the card they are instructed that the card is not “active”.  To activate the card the recipient is instructed to sign the card.  If the recipient is willing to accept the responsibilities that go along with holding the card, which include the card is to be held in a safe place until such time as its actual owner wants it back, the recipient signs the card with a signature act.  In accord with that signature, the holder is “licensed” with the authority to use the name and number printed on the card in order to carry out its business needs and relations necessary to the obligation of so holding the card.   Corp. U.S. also reserves the right to terminate the relationship at any time with their request for the return of the card; and that is the extent of the relationship.

Looking over this relationship, one will discover all of the elements of a Revocable Trust (see Contracts, Trusts and the Corporation Sole) are clearly part of this relationship.  Therefore, the Social Security Administration created relationship inherent with the acceptance of the card is that of a Trust that remains an agency of Corp. U.S. under Corp. U.S.’ direct control through its Congressional acts.  Social Security Administration attests that it created (and uses) that name and number combination to uniquely distinguish that person from any other person of the same or of a similar name.  Therefore, the Social Security Number distinguishes all relationships using it as exclusive actions of the Trust so created.

Therefore, all contracts and relationships using the registered name and number of such a trust (the name and number printed on the Social Security Card) are the relationships of that trust and are not the relationships of the man, woman or child that lends consciousness and physical capacity to the trusts.  Therefore, any property ever acquired by the use of such a name and number of such a trust remains the property of that trust and is actually the equitable property of the trust ’s beneficiary, Corp. U.S.  In other words as a matter of law:

Corp. U.S. holds equitable title to all property acquired with a Social Security number.

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