Common
Law Social Security
Believe it or not, a type of social security was established in England by the Statute of Charitable Uses (43 Eliz. c. 4, 1601). In this Statute you will find every description that your social security number covers, and everything your income tax pays for.
A. "whereas lands, tenements, rents, annuities, profits, hereditament, goods, chattels, money and stocks of money have been heretofore given, limited, appointed and assigned, as well by the Queen's most excellent Majesty, and her most noble progenitors, as by sundry other well-disposed person; some for relief of aged, impotent and poor people, some for maintenance of sick and maimed soldiers and mariners, schools of learning, free schools and scholars in universities, some for repair of bridges, ports, havens, causeways, churches, sea-banks and HIGHWAYS, some for education and preferment of orphans, some for or toward relief, stock or maintenance for houses of correction, some for marriages of poor maids, some for supportation, aid and help of young tradesmen, handicraftsmen and persons decayed, and others for relief or redemption of prisoners or captives, and for aid or ease of any poor inhabitants concerning payments of fifteens, setting out of soldiers and OTHER TAXES ...***...
[ Emphasis added ]
These Trusts defined in the Statute of Charitable Uses are either eleemosynary or governmental trusts and it is highly apparent to me that it is this Statute from which the United States Government drew its authority to create the Social Security Act with the support of the income tax. After all just where does your tax dollars go? To the above. And doesn't all the above require a number?
B. "A group of trust having some incidents in common and classed as charitable may be called "governmental, because they provide for the maintenance of existing governmental organizations or are designed to supplement existing governmental agencies...***...It would seem, therefore, that a trust to furnish money to a government for its general governmental purposes would always be charitable, since all the objects of the particular government must be of widespread social interest(106)
It is essential that the act of creating a charitable trust be an act of donation.
C. "Charitable trusts are not created by compulsory payments but usually arise VOLUNTARILY". (107)
D. "A public charity, in legal contemplation, is derived from gift or bounty". (108)
INCOME TAXES ARE VOLUNTARY. I wonder why? Old English cases show that taxes were for charitable uses and it made no difference if the funds received were voluntarily made or not. Of course let that be known in America and people might begin to suspect what the tax and the charity was all about.
Your donation (1040) is a donation to a governmental charitable trust (one not claimed to exist) for the purposes set out in the Statute of Charitable Uses. I would venture to say the Federal Government denies the existence of a trust for the express purposes of having the right to commingle funds and claim absolute ownership. If a trust was uncovered, this would be fraudulent behavior on the part of the trustees. And again if a trust were admitted, the rule against perpetuities would come into play, because when a beneficiary is named such as "Fourteenth Amendment citizen", it then becomes a "Private" charitable trust, and this is a no-no. So therefore we have to play the legal shell game, to make your donation an absolute gift.
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Footnotes :
106. . Trusts and Trustees, Bogert infra, '378, Governmental Trusts.
107. Home Insurance Co. v Cobbs (1925), 103 So. 165, 20 Ala App 491.
108. . Attorney General v Federal Street Meeting House, 1854, 3 Gray (Mass) 1, 49, 50
Points & Authorities :
- What's This All About
- Preamble Explained
- Inheritable Property
- Trusts in General
- Trusts by Operation of Law
- Preamble Religious Intent
- Charitable
Trusts
- Constructive & Spendthrift Trusts
- Rules under a Spendthrift Trust
- Breach of Trust
- Termination
of a Trust
- Doctrine of Election
- Common Law Social Security
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