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Marie: Merging equitable title with legal title. Why do we want to do that?
Caller: You've gotta claim the equitable title from the state.
Absolutely right. Now who has the authority to do that?
The Executor?
No.
The Beneficiary.
Yes. But why does the beneficiary have the authority to do that? What can the public servant's pieces of paper not do?
They're civilly dead. They can't move, talk, mark a paper. It cannot make an assertion [ ]. Why does the human being with
blood in his veins get to do that?
Caller: Because we created the whole program.
Right. So what are the people? Donors, grantors, settlors. Why is that important when you make a stand to take away from
the state what the state wrongfully took from the people when your mother informed the state of the property of the
marriage? What can living people take back from the state...
Caller: the birth certificate.
...when the state took the corpus of the marriage trust away from mom and dad?
Caller: Well one it was done under an adhesion contract which is null and void so they can go in and counteract it. There
was no disclosure.
That's right. So what can the people do?
Take back the birth certificate. The instrument that originated it.
And what's contained in that BC?
A bond.
The title! The equitable title. So what can the people do? Under the Doctrine of Merger, the people can merger the equitable
title with the legal title of what?
Well if you did it that way wouldn't that put you under the de facto because now you're merged with their instrument?
No, they're merged with me. They hold the equitable title in the all capital letter name. If we merge that
with our private name as DBA (Doing Business As) what happens when that occurs? You create a new ownership of that
equitable title. When both the equitable and the legal titles are merged under the Doctrine of Merger, it states that the
presumptive constructive trust is then abolished and dissolved.
Caller: You use an SS4, and get an EIN number.
What happens when a judge signs an order using the all capital letter name?
Caller: Its kaching, kaching. Its commerce.
And where does that kaching, kaching have to go after the 2 titles are merged? Into my back pocket. Into the people's back
pocket. Now when you do this merger and you bond it, what happens then?
Caller: They can't dissolve it.
That's right. They cannot dissolve it but most of those documents coming out of the court have no less than 12 zeros on
them by the time they go from point A to point Z. Is that not true?
Twelve zeros?
At least. Where does that go if you own the all capital letter name?
Caller: Back to the individual who owns the name.
Absolutely right. This is what we learned on Saturday night and the webinar students will get a recording and Jean goes into
the definition of merger. What is merger? What is the Doctrine of Merger? That will be coming out in the webinar this
week. So what's the ramifications of all this? What do you think?
Caller: The little black robed [ ] are gonna run?
I believe they will. Why are they gonna run?
Caller: The liability.
They have the liability that if they sign an order and they don't give the title holder the relief the title holder is due then they
become tax liable for the 12 zeros that's going to be added on the document that gets in any court case. It starts out at 5
numbers. For every court hearing a zero is added. Then the federal court buys those judgments. They add their zeros on their
federal bonding paper and then it goes on...by the time you get done, somebody told me on a typical mortgage there's
something like 32 times a bonding [run?] even on a mortgage. What you do when you take control of the ownership of the
name, not the item, its like putting a patent/trademark on a name. Everyone who touches that name has to pay a royalty. And
what is that royalty but the zeros the court system puts on the item, the name. So how do you go about merging the titles.
How do you go about bonding that merging? A Public notice.
Caller: If I take ownership of the corpus of the trust there's no trust.
You're absolutely right.
Caller: And there goes all my funny money.
Caller: No you can collect it cause you are the beneficiary and you are the executor of that... If you own that item and you
have the right to the royalty of that item does everything that pertained to that item have to come back to you? 14:16 So now
we have stopped killing trees with one page and when you bond it and get your bonding number on there, that bonding
number goes on everything that is connected to that royalty and what does that do? Whether its a drivers license, or a
marriage license, a birth certificate. You bond it with your bond, what happens to it?
Caller: If they trespass on it they owe you.
Absolutely right. Every time you get anything from anybody... we have put our conditional acceptances on everything, but
now you can take every paper you get in a court setting and what do you need to do to it? If you have taken proper merging
ownership of that all capital letter name, what can you do with every piece of paper from every agent, agency, sub-agency?
Put the bond number on it. And what does that do?
Caller: They become liable every time they trespass on it.
Absolutely and no this is not a Tim Turner process from 10 years ago.
Caller: When you go into court and ask them for their fidelity bond to cover that taxable event, now when you take
ownership of it don't you have to take responsibility and cover the tax on it? And the bond would do that?
Caller: Not if they're your fiduciary. Its their responsibility.
They're still the trustees if you have appointed them as trustees they still have to pay the bill but where does the bill get sent
to? Me. You're absolutely right. Anything connected to that all capital letter name is what? Mine! 17:08
Caller: When they're dealing with that upper case name all that property is yours.
Congratulations [ ] kaching, kaching kaching. And who bears the taxable termination and penalties and fees when they don't
pay the taxes?
The fiduciary trustee because they've got the liability. Now copyrighting the name and trademarking it, wouldn't that grab
ahold of it?
No, you didn't bond it.