
December 14, 2015
John Kerry, US Secretary of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
Ban Ki-Moon, UN Secretary General
United Nations Secretariat
New York, NY 10017
United Nations Secretariat
New York, NY 10017
Dear Sirs:
This is a matter of urgent importance. It concerns either mistaken identity or identity theft, depending upon each man’s estimate of the situation.
Very briefly: at the end of the American Revolutionary War two distinct groups of people lived in the former Colonies as memorialized in the Treaty of Paris 1783, Article III: the “free sovereign and independent people of the United States” and the “inhabitants”. The “inhabitants” were and are --from the perspective of the “free sovereign and independent people”—British Loyalists and subjects of the Crown permitted to co-habit our land via Treaty of Peace.
At the end of the American Civil War, President Andrew Johnson declared peace on the land via three separate proclamations establishing an undisputed Treaty of Peace and commercial contract obligation honoring the fact that the “free sovereign and independent people of the United States” were at peace and we have remained so ever since. No such peace was ever declared for the “inhabitants” and no Peace Treaty in their behalf was ever signed, with the result that they have been at constant war since 1860.
Ever since that time the “free sovereign and independent people of the United States” have been non-combatants and Protected Persons recognized and honored as such successively by the Lieber Code and most recently by the Geneva Convention Protocols of 1949.
In 1868, the United States Congress operating as the government of the District of Columbia established its own constitution as an incorporated municipal government and established a new municipal citizenship for the subjects of the British Crown called “United States citizenship”. For its own purposes and its own administration only, the words “state” “State” and “United States” were formally redefined to mean “District of Columbia Municipal Corporation” and the word “person” was redefined to mean “corporation”.
This is a matter of urgent importance. It concerns either mistaken identity or identity theft, depending upon each man’s estimate of the situation.
Very briefly: at the end of the American Revolutionary War two distinct groups of people lived in the former Colonies as memorialized in the Treaty of Paris 1783, Article III: the “free sovereign and independent people of the United States” and the “inhabitants”. The “inhabitants” were and are --from the perspective of the “free sovereign and independent people”—British Loyalists and subjects of the Crown permitted to co-habit our land via Treaty of Peace.
At the end of the American Civil War, President Andrew Johnson declared peace on the land via three separate proclamations establishing an undisputed Treaty of Peace and commercial contract obligation honoring the fact that the “free sovereign and independent people of the United States” were at peace and we have remained so ever since. No such peace was ever declared for the “inhabitants” and no Peace Treaty in their behalf was ever signed, with the result that they have been at constant war since 1860.
Ever since that time the “free sovereign and independent people of the United States” have been non-combatants and Protected Persons recognized and honored as such successively by the Lieber Code and most recently by the Geneva Convention Protocols of 1949.
In 1868, the United States Congress operating as the government of the District of Columbia established its own constitution as an incorporated municipal government and established a new municipal citizenship for the subjects of the British Crown called “United States citizenship”. For its own purposes and its own administration only, the words “state” “State” and “United States” were formally redefined to mean “District of Columbia Municipal Corporation” and the word “person” was redefined to mean “corporation”.