From what I've seen, one can legally change their status from citizen to non-citizen national by filing the appropriate documents. I still need to read through the tax codes though, because I'm not sure if being non-citizen national doesn't have additional clauses appended. But it really does seem like this completely removed the onus of income tax.
However, in the process of becoming a non-citizen national, one loses the ability to participate in elections. If one feels the elections don't matter, there may be no downside to doing this. Of course, one would also think the plantation owners are devious enough to stage multiple events of voter fraud and election theft to keep the appearance that the popular vote matters.
I've wondered if you would lose your right to buy a firearm. I believe the questionnaire ask if you're a US citizen. Filing that from with a falsehood is what hemmed up Hunter Biden. Be very careful treading that ground
That is an excellent point, and it may not stop there. I need to look at the exact wording of the constitution and amendments to see if non-citizen nationals can even claim constitutional rights, and if they can, are there any breaks on new strictures that can be introduced for non-citizens.
This is definitely not the sort of change one should leap at without looking well.
Even non citizens have to get a tax ID number. It's how illegals pay taxes to bolster their citizenship application and prove they've been in the states for x years and paying into the system and not mooching off it.
Not the right path at all. u/Jalapeno_gringo, it's appropriate to look up the definition of "U.S. citizen" for the purposes of the form that requests it, but this is not the nexus by which an information return declares money to be "income"; see my other comments. Those who are waving the "noncitizen" flag are muddying the waters, typically self-deceived, and have no evidence or provable victories. It's true that being a sovereign citizen, one who authorized the state government that authorized the federal government, has certain noblesse oblige associated, but declaring oneself a noncitizen is flat abrogation of both the privilege and the responsibility.
From what I've seen, one can legally change their status from citizen to non-citizen national by filing the appropriate documents. I still need to read through the tax codes though, because I'm not sure if being non-citizen national doesn't have additional clauses appended. But it really does seem like this completely removed the onus of income tax.
However, in the process of becoming a non-citizen national, one loses the ability to participate in elections. If one feels the elections don't matter, there may be no downside to doing this. Of course, one would also think the plantation owners are devious enough to stage multiple events of voter fraud and election theft to keep the appearance that the popular vote matters.
I've wondered if you would lose your right to buy a firearm. I believe the questionnaire ask if you're a US citizen. Filing that from with a falsehood is what hemmed up Hunter Biden. Be very careful treading that ground
That is an excellent point, and it may not stop there. I need to look at the exact wording of the constitution and amendments to see if non-citizen nationals can even claim constitutional rights, and if they can, are there any breaks on new strictures that can be introduced for non-citizens.
This is definitely not the sort of change one should leap at without looking well.
I don't think I would take that leap at all.
Even non citizens have to get a tax ID number. It's how illegals pay taxes to bolster their citizenship application and prove they've been in the states for x years and paying into the system and not mooching off it.
Not the right path at all. u/Jalapeno_gringo, it's appropriate to look up the definition of "U.S. citizen" for the purposes of the form that requests it, but this is not the nexus by which an information return declares money to be "income"; see my other comments. Those who are waving the "noncitizen" flag are muddying the waters, typically self-deceived, and have no evidence or provable victories. It's true that being a sovereign citizen, one who authorized the state government that authorized the federal government, has certain noblesse oblige associated, but declaring oneself a noncitizen is flat abrogation of both the privilege and the responsibility.