Nelson
The Articles of confederation refers to us as free citizens and inhabitants.
State national and national came from there website of immigration, codes and
coopermoonshine website. I have a tendency to interchange the words hoping one
of them rings a bell. Of our status established in the Articles of
confederation constitution. Free national would be worthy of status also.
National refers to your country United States of America which has free states
in a social compact to fight and protect liberty. .
On Mar 31, 2021, 10:56 AM -0600, NELSON DICE <nelsondice@xxxxxxxx>, wrote:
Charley,
I am trying to get clear on your favored term for your status, "state
national".
How did u arrive at this declination?
i always look to perfect my understanding to live peacefully and assert full
rights.
currently, i prefer "foreign sovereign" but am always looking to improve or
add.
thanks
nelson
NATIONAL or PUBLIC DOMAIN. All the property which belongs to the state is
comprehended under the name of national or public domain.
2. Care must be taken not to confound the public or national domain, with the
national finances, or the public revenue, as taxes, imposts, contributions,
duties, and the like, which are not considered as property, and are
essentially attached to the sovereignty. Vide Domain; Eminent Domain.
https://constitution.org/1-Constitution/bouv/bouvier_n.htm
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 1856 Edition - Letter N
Bouvier's Law Dictionary 1856 Edition. N. NAIL, A measure of length, equal to
two inches and a quarter. Vide Measure. NAKED. This word is used in a
metaphorical sense to denote that a thing is not complete, and for want of
some quality it is either without power, or it possesses a limited power.
constitution.org
BLACKS 4th
NATIONAL. Pertaining or relating to a nation as a whole; commonly applied in
American law to institutions, laws, or affairs of the United States or its
government, as opposed to those of the several states. The term "national"
as used in the phrase "national of the United States" is broader than the
term "citizen". Brassert v. Biddle, D.C.Conn., 59 F.Supp. 457, 462.
https://16679a2f-510f-4703-9156-f2a91f18c64c.filesusr.com/ugd/fadef6_56d5446619664b228f2b7b9b450998d7.pdf