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Here is a history of what is really going on:

26 The funds for social security, welfare, housing, disaster relief, and now terrorist attack relief, come from the foreign authorities

27 who loan us the national debt. These funds are not appropriated by Congress, but by treaties and trusts administered by the

28 President. In 1933, the U.S. government was threatened by financial emergencies that threatened legitimate constitutional

29 duties. Instead of resorting to direct taxes to collect funds, as was allowed by the Constitution, the government went bankrupt.

30 When the government declared bankruptcy in 1933, it was put under the control of a receivership governed by its creditors.

31 The government provided a (still ongoing) public emergency to administer foreign funds borrowed from the receivership.

32 The U.S. has a duty to secure the assets and income of the federal government as collateral for its creditors. Federal lands

33 were already mortgaged, so the federal government had to secure more collateral as surety on the country’s debts. The only

34 assets remaining were the labor of federal people. The U.S. government now uses the labor of its numbered people to secure

35 its debts. To secure the pledge to the creditors, the U.S. has a duty to manage and protect these assets, keep them healthy,

36 and provide for their welfare and enforce their obligations.