The SF-181 form: indigenous status correction
Aaron McBride, a.k.a. ATHUG (the rap god), put you on to this indigenous status correction.
The SF-181 form.
The SF-181 form.
Changing your status correction and why.
What is the reason?
Putting you on status correction, non-citizen.
First off, black and white is not a color.
It’s not a color.
It’s a status.
It’s not a nationality.
In order to gain your rights, you have to correct your status.
Status correction, non-citizen national.
A non-citizen national is the same thing as a U.S. citizen.
One is rooted in nationality and allegiance, and the other is fourth amendment statutory status tied to the federal benefits, obligations, and political subjection.
U.S. citizen, fourth amendment, a political status created by statute, function as federal and municipal person subject to federal privileges and liabilities, operates inside the administrative system.
Non-citizen national, national first, political status second, owes alliance, not subjection, not classified as fourth amendment statutory person, moves under nationality, not federal franchise.
This is why the status correction matters.
Courts, agencies, and systems move and pursue status.
If you do not define it, they will.
This ain’t theory.
This is paperwork.
Boss up.
King up.
God up.
Go get the albums right now.
I’m sturdy.
What’s the word?
Drop those singles.
Let me know what y’all think.
You already know what it is.
Putting you on the morning game.
This is life-changing.
Transformation.
Hey, dawg.
God of the gods.
Also, we’re gonna have a download link to where we can actually help you and guide you if you need help, for one-on-one counseling to understanding this and finishing this up. If you need help, it’s available for a small donation of $49.99.