On September 17, 1787 the Constitution for the United States of America was adopted by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and ratified by conventions in each U.S. state in the name of “The People.” By 1871 that had all changed. On 21 Feb. 1871 the Forty-First Congress passed “An Act to provide a Government for the District of Columbia,” or Act of 1871, Section 34, Session III, chapters 61 and 62. With no Constitutional authority to do so, this Congress had formed the UNITED STATES Corporation (US Inc.) and passed the Act of 1871, an amended version of the original 1788 organic Constitution, which ruled such was in the possession of the King of England. In other words, US Inc. paid taxes to the King of England. The privately owned by bankers and the King of England US Inc. Corporation was the Supreme Court-confirmed Federal Zoned District of Columbia known as Washington DC. This US Inc. had been created as a separate form of government for the District of Columbia, which was a ten mile square parcel of land. Such was designated to be written in all capitol letters as the UNITED STATES and the CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES Legally the UNITED STATES that formed in 1871 only had control over the District of Columbia and territories it purchased: Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virginia Islands. The UNITED STATES US Corporation (originally called the District of Columbia, or Washington DC) did not affect or have control over the 50 sovereign states that were protected from the federal government according to the US Constitution for the United States adopted in 1788.
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