Confederation
The Confederation – explained
For five years from 1776 to 1781 the States functioned with just these two branches of government:
- national – the Union States, dba “the” United States on homeland soil jurisdiction.
- Federation – dba The United States of America in the international Land, sea + air jurisdictions.
In January 1781 the “states” were still fighting the American Revolutionary War (1775 – 1783) against Britain (a corporation).
Note: England is the actual tangible country, whereas corporations are made up of the mind.
For the Officers working in The United States of America the workload was overwhelming.
Officers, like Ben Franklin, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, were kept busy with international diplomacy, the American Revolutionary War, and the many jobs back home like producing and paying for gunpowder, etc.
Therefore, each State chartered a new entity called a “state of state” organization which formed the third element of our American Government… the “Confederation”.
A way to remember this is that a Con-federation acts upon pre-established con-tracts.
Contracts are originally a corporation creation, and since our Confederation works in the Municipal air jurisdiction, they can also create contracts.
The burden of conducting Global commercial business was lifted off of the Federation and shifted onto the Confederation to conduct International commercial (Global) business for the States under the dba name “States of America“.
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