How to Use the Mailing Address
The address of your residence or your business has been usurped by the Federal Government as it is what is known as a military address. So, you can take steps to insure that you remain outside the matrix with respect to the address.
Address
Use ℅ in front of your street address. Fully spell abbreviations of any kind
State
Fully spell State abbreviations. For instance, NY becomes New York
Zip Code
Place brackets around your zip code [12345] or [12345-1234]
Rural Postal Address
You can revert back to the rural postal mailing address known as the Rural Free Delivery (RFD) address assigned and used by the United States Post Office. The aforementioned address is the address used prior to everything becoming standardized/militarized. There is a form the USPS has that can be filled in to change from your current military address to the RFD Address.
The Military address displayed on all of our state driver’s licenses is also on our State ID’s tying us to the legal fiction (or corporate citizen). However, on the Foreign National Drivers Licenses*, the military address (what we know of as our regular address) is not displayed. Rather, the private Rural Free Delivery (RFD) address provided on USPS.com is used instead. This aids in removing you from the government's jurisdiction.
Our normally used address, the military address, that we all use is not ours to keep, but rather is owned by the corporate government. Because they own it, they have jurisdiction over it and can take it away at anytime…which is why either the RFD address or the use of the words ‘Care Of' (or c/o) prior to your street address, fully spelling, not abbreviating, your state, and brackets around the zip code [12345] must be used. The 4 corner rule says that use of the brackets [12345] removes governmental ownership of the address.
To get your RFD address, go to USPS.COM, select 'Quick Tools' at the top, select 'Look Up a Zip Code', and select 'Find by Address'. Key in your address. Click ‘Find’. When your address displays, click the down arrow to the right of your address and your RFD will display. Yours may be different, but mine was a sequential combination of: Carrier Route - Delivery Point Code - eLot.
The above instructions will make sense when you type in your current address into the USPS site noted above.
*Foreign National Drivers License - issued by ANPC
State Abbreviations and Zip Codes
The Act of 1871 incorporated the United States and placed its location only within the 10 square mile boundary called the District of Columbia. But, over the years, as the government spread its wings throughout the Continental United States and began taking ownership of other lands which became known as its territories (U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and some minor outlying islands), its reach extended beyond the District of Columbia. Its reach now is the District of Columbia, the above countries and then military bases, federal buildings, and national parks. So, its expansion and ownership and control continued to grow.
But the corporate United States still did not have control of the people.
So, the United States Postal Service (USPS) developed the standardized state abbreviations and as of 1963, added zip codes. Otherwise, they claimed, the mail may not be delivered as hoped. By using these two standardized methods of delivering mail, we converted from the previously used rural address to the military-based delivery system which makes your address part of the federal government. By implementing the zip code system and getting those who live in the Continental United States to use it whenever using the USPS, the government has theoretically expanded its reach by folding your property into its ownership under the auspices of 'territories'.
In effect, we all live on government owned property whether it be at the state or federal level having started with the Certificate of Live Birth, all of the many license and registration contracts signed, tax forms, and finally the state abbreviations and zip codes.
To combat this, people who are aware of the above have taken steps to remove themselves from the matrix. Some people have:
Reverted back to using their Rural Free Address (RFD) which still exists on the USPS.com website. To get your RFD address, go to the aforementioned site, select Quick Tools at the top, select Look Up a Zip Code, and select Find by Address. Key in your address. Click ‘Find’. When your address displays, click the down arrow to the right of your address and your RFD will display. Yours may be different, but mine was a sequential combination of: Carrier Route - Delivery Point Code - eLot.
Continued to use the normal address, but add '℅' in front of the street address and brackets [12345-1234] around the zip code.
Changed their citizenship from U.S. Citizen to state National
Placed all possessions in a Trust
Changed the title on their property, after creating a Trust, to an Allodial Title (which prevents you from having to pay property taxes ever again).