Okay, here is the corrected and divided version of the text: Okay, piscina salon family. I want to go over a topic today that I talk about all the time to people, and it seems no one gets what I'm talking about. Basically, it's corporate expatriation. A lot of people get the concept of expatriation but don't understand that you can expect from the municipal corporation without being expatriated from the land, basically taking you out of the fourteenth amendment citizen status. You know, because the corporate or municipal citizen is the straw man, but we're actually the nobles, the moors, the people of the Republic. I don't think I can explain this any better without the facts. So what I've decided to do is basically show off a little bit of my own paperwork. This is just one of the many sections that's in my document, the Declaration of Independence administration. I have videos on this, kind of going into the topic a little bit. I know most people don't get it or probably even realize how deep it goes. So really, the best thing I could do right now is just read you directly from the documentation. I'm not even going into everything word-for-word, alright. But what I do want to point out is they have multiple meanings for the United States, and this is all in case law. Everything that I'm gonna state is case law. I'm gonna read you a little bit of it, okay? Almost a century ago, Congress declared that the right of expatriation, including expatriation from the District of Columbia or the U.S. Inc., the corporation, is a natural inherent right of the people, indispensable to the enjoyment of the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and decreed that any declaration,...