Topic: Bank of America Freezes Gun Company's Customer Depo | |
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Edited by
Jeanniebean
on
Mon 01/14/13 10:01 PM
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If you are a registered corporation or have a registered state business name and a tax I.D. # you can open an account in the name of your business. In reality the SSN is a tax I.D. #. The IRS must have that number for you to pay your taxes.
After 9-11, the Patriot act added a lot of other rules and regulations that tightens the big brother controls even more. |
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Edited by
JustDukkyMkII
on
Mon 01/14/13 11:24 PM
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Is that the same BoA that gives home loans here in the US to Illegals? The same one that will open checking and debit accounts without the person having to provide an SSN? If the banking system there is similar to Canada's (and I'm sure it is), a SSN would not be required for any non-interest-bearing account. You could be Mao-Tse-Tung with no papers and open an account like that at any bank in the world I'm sure. For the home loans, you could have been Rin Tin Tin and gotten one of those loans with your paw print. My bank requires a SS # to have an account. So people who have never applied for an SSN are not allowed to have bank accounts in the US? That alone is a violation of their human rights on the part of the bank and therefore unlawful under international law. If an SSN is required, the potential depositor should then order the federal government to give him one (He should NOT have to apply for it) or show lawful cause why they should not. Here you are assigned a SSN when you are born. The only way to avoid it is to be born at home and not tell anyone. For me, I had to get one in order to get a job. I don't know what you mean by "apply" for one. You just prove who you are, and they give you a number. All employers insist on having your SSN. It is not really a bank account that you can access. In reality, it is a way to identify you. I wasn't aware of that. I think they do that in Canada now too (give people one as infants)...That's actally great because you don't have to apply for it...It is therefore not contractual in nature. That's really a blessing because you are under no obligations with it. When I was young, I had to apply for one (a "SIN" in Canada)...It was a lot of years before I figured out it was an unconscionable* contract and rescinded it. *(unconscionable because of the unprovable fraud involved wherein the government always had plausible deniability) |
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