Although a birth certificate may lack "monetary value", it likely has value underlying it or associated with it. Consider that a blank check has no monetary value either. The birth certificate and the entry associated with it are highly significant. The number on the back of a social security card (called a 'control number') or a birth certificate is uniquely identifies that instance of printing on a birth certificate blank (typically on exchequer paper or bank note paper)--as in it uniquely identifies that certificate blank. Vick Beck and his old talk show guests (pre 2009) are probably the only "public legal theorists" to have gotten close to revealing what a "birth certificate" is.There is no monetary value associated with birth certificates.....
U.S. subjects != the People. Canadian subjects != the Crown. See: odious debt; The Concept of Odious Debt In International Public Law (UN/UNCTAD)"Canadian [or U.S.] citizens do not have any personal property rights or obligations with respect to the public debt."
#1 The sovereignty transferred to the people of North Carolina;State v Manuel (State v. Manuel, North Carolina, Vol. 20, Page 121 (1838)): The sovereignty has been transferred from one man to the collective body of the people - and he who before was a "subject of the king" is now "a citizen of the State."
#2 Former British subjects become subjects of the State of North Carolina but not of the United States.
(Note: the Crown and the Monarchy are not the same.)
For reasons withheld I am convinced of lack of requirement or need for any person named on a birth certificate or on a social security card to have any CUSIP # even though the typical registered corporation might have such a requirement with respect to SEC regulations.CUSIP#s...