
Australia is presented as a free and independent nation. The story is repeated in schools, parliaments, and media. We are told that Federation in 1901 created a sovereign country, that the Constitution protects liberty, and that politicians serve the people. But when you look closely, the picture changes. Behind the symbols lies a corporate structure. Australia is not what it appears to be. It is a business.
The Commonwealth Corporation takes readers on a detailed journey through this hidden system. It shows how the Crown functions as a corporate entity, how parliaments act as boards of directors, how courts process accounts rather than deliver justice, and how councils and the ATO issue invoices under Australian Business Numbers. It reveals how men and women are converted into corporate Strawmen through birth certificates and identification documents, and how every demand for rates, fines, and taxes depends on consent, often assumed through silence.
Across twelve chapters, Roger Davies exposes the machinery of incorporation:
• How Federation joined six corporate colonies under the Crown rather than creating true nationhood
• Why the Royal Style and Titles Act of 1973 created a new corporate Crown without asking the people
• How parliaments, courts, councils, and police forces operate with ABNs, proving their commercial nature
• How statutes function as company policies that bind only those who consent
• Why courts require you to answer to the name in capital letters before they can proceed
• How rates, taxes, and fines are commercial invoices disguised as lawful orders
• How birth registration creates a Strawman that carries obligations, while the living man or woman remains free
• Why media and schools work to maintain belief in the system and ridicule dissent
• The steps Australians are taking to withdraw consent, give lawful notice, and stand as sovereign men and women
This book does not promote violence, rebellion, or anger. It calls for honour, calm, and lawful action. It explains how to ask questions, demand proof of claim, and rebut presumptions without hostility. It reminds readers that true sovereignty requires peace and personal responsibility.
The Commonwealth Corporation is written for Australians who sense that something is wrong with the system. It speaks to those who have questioned why government departments have ABNs, why courts enforce revenue rather than justice, and why they are treated as customers of a company rather than free men and women. It will confirm suspicions, fill in the missing pieces, and offer a path forward based on knowledge and honour.
Australia was never truly made sovereign at Federation. It was incorporated. Its Constitution is not a declaration of freedom but the charter of a corporation. Its parliaments are boards, its ministers executives, its people assets. This book will help you see that structure clearly and decide whether to continue serving as a citizen of a corporation or to stand as a sovereign man or woman.
The choice is yours.
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