In the United States of America the only \real\ confusion is the portability of citizenship.
One is always a citizen of the Unites States and can be a resident of any State.
One should \never\ consider his/herself as a “citizen” of a sovereign State.
I am a citizen of the US (passport proof!) and a resident of Michigan (property ownership proof).
I have always been a citizen of the US but also resident (property proof) of 6 States in my lifetime.
If I travel to another State, I am still a citizen of the US but NOT a citizen of that State NOR am I a resident unless I obtain property proof of residency.
If you read the article, you won’t have to ask...
https://nypost.com/2022/03/26/longtime-nfl-official-wayne-mackie-dead-at-62/
Yep!
I saw somewhere someone said paying taxes is like a membership fee to the greatest country on the planet. It makes it easier to swallow I guess.
As far as state taxes mine will go to zero when I move to NH and my property taxes will go down by $2k a year from what I pay in MA. Believe it. Or not. (NH property taxes can be high)
Right now my property tax bill is around $13k a year. $5k in MA, $5k in MD and $3k in NH. I’m going to sell the MD property to build the house in NH then sell the house in MA. My poperty tax bill will go from $13k to 3k a year.
Being a land baron has it’s down side.
-SB
Exactly, the sovereign citizen stuff just won’t die.