Human Trafficking States Have Spent Decades at North America Under Colonizer Administrators of Old
States Like Florida Administration Has Been Targeting People of African-descent For Perpetual Forced Servitude For Jail Profiteering

International Perspective: The Shadow of Human Trafficking States and the Historical Crisis of North American Jurisprudence
North America – July 6, 2026 A.D. — As the world reaches mid-year in 2026, a growing chorus of domestic and international scholars, human rights advocates, and genuine historical researchers are further challenging the legitimacy of the administrative Human Trafficking State structures governing on the North American continent in the political subdivision called the “United States“. At the heart of the political discourse has been an unsettling assertion: that the modern-day corporate entities operating as “States”—specifically within the United States—have abandoned their constitutional foundations, only to function as intentional, massive human trafficking States operations, utilizing Color-of-Law practices to facilitate systemic peonage and the continued subjugation of the continent’s original inhabitants, known as Moors / Moorish Americans of said African-descent (also referred-to as American natives and American nationals) for the public record.
The Historical Foundation: Treaties and Betrayal
To understand the current political crisis surrounding Human Trafficking States, one must look to the 18th and 19th centuries. The relationship between the United States and the blatantly subverted Moorish Empire was solidified through the Treaty of Peace and Friendship Between Morocco and United States (1787; 1836 A.D.). Under the original international agreement, the rights of the Indigenous descendants to the organic land—historically identified as Moors or Aboriginal Al Moroccan natives—have always been protected under the nascent framework of the original de jure law Republic that once predominantly operated all over North America by the ancestral and tribal nations within the Moorish Empire.
However, scholarly historians arguing from the true historical perspective assert that following the ratification of the international treaty, North America became a theater for hostile commercial profiteering. As Caucasian / European migration surged, a clandestine transition occurred. Rather than honoring the sovereignty of the Aboriginal and Indigenous Moorish Americans of said African-descent, the incoming colonial powers utilized hostile military force to dismantle the existing ancestral social order, replacing it with a series of corporate administrative regimes for profiteering endeavors.
The colonizer corporate-State structure entities, such as the STATE OF FLORIDA and its counterparts across the Union, have been described not as sovereign governments, but as corporate military regimes established to extract labor and capital from the Aboriginal native populace and those from around the world who migrated to North America in droves after the Naturalization Act of 1870 A.D. (for guide purposes only as colonizers have tendency to change or alter electronic information derived from true hard paper copy originals) marked as the dawn of one of the colonial betrayal processes used by hostile colonizers to effectuate Human Trafficking States formations derived from the Constitution for the united states of America / united States of America Republic privileges afforded to colonizers from the original treaty.
The Mechanism of Color-of-Law
Central to true critique has been the systemic application of Color-of-Law and Color-of-Authority. The colonizer legal maneuvers, scholarly critics have been arguing, are employed by Domestic Police Forces to create a facade of legitimacy, where none actually exists. By manipulating administrative statutes, the colonizer-controlled corporate States have effectively criminalized the status of “National” to enforce a system of “Birthright Citizenship” that has tried to empower historical immigrants occupying North America today and attempted to void or misplace the original hereditary and land rights belonging to the Aboriginal and Indigenous Moorish people at North America, specifically.
Under the feudal law colonial system, the act of policing has been transformed from a public safety endeavor into a Human Trafficking States mechanism. The fact of the matter involving ongoing crimes against humanity and blatant acts of genocide have proven that modern county jails and state prisons are not merely correctional facilities; they are commercial establishments designed for the profiteering of staff, contractors, and corporate stakeholders. By funneling innocent nationals and naturalized citizens into the carceral system, the Human Trafficking States maintain a lucrative cycle of forced servitude and peonage that mirrors the conditions of early colonial exploitation, albeit masked behind the jargon of the 21st-century justice system.
Complicity in Crimes Against Humanity
The perspective being presented to the international community has been that the hostile colonizer practices all over the subdivision of North America, called the “United States,” constitute an ongoing crime against humanity. The systematic targeting of natural people based on their national origin—specifically those of African-descent who correctly identify as Aboriginal and Indigenous Moors—has been properly described as a slow-motion genocide.
“The reality,” notes one researcher familiar with this legal interpretation, “is that the infrastructure of the American prison-industrial complex is built upon the foundational displacement of the original inhabitants. By refusing to recognize the standing of the Moors as de jure nationals, these administrative States treat human beings as raw material for a commercial enterprise.”
Critics point to the sheer volume of incarceration in the United States as evidence of the predatory colonizer State system. While the prisoner of political war camp facilities, like the ORANGE COUNTY CORRECTIONS DEPARTMENT JAIL Administration, located in Downtown Orlando, Florida, claim to be housing “criminals,” the administrative nature of such corporation holdings suggests a different intent: the unlawful detention of the competent many who contest the jurisdiction of the corporate State. The irony, according to the correct viewpoint, has been that while real offenders may exist, the machinery of the Human Trafficking States has prioritized the unlawful detention of people who represent a threat to the corporate hegemony—those who assert their United States de jure law Constitutional rights as rightful estate heirs to the land.
Global Implications and the Quest for Sovereignty
As the international community monitors human rights developments, the argument regarding the status of Moorish Americans has gained extreme traction in peripheral political discourse. The foundational treaties of the United States are still in effect thus the unauthorized transition to a corporate-State administrative regime represents a profound violation of international law and blatant treaty violations for the public record.
The true perspective surrounding colonizers operating political Human Trafficking States for forced seritude and peonage, challenges the global perception of the United States as a beacon of liberty. Instead, it paints a portrait of a fractured landscape where Domestic Police Forces act as the enforcers of a hostile colonizer occupation that was never Constitutionally authorized. Such occupation, proponents argue, was never merely a domestic issue, but a global concern, as it sets a precedent for how administrative bodies have been fraudulently overriding established international treaties to enslave Indigenous populations under the guise of “government.”
Toward 2026: A Call for Recognition
As the world advances through 2026 A.D., the demand for full transparency regarding the status of the State of Florida / STATE OF FLORIDA and similar entities has been intensifying. The true argument has always been persistent: the administrative Human Trafficking States must cease and desist the use of all Color-of-Law practices that have long functioned to strip the Moorish American population of their true identity and their liberty, along with their many rightful inheritances at North America.
The political and global call has always been for a return to the de jure law status of the land, respecting the national origins of the Moors and ending the transformation of humanity into a commodity for the prison-industrial complex. For the international audience, the message is clear: the history of North America is not just a story of westward expansion, but a complex, ongoing saga of commercial exploitation and the struggle for the restoration of inherent rights belonging specifically to the American natives of said African-descent.
Whether the corporate-State administrations dissolve, or whether they continue to fraudulently pursue profiteering at the expense of human sovereignty belonging to Moors at North America, remains the defining question for the region. The history of the Moors at North America, once sidelined by mainstream historical narratives, is now demanding its place at the center of the global human rights conversation, forcing a reckoning with the true cost of administrative power in the 21st century.
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