Executor, Trustee, or Beneficiary? Know Your Role
Following on from our last blog about the Strawman — your legal fiction — it’s time to look deeper into the hidden structure that controls your interaction with that entity: the Trust.
Whether you’ve realised it or not, you are already part of a trust framework. And within that framework, there are three essential roles: the Executor, the Trustee, and the Beneficiary.
π The Basics of Trust Law
A trust is a legal structure with three core parties:
- Executor (or Grantor): The one who creates or authorises the trust
- Trustee: The one who manages the assets and obligations
- Beneficiary: The one who receives the benefit
This structure isn't just theoretical — it's how governments and financial systems classify you, based on the legal fiction tied to your name.
π¨ The Role You Were Assigned Without Consent
When your birth was registered, a trust was created. The state assumed the role of Executor. You, unknowingly, were made the Trustee — responsible for all the liabilities, debts, and obligations of the legal fiction.
Meanwhile, the state or government institutions act as the Beneficiary, enjoying the privileges, fees, taxes, and authority generated by the trust.
Trustee = Burden bearer. Executor = Decision maker. Beneficiary = Receiver of benefit.
π‘ Reclaiming the Executor Role
When you declare yourself as Executor of your legal person (the Strawman), you reverse the presumption. You tell the system: "I’m not the vessel — I’m the authority."
This is done through:
- Correct use of language in correspondence
- Non-consent and correction of status
- Understanding how trust law is applied to your commercial identity
In courtrooms, in banks, and on official documents — the system looks for the signature of the Trustee. If you don’t correct the presumption, that’s the role you fill by default.
π Language Matters
Have you ever signed something “on behalf of” your ALL CAPS NAME? That’s you, the living being, acting as Trustee for the Strawman.
When you claim the Executor role, you step into your rightful position: above the fiction, not beneath it.
Reclaiming this role is not rebellion — it’s remembrance. You’re not creating something new. You’re remembering who you were before the trust was imposed upon you.
π Take Control of the Trust
In future blogs, we’ll explore how to issue notices, correct assumptions, and operate as a private living being with full authority.
But first, make sure you truly understand the language of this world. That’s why I created the Legal Fictions Glossary — your key to decoding the system’s script.
π Download the free Glossary here
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