"“accidentally agreed” to be ruled, by getting a Social Security Number, or a driver’s license, or using Federal Reserve Notes, or calling yourself a “citizen,” etc. But no, you can’t “accidentally” become contractually bound by something that someone else arbitrarily declares “counts” as agreeing to something. If you doubt it, then I hereby declare that by wearing socks last week, you accidentally agreed to give me half your money. So hand it over!)"
I know that it's great to first extract people from Statist mindset, but it would also be great to give details for opting-out.
If you have a bank account, while you could argue that it was not transparent and written in legal-ese, a language you cannot understand, and therefore not a valid agreement. It does bind you to the IRS statutes.
When people get passports, they do commit loyalty to the State.
A Drivers License is permission you asked for from the State.
I'm not agreeing that these things are honorable, just that it would be cool if you would delve deeper the details.
RE: The "Social Contract" Excuse