Our Republcan Form of Government: Section 33 — The American Civil War from Anna Von Reitz
Section 33 — The American Civil War
From our discussions we have now fully realized that the
Constitutions and the Federal Government arising from these venerable
agreements only affected our country’s operations in the municipal
jurisdiction’s realm of commerce — that is, business conducted between two
fully incorporated, chartered legal fiction entities.
Adoption of the Federal, Territorial, and Municipal
Constitutions didn’t affect our soil jurisdiction estates, doing business as
The United States, nor did they impact our land jurisdiction States doing
business as The United States of America, but they did change
the operations of the States of America, a union of commercial corporations
chartered by the States.
The impact of the Constitutions on the States of America and
on the member commercial corporations doing business under names styled like
this: The State of Pennsylvania — was dramatic.
The most important immediate change was that control of our
fledgling Navy and our Naval operations was ceded to the British King, who was
obligated to function as our Trustee on the High Seas and Inland Waterways, and
to protect our private and international and commercial interests in those
venues.
Control of our international trade policy was also given
away to the King. At least in the realm of commerce, we traded our freedom for
safety, though it is doubtful that many Americans realized this at the time.
The overall result of adopting the Constitutions was to split up the functions originally taken care of by the States of America, and assign some of them to foreign governments to take care of “for” us.
This power-sharing concession was pre-destined by the Treaties and earlier agreements that allowed for the end of The Revolutionary War. In other words, these concessions and promises to share power with the British King and the Holy Roman Empire were obligations our Forefathers accepted as part of the Peace Negotiations and the Constitutions that resulted — Federal, Territorial, and Municipal — were simply the instruments used to implement the pre-existing deal.
So, the States of America remained the fundamental Federal Service Provider as we came out of the Constitutional Convention, and as of 1787, The Constitution for the united States of America, emerged as “the Federal Constitution”. That is, this is the Constitution creating the Federal Branch of the Federal Government.
Though its powers and turf were battered and beaten in this process. the States of America was still a very potent force, with responsibility for the nation’s money and many other key services.
The loss of control of the Naval Powers and the loss of control of our international trade policy was grievous, but was deemed necessary at the time: coming out of the Revolution we had a huge commercial fleet, but almost no Navy. We had lots of raw materials to ship to eager markets in Europe and a need to get paid for them, but our unprotected commercial fleet was being decimated by privateers.
Most of the American-based private commercial fleet belonged to two groups — British American former colonists sailing out of Rhode Island and Massachusetts and Virginia, and Dutch New York and Southern interests derived from the “disappeared” Dutch East India fleet
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 122 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
that mysteriously
vanished circa 1702 and wound up in New York and the Pacific. They were the
primary movers insisting on the surrender of our Naval Powers so that they
could continue their commercial shipments unmolested.
The rest of the people were tired of war and accepted the
new inroads against our sovereignty rather than continue to fight and starve.
Still, for many, these losses remained a sore point and the
adoption of the Constitutions was by no means unopposed — nor, were the losses
unforgotten.
As the British Parliament began to impose ever-more
disadvantageous trade policies on the American Federal States of States — all
commercial corporations with their own axes to grind, tempers flared.
Malfeasance by British Merchant Marine Officers known as Bar
Attorneys led to the War of 1812, which was a push-back against unequal trade
policies and unfair tariffs and market rigging.
In 1819, the States of America responded by toughening
already existing constitutional provisions against conflicts of interest and
“buying of loyalty” by foreign powers bestowing foreign “Titles of Nobility” on
Americans. This was applied to the practice of bestowing the title “Esquire” on
American Bar Attorneys.
Frustrated by our resistance to their interference and
manipulation of our commercial interests to our own detriment, the British
Monarch and the then-Pope signed a clandestine treaty known as The Secret
Treaty of Verona, in 1822, in which they agreed that our American system of government
was intrinsically opposed to both feudal monarchies and papal authority.
In gross Breach of Trust they agreed to secretively
undermine our government — a course of action which they have pursued ever
since and which has finally led to the present circumstance.
This is the Big Picture, but to further understand, we must
necessarily revisit what has euphemistically been called “The American Civil
War”.
First one must ask — what is a “Civil” War as opposed to any
other kind of war?
Civil = City = Municipal = Global Commercial Jurisdiction =
war between Persons, not People = war between commercial corporations.
This “War” called “The American Civil War” was not properly
termed a war, but was instead a “Commercial Conflict” like the Vietnam
Conflict, fought by foreign mercenaries on our shores, and by employees and
volunteers backing the various Federal State of State commercial corporations.
Those Federal States of States that remained loyal to the
original Confederation doing business as the States of America represented the
North and were called “Union” troops. Many Americans even at the time mistook
which “Union” they were fighting for and in what context.
The Federal States of States that broke away from the
original Confederation and formed their own version doing business as The
Confederate States of America, represented the Southern State’s commercial
corporations, and their troops were called “Confederates” as a result.
The King of England gleefully funded both sides of the
conflict and the separate international City State of Westminster lost no time
setting up effective blockades and conscription services and issued privateer
licenses against all our shipping North and South.
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 123 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
From the standpoint
of the Monarchists and the Holy Roman Empire, the object of the American Civil
War was to defeat the South and take Southern Cotton out of the European
markets, permanently end the cost saving advantages that slavery provided the
Southern Plantations, and to reduce the Northern States of States to a
condition of bankruptcy. They succeeded in all respects.
And Americans and America paid for it all.
You must remember what we are talking about — a commercial
“war” for markets and profits, waged by commercial corporations that are
essentially no different than any other commercial corporation except that they
are chartered directly by actual States instead of being chartered secondhand
by States of States.
The British and French-backed Northern States of States
resented slavery for profit and market reasons, so they encouraged the
Abolitionists. Private slavery was already out of fashion in Europe and of no
great economic consequence to their domestic markets — except that it gave the
American Southern States of States a cost advantage in the marketplace, and
they competed against British and French cotton plantations established
elsewhere in the world.
The British and Holy Roman Empire backed Southern States of
States favored slavery for profit and market reasons, so they encouraged the
Pro-Slavery Plantation owners — many of which produced products other than
cotton. Remember that the addictive properties of high nicotine tobacco were
just beginning to be exploited as a de facto drug trade prior to the Civil War,
and the squabble over cotton production interfered with tobacco, sugar, rum, molasses,
and many other products.
Last but not least, this commercial “war” was a bonanza for
the railroads, the arms manufacturers, and the U.S. Armed Forces, especially
the British-controlled Navy, which received privateer kickbacks. There had
never been a better opportunity for professional soldiers in this country and
men like Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman made the most of it.
So it is not a pretty picture, but it is an accurate one.
The members of the original Confederation of Federal States of States doing
business as the States of America — all of them commercial corporations
chartered by their States, all of them assigned service contracts under The
Constitution for the united States of America — took the European bait and went
to war with each other.
By 1863, the Northern States of States were bankrupt. By
1865, the Southern States were in ruins and the Southern States of States gave
up the fight.
Since it was not an actual war according to the definition
of “war”, there was never any Declaration of War issued by any Congress related
to the American Civil War, nor was the surrender of Lee’s Army at Appomattox a
peace treaty. The corporations and those backing them simply decided to stop
fighting and went home, leaving the Federal Government in chaos that has
persisted and been capitalized upon until this day.
The Federal States of States are separate entities though
they were all chartered by the actual States. The Confederation of States
founded in 1781 was in ruins. It would require a concerted effort to
“Reconstruct” the Federal States of States and form new commercial corporations
to service their obligations under The Constitution for the united States of
America.
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 124 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
That job of
reconstruction of the Federal States of States has never been accomplished, and
it can only be done by the actual States and People.
So the People must assemble and the States must assemble and
they have to take care of long- overdue business. As we shall see, certain
parties who owed us better service left us unaware of this urgent necessity and
deliberately lulled us into the assumption that the Reconstruction Era was long
over, and that we had no work to do.
Until this long overdue process of reconstruction is
undertaken, the entire Federal Branch of the Federal Government is out of
commission, moth-balled, and the assets of the original Federal States of
States that came through the ruination and bankruptcies have been rolled into
“land trusts” — meaning that these trusts belong to the land jurisdiction
States and People.
The assets of The State of Maryland and The State of Maine
and The State of Pennsylvania...and so on, have been rolled into the Maryland
State (land trust), Maine State (land trust), Pennsylvania State (land
trust)....
The actual States and People of this country are being
summoned to take action in their own behalf and to reconstruct their Federal
States of States and to restore the Federal Government they are owed — all of
it, not just the Territorial and Municipal bits.
Please bear in mind and be aware that your actual soil
jurisdiction states, dba The United States, and your land jurisdiction States,
dba The United States of America, and all their member republics and States,
have never been involved in any of this commercial uproar. Our only duty and
our only failure thus far is to recognize certain semantic deceits, to organize
ourselves into competent State Jural Assemblies, and to re-charter our Federal
States of States to provide the services owed to our States under The
Constitution for the united States of America.
—Posted: Friday, February 15, 2019
Updated: May 22, 2019 Table of Contents Page 125 of 209
The Jural Assembly Handbook By: Anna Von Reitz
Section 34 — Reconstruction: Your Mission
No comments:
Post a Comment