View Full Version : Surname is Death
palani
22nd February 2013, 11:14 AM
From 'A Treatise on the Law Concerning Names'
http://i48.tinypic.com/wrnqis.jpg
Surnames were conferred after death. Commerce is death. People who are dead have surnames. People who engage in commerce are dead.
midnight rambler
22nd February 2013, 11:19 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ou25IDw-Y34
Glass
24th February 2013, 08:06 PM
Its interesting. I've been watching some stuff from Bill Turner of Kiwi origins. I think he's on about par where we are on knowledge given the stuff he has put out there is a couple years old now. I thought I posted some Bill Turner stuff but I can't find it ATM.
He came to that exact conclusion. That a Birth certificate is not issued to a living baby. It's issued to a dead baby. The Informant is telling them that someone was born but now they are dead. This is then how they grab control of the wealth of the individual. They claim, on paper that they are dead. Under maritime law a man is lost (at sea) after 7 years. Once those years have elapsed the estate is vested to a trustee, the government who administer it until someone turns up to claim it.
I wonder what it would signify (on paper) if a birth certificate is endorsed and sent to them. Would it signify the individual is not dead at sea and the trust could be vested to another i.e. the Heir.
Thats assuming there is a trust. There doens't appear to be much outright information that supports this.
This concept could, may, might also be supported by biblical stories. Being Dead, being redeemed in 3 days. Being cast into the land of the dead? Being in Hell. Living as a civil (dead) person and not as a Man. Those kinds of things.
Son-of-Liberty
25th February 2013, 06:48 AM
Up here in Canada the letter that they sent with the birth certificate used to say not to use the BC as identification. It no longer says that though. But it is a clue.
govcheetos
25th February 2013, 12:39 PM
Up here in Canada the letter that they sent with the birth certificate used to say not to use the BC as identification. It no longer says that though. But it is a clue.
Same as with social security cards.
palani
5th March 2013, 02:45 PM
From 'A History of Feudalism, British and Continental' by Andrew Bell
http://i50.tinypic.com/168e9fq.jpg
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