Saturday 3 March 2012

THE LAW OF EASEMENT [for Wendy, Part Two]


A large part of the video with which we began this series deals with driving without ownership papers, insurance papers or driver’s licence.  Some related material appears here:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeXNntuqwNI&feature=related and
This subject comes under the fourth of the Five Projections of Fryslan Democracy.  Each of the Five Projections consists of a whole body of culture of the Free World Order.  The name of each projection is a physical place/location within each Free World community, (so that you are constantly reminded of it whenever you see the physical representation) but it also a) relates to one of the five primary human senses [motl#9], b) contains its opposing but affinitive Absorption [previous comment on this is at the following link, but I need to expand on ying-yang, Churchward’s translation of the sciences of Mu, and the experiences of American astronauts which proved it 40 years later http://nebirucrossing.blogspot.com/2011/04/five-absorptions-of-habbukkuk.html ] and c) is formulated as two Common Law assertions, one stated negatively and one stated positively.  The two Common Law assertions of the 4th Projection, which is known as The King’s [motl#10]
High Way
, are:
Negative noun:  Never be an obstruction.
Positive verb:  Possess your easement.

These two alternative statements of the same concept contain everything you need to know to be a good driver.  But they are far more than that:  like all Common Law, they are common sense guidelines for the whole of life, including the spiritual [as above, so below; as below, so above].

In the videos before us, it is the positive verb form of the statement that is under discussion:  possess your easement.  An easement is a right of way, which means an entitlement to make use of property which does not belong to you personally.  The public roads [known as the King’s High Way to distinguish them from private roads which are known as the Low Way] are held in common, i.e., owned by everyone in general but no-one in particular.  The Common Law right to “unhindered and unencumbered walk upon, ride upon, or travel in a conveyance upon, the King’s
High Way
” is one of the sub-categories of the Law of Easement.

A quick note regarding the historical context of Easement:  in the Old Testament, the mandate of the three Freemen prophets [Hosea, Jeremiah, and Habakkuk] overlapped seven generations of their peers.  Their failed mission was to restore the pre-Mosaic rituals which carried the memory of the Common Law jurisprudence of Atlantis and Lemuria [see related comment in yesterday’s post].  Those rituals had been restored in Egypt at Giza and Heliopolis and maintained for many generations.  The historic Moses [Thoth-Moses, or Tutmosis, see http://nebirucrossing.blogspot.com/2011/03/review-moses-legacy-phillips.html ] was High Priest at Heliopolis for 20 years before his younger half-brother [this was the Pharaoh who took the throne that the historic Moses had been entitled to by birth, but was subsequently disqualified from because he had not married his half-sister] chased him out of Egypt to the Edom wilderness where he formulated an evil twin version of the rituals.  The biblical books authored by the three Freemen prophets are the only ones which make specific reference to the Common Law of Atlantis [in chronological order of their appearance, these are:  Hosea, Deuteronomy, Jeremiah, Lamentations, and Habakkuk.  There are a few secondary references in the Gospels where Jesus quotes from these books].  In his Book of Deuteronomy, Jeremiah refers to the Law of Easement 35 times.

Let’s examine an example of Easement at work in a non-driving context.  When downtown Toronto’s giant showcase retail complex, The Eaton Centre, was in the planning stages [long before Walmart put Eatons and all other Canadian-owned retail giants out of business], the developer had purchased what was then three city blocks of run-down buildings.  Except for one small parcel of land smack-dab in the middle of the redevelopment – the land occupied by the Church of the Holy Trinity.  That property can never be sold because when it was donated by the Gooderham family (same family that a century later provided Al Capone with booze and acted as private banker to him, storing his money in huge vaults in the Gooderham [flatiron] Building, and keeping the money when he was arrested), the grant specified that it could not be sold and must maintain a church until the Second Coming.  The church sued to stop the development on two counts of Easement.  When you can prove that you have habitually done something, you have the right to continue doing it; that is Easement.  Holy Trinity claimed Easement on two counts:  the worshipping congregation had habitually received sunlight through its stained glass windows, therefore had a Right of Easement to continue receiving sunlight, and the developer could not erect the proposed office towers in a way that would block the sunshine.  Secondly, pedestrian entrance to the church had habitually been along a private laneway to the east side of the church (not owned by the church, and now owned by the developer); therefore a Right of Easement for pedestrian access from that direction was established.  The church won its case, and delayed construction by six years while the architects completely redesigned the project.  The main lobby of the Eaton Centre now stretches along the old laneway directly from
Yonge Street
to the east entrance of the church, and the three office towers were moved from their original intended location to the corners of the complex so that they never cast a shadow upon the church.  That is Easement at work.


The whole concept of homesteading or squatting which built western Canada is based on the Law of Easement.  Once you had harvested a crop, each year for six years, from the land you had tilled, Easement entitled you to become the owner of the land.

But there is an evil-twin version of Easement which is claimed to justify general taxation.  An ancient King of France was petitioned by a community to build a public road for them. He agreed, provided they pay a Road Tax to cover construction costs.  The community agreed to pay the tax.  After they had paid the tax for three years, the King claimed Easement to level the Road Tax on everyone in the kingdom.  If you closely examine the history of taxation over the last millennium, you find that all illegal taxation has been justified by easement.  In Canada, when the Temporary Income Tax Act 1919 expired, the Government sent out the tax forms anyways, and most people paid.  Three years later, guess what?  By Easement, income tax is permanent!

I have more on the subject, but that’s enough for today.

1 comment:

  1. TY You again I am understanding much more now ty:)

    ReplyDelete