The Sabaeans or Sabeans (Sabaean: ???, s¹bʾ; Arabic: ٱلسَّبَئِيُّوْن, as-Sabaʾiyyūn; Hebrew: סבאים) were an ancient people of South Arabia. They spoke the Sabaean language, one of the Old South Arabian languages.[2] They founded the kingdom of Sabaʾ (Arabic: سَـبَـأ),[3][4] which was believed to be the biblical land of Sheba[5][6][7] and “the oldest and most important of the South Arabian kingdoms”.[8]
Month: March 2021

Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction equates to ‘Right Words’; as Juris means ‘Right’ and Diction means ‘words’.
feint (n.)
1670s, “a false show, assumed appearance;” 1680s as “a pretended blow, movement made to deceive an opponent as to the object of an attack,” from French feinte “a feint, sham, fabrication, pretense,” abstract noun from Old French feint “false, deceitful; sham, artificial; weak, faint, lazy, indolent” (13c.), originally fem. past participle of feindre “pretend, shirk,” from Latin fingere “to touch, handle; devise; fabricate, alter, change” (from PIE root *dheigh- “to form, build”).
Borrowed c. 1300 as adjective (“deceitful,” also “enfeebled; lacking in courage;” see feint (v.)), but long obsolete in that sense except as a trade spelling of faint among stationers and paper-makers. Also as a noun in Middle English with senses “false-heartedness” (early 14c.), “bodily weakness” (c. 1400).
feint (v.)
c. 1300, feinten, “to deceive, pretend” (obsolete), also “become feeble or exhausted; to lack spirit or courage,” from Middle English feint (adj.) “feigned, false, counterfeit” and directly from Old French feint “false, deceitful; weak, lazy,” past participle of feindre “to hesitate, falter; lack courage; feign, pretend, simulate,” from Latin fingere “to touch, handle; devise; fabricate, alter, change” (from PIE root *dheigh- “to form, build”). Sense of “make a sham attack, make a pretended blow” is attested by 1833, from the noun (1680s as “a feigned attack”). Related: Feinted; feinting.
De donis conditionalibus
It originated the law of entail – forbidding a landholder to sell his land except to his heirs.
Clearfield Doctrine
Government divests itself to the status of a corporation when in lawsuit.
When one is the defendant, one cannot be the judge.
Clearfield Trust Company v. United States 318 U.S. 363-371 (1942)
1861: Congress adjourned – Sine Die (without day)
1871: Coup (undermined American Constitution Republic form of government Article 4, Section 4)
Institutionalize connotatively known was Slavery in Southern States.
Constitution derived from Moslem law.
To put Moors (Negro’s) in bureaucratic servitude under the corpse of the 14th Amendment
1868: Corpse (Corporation) Register Christian property (Chattel) ens legis
Codes noir (Black Codes)
Corpse personality of person (legal person)
Christian Names infers agency (state of Agency)
Color v. Pedigree
Smith, Jones & Johnson (unable to use Common Law)
Clearfield, Pennsylvania (check was cashed) ($24.60)
Principle of Latches (late time) (statue of limitation)
Stare Decisis
Res judicata
Res judicata or res iudicata, also known as claim preclusion, is the Latin term for “a matter decided” and refers to either of two concepts in both civil law and common law legal systems: a case in …
Public corporation = service to the people
Right to trial by people of your nation
Private corporation = service to the pope
Don’t recognize nationality, only people are coded by color aka property
Republic = de jure
Common Law (Allodial in nature)
Articli III Court
Democracy = de facto, anarchy in government
Feudal Law
All officials positions have been transferred to the International Monetary Fund.
Failure to claim a right, you’ve abandoned your right of claim
kingship oligarchy
mummers parade
moor
sta·re de·ci·sis
the legal principle of determining points in litigation according to precedent.
A precedent is a principle or rule established in a previous legal case that is either binding on or persuasive without going to courts for a court or other tribunal when deciding subsequent cases with similar issues or facts