racket (n.1)

“loud noise,” 1560s, perhaps imitative. Klein compares Gaelic racaid “noise.” Meaning “dishonest activity” (1785) is perhaps from racquet, via notion of “game,” reinforced by rack-rent “extortionate rent” (1590s), from rack (n.1). But it might as well be an extended sense of “loud noise” by way of “noise or disturbance made to distract a pick-pocket’s victim.”

friend (v.)

in the Facebook sense, attested from 2005, from the noun. Friend occasionally has been used as a verb in English since c. 1200 (“to be friends”), though the more usual verb for “join in friendship, act as a friend” is befriend. Related: Friendedfriending. Old English had freonsped “an abundance of friends” (see speed (n.)); freondleast “want of friends;” freondspedig “rich in friends.”

friend (n.)

Old English freond “one attached to another by feelings of personal regard and preference,” from Proto-Germanic *frijōjands “lover, friend” (source also of Old Norse frændi, Old Danish frynt, Old Frisian friund, Dutch vriend, Middle High German friunt, German Freund, Gothic frijonds “friend”), from PIE *priy-ont-, “loving,” present-participle form of root *pri- “to love.”

Meaning “a Quaker” (a member of the Society of Friends) is from 1670s. Feond (“fiend,” originally “enemy”) and freond often were paired alliteratively in Old English; both are masculine agent nouns derived from present participle of verbs, but they are not directly related to one another (see fiend). Related: Friends.

https://www.slideshare.net/ernestrauthschild/presentations?order=popular

https://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/9

https://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/9/9-102

https://www.lawinsider.com/clause/products-and-proceeds

https://en.calameo.com/read/00580173991ef029dd338
https://en.calameo.com/books/00580173991ef029dd338
https://www.scribd.com/document/409759245/At-sik-hata-Nation-United-Nations-Submission-Justice-Report-2019

Tama-Re

The Tama-Re village in Putnam County, Georgia (a.k.a. “Kodesh”, “Wahannee”, “The Golden City”, “Al Tamaha”) was an Egyptian-themed set of buildings and monuments established in 1993 on 476 acres near Eatonton by the Nuwaubian Nation. This was a religious movement that had a variety of esoteric beliefs and was led by Dwight D. York. Many of the African Americans in the community had resettled here from Brooklyn, New York, where the movement had been developing since about 1970.

York was prosecuted for child molestation, racketeering and financial charges; convicted in 2004, he was sentenced to 135 years in prison. As part of the verdict, the Tama-Re complex was sold under government forfeiture in 2005. The structures were mostly demolished, and the site cleared by the sheriff’s department to prepare it for sale.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tama-Re

https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2002/united-nuwaubian-nation-moors-meets-its-match-georgia