arrears (n.)

“balance due, that which is behind in payment,” early 15c., plural noun from Middle English arrere (adv.) “in or to the rear; in the past; at a disadvantage” (c. 1300), from Anglo-French arrere, Old French ariere “behind, backward” (12c., Modern French arrière), from Vulgar Latin *ad retro, from Latin ad “to” (see ad-) + retro “behind” (see retro-).

It generally implies that part of the money already has been paid. Arrearage (early 14c.) was the earlier noun. Phrase in arrears first recorded 1610s, but in arrearages is from late 14c.

epigraph (n.)

1620s, “inscription on a building, statue, etc.,” from Greek epigraphē “an inscription,” from epigraphein “to mark the surface, just pierce; write on, inscribe; to register; inscribe one’s name, endorse,” from epi “on” (see epi-) + graphein “to write” (see -graphy). Sense of “motto; short, pithy sentence at the head of a book or chapter” first recorded in English 1844. Related: Epigraphicepigraphical.

Moroccan–American Treaty of Friendship

In December 1777, the Moroccan Sultan Muhammad III included the United States in a list of countries to which Morocco’s ports were open. Morocco thus became the first country whose head of state publicly recognized the newly independent United States.[1][2]

Relations were formalized with the Moroccan–American Treaty of Friendship [3] negotiated by Thomas Barclay in Marrakesh, and signed by American diplomats in EuropeThomas JeffersonJohn Adams with Sultan Muhammad III in 1786.[4][5]

Muhammad III, or Sidi Muhammad ibn Abdallah, came to power in 1757 and ruled until his death in 1790. Prior to his reign, Morocco had experienced 30 years of internecine battles, instability and turmoil. During the 33 years Sidi Muhammad ruled he transformed the politics, the economy and the society, putting development of international trade high on his agenda and restoring power to the sultanate. This served to quickly bring respect to Morocco on the international scene.[6] Central to his pursuit of international trade was the negotiation of agreements with foreign commercial powers. He began seeking one with the United States before the war with Great Britain was settled in 1783, and welcomed Thomas Barclay’s arrival to negotiate in 1786. The treaty signed by Barclay and the sultan, then by Jefferson and Adams, was ratified by the Confederation Congress in July 1787.[7] It was reaffirmed by the sultan in 1803 when the USS ConstitutionNautilusNew York, and Adams engaged in gunboat diplomacy as part of the First Barbary War. (At the time, independent corsairs and pirates were using Morocco’s ports as safe harbors between raids on American and European shipping.) The treaty has withstood transatlantic stresses and strains for more than 234 years, making it the longest unbroken treaty relationship in United States history.[8]

Things to include in Trust

Trust Indenture for an Irrevocable Trust and operating all three positions would technically be a violation of the Arm’s length principle however by leveraging the Treaty of Peace and Friendship 1836 as well as:

Library of Congress, Congressional Records on the 14th Amendment

American Jurisprudence Volume 16, Second Edition Subsection 195

Constitutional Law Reprinted from Case Law Volume 6 Subsection 117

Public Law 97-280

Us Statutes at Large 96 Stat 1211

as you outlined here: https://youtu.be/LAp2-6zjEvc?t=3859

And be it, they’ve violated Articles 2, 3, 22 of the Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1836, defacto, civilitus mortuus, 14th amendment citizens and insolvent, is it fair to assume these facts would render them unfit to rule on the matter.

All of this would need to be included into the trust indenture/corpus of the trust.

When challenged by the court or whomever is construing the trust to be an ‘association’, I would enter the indenture/documents into evidence which would mum the prosecutor and dismiss the accusation.

Rump legislature

rump legislature is a legislature formed of part, usually a minority, of the legislators originally elected or appointed to office.

The word “rump” normally refers to the back end of an animal; its use meaning “remnant” was first recorded in the context of the 17th century Rump Parliament in England. Since 1649, the term “rump parliament” has been used to refer to any parliament left over after the true parliament has formally dissolved.

In the United States in the 19th century, upon the secession of Virginia from the union on April 27, 1861, anti-secessionist legislators convened a rump legislature and formed a pro-Union reformed government which claimed to represent all of Virginia. This reformed government authorized the creation of the state of Kanawha, later renamed West Virginia.

By contrast, the Legislative Yuan of Taiwan between 1951 and 1991, having been relocated from Nanking to Taipei when the Republic of China lost its Chinese mainland in late 1949, contained members originally elected from mainland constituencies who could not be replaced. The pre-reform Legislative Yuan was nevertheless widely regarded as a rump legislature, controlling only a fraction of the territory it claimed to represent.

Irish republican legitimists regarded the Second Dáil elected in 1921 as the last legitimate Irish legislature, arguing it never formally yielded its authority to the Third Dáil elected in June 1922. The rump Second Dáil held symbolic meetings a few times from October 1922. Members died or defected to the Oireachtas of the Irish Free State until, in 1938, the remaining seven yielded their notional authority to the IRA Army Council.[1]