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VII. Law
 
  7.14 Corruption of Law  
  Article 330-License  
  Canon 3402  
  A License (also spelt “licence”) is an official document under Roman law granting a privilege and/or immunity for some activity that would otherwise be deemed illegal by the policies of Government. Hence, a license is effectively a grant to perform an act that would otherwise be forbidden.  
  Canon 3403  
  It is frequently mistaken that a license is merely a permit to do something that would otherwise be lawful. This is due to fact that Government frequently took ancient unregulated rights and customs and then outlawed them, by inclosing such rights and property except by license.  The right of passage on the Kings Roads is such an example that was converted from a right to a crime, only permitted under license.  
  Canon 3404  
  The technique most frequently used to abrogate ancient rights and freedoms was the same technique to steal the land and property of the people being a legal fiction called inclosure or "enclosure". By "enclosing" such ancient rights, such rights were effectively claimed as private property of an elite few while the property to which it was also attached was privatized. The modern system of patents is an equivalent system of creating private enclosures for a defined period of time over otherwise public property.  
  Canon 3405  
  Under the perverse commercial laws of the Roman Cult, when one fails to have a license and seeks to assert and ancient right on now "enclosed rights" and property, such a man or woman is effectively guilty of trespass on private property, for which the only valid legal excuse in Roman Courts is to admit a mistake.  
  Canon 3406  
  The word License comes from the Latin licens meaning “freedom, boldness and unrestricted”.  It is attested as a word equivalent to possession of a freedom or unrestricted “right” from the 14th Century onwards in popular culture until the 19th Century. The use of the word “license” in official statute is under King Henry VIII and the Ecclesiastical Licenses Act 1533 which remains still in force. Its second usage was in control of media through the Licensing of the Press Act of 1664, followed by liquor control and Wine Licenses, etc Act 1670 until the mid 1800’s when licensing extended to a whole range of activities including but not limited to premises, ownership of animals and guns.  
  Canon 3407  
  As demonstrated by its history, the primary function of licensing is commercial control for the benefit of a few, using the tools of Government to enforce a market control. The most notable industries for this symbiotic relationship between Government force and Private claim is first religion, then media, then alcohol production. Today, there are literally tens of thousands of industries that are controlled by a handful of interests using the licensing methodology.  
  Canon 3408  
  The most significant change in licensing laws occured during the early 20th Century when western Governments in control of private central banks effectively turned their own people into "enemy aliens" requiring registration. Under this model, the Birth Certificates identifying paupers (poor and disenfranchised) also became effectively an "enemy licence to engage in commerce and banking".  
  Canon 3409  
  Given all Roman law licenses and all statutes defining licenses are founded on fraud, organized crime and corruption by members of government against their own people, all such law is considered null and void from the beginning having no effect.  
     
     
     
 
 

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