By Anna Von Reitz
Many centuries ago kings and 
prelates and businessmen kept their own stables of messengers who 
hand-carried information back and forth, either verbally or by written 
means, and these physical communication systems gradually developed into
 the Postal Services we know today--- and to this day, a postal service 
may either be public or private in nature.  
Benjamin Franklin was the owner of 
one of the first private postal services serving the public in America. 
 For a stated fee, his company would take your letter or box over the 
rough roads from Boston, Massachusetts, to Charleston, South Carolina, 
and guarantee its safe passage (insure it) so that you didn't have to 
make the journey yourself or send someone in your direct employment on 
this arduous errand. 
Postal Service at that time was 
cheaper than doing it yourself and arguably safer and often faster than 
what people could afford to do for themselves, so the idea caught on and
 the economic advantages of being able to bundle mail going to a 
specific destination provided the profit needed to spur growth. 
Franklin's initial service was fine 
enough for local service around the Boston area, but to thrive and 
maximize profit, he quickly realized that the most expeditious and 
safest routes had to be identified and that a survey evaluating various 
routes had to be conducted to firmly establish the preferred byways.  
These then became known as "post roads"---- the routes by which the mail
 would be moved. 
The physical structures at the 
junctions of post roads where the mail was delivered became known as 
"post offices" and the traditions of both going to the post office to 
pick up the packages and letters sent "general delivery" to that 
geographic location and the expansion of service to home and " post box"
 delivery also expanded. 
Such designated post roads  and post
 offices had already existed for a long time in England and France and 
other European countries and so had special "sea lanes" designated for 
the transportation of mail and international cargos.  Franklin dreamed 
of the day when his postal service would be competent to take a letter 
from Boston to Paris, or from New York to Brussels---- but in order to 
do that, he would need to negotiate relationships with other postal 
services in those countries. 
So far we are just talking about 
private postal services: for-profit private companies that move letters 
and parcels and bulk cargo similar to UPS and DHL and Federal Express 
today.   
The idea of a national postal 
service provided by and guaranteed by the national government of each 
country as a public postal service was quickly becoming adopted as a 
result of the government's own need for it and also as a ongoing need of
 the postal services themselves.  In order to operate efficiently and 
responsibly, postal carriers needed firm ingress and egress treaties 
known as "postal treaties" allowing them to cross borders and move 
mail. 
Treaties establish international 
law.  In the international jurisdiction, people do not exist; only 
offices (such as "Mister" and "Esquire" and "Lieutenant" and "General" 
and "Head of State" and "Queen") and things (such as vessels and cargo) 
 and "persons" (such as HAROLD V. MORGAN) exist in this jurisdiction.  
For treaties to be implemented there
 have to be "sea lanes" and "post roads" to communicate and allow both 
commerce and international trade.
What happens when one country (land)
 or nation (sea) decides that oh, ho, hum.... I want to be isolated 
(like North Korea)?  Well, for one thing, commerce and international 
trade are both adversely impacted, for another, communications are 
impaired.  The world ceases to operate in a integrated fashion.  
Getting the world to function in an 
integrated fashion in the first place has largely been the objective of 
the Postal Service, because in order to do its duty and provide its 
service, the postal services of the world must have access and free 
egress of the international sea lanes and the nationally designated post
 roads.  
Please underline the word "service",
 because that is what the "Postal Service" is supposed to be 
about---service to its customers,  even if it has been abused like other
 "services"--- the Military Services, the Police Services, the Banking 
Services, the US Marshals Service, and so on. 
It does not take advanced logic or 
rocket science to deduce the reason that all the various countries on 
earth and all their governments have "postal treaties" and that those 
treaties are among the most solemn contracts that nations enter into 
upon becoming part of the international community. 
To begin with, they cede a portion 
of their natural jurisdiction both on land and sea to create seats of 
government and post roads and post offices on the land, and sea lanes 
and safe harbors on the sea and sea coasts ---which are all necessary if
 the Postal Service is to be enabled to operate and deliver mail and 
cargo from one country to another.  
A seat of government must be 
established before a postal treaty can be negotiated with other 
countries--- and without a seat of government and a national government 
competent to negotiate it, postal services in America would remain very 
limited and very local in nature.  This in turn would, over time, 
cripple the American economy.  
The flow of goods and information is
 crucial to commerce and trade and as Franklin correctly foresaw, 
without embracing this next level of international organization and 
establishment of postal treaties, we'd be left behind as a permanently 
limited and parochial society, impaired in our ability to communicate 
and trade with the rest of the world.  
Franklin chose our fate for us and chose to connect America to the rapidly developing postal service grid.  
The first United States Postal 
Service established as a national public postal service under postal 
treaty with all the other member nations designated Philadelphia, 
Pennsylvania as our seat of government, and so it remains to this day.  
This Post Office is owned and 
operated by The United States of America (Unincorporated) and includes 
the offices of the United States Postmaster (sea) and United States Post
 Master (land).  It flies the United State Civil Flag (vertical stripes)
 in peacetime, and still does, because these "United States" are at 
peace.
The Territorial United States 
Government also runs its Postal Service known as the U.S. Postal Service
 under the auspices of this seat of government and contains the offices 
of the United States Postmaster General (sea) and United States Post 
Master General (land).  This Postal Service flies the United States War 
Flag, the Stars and Stripes, because it has never ceased to be at war 
since the end of the so-called American Civil War. 
The Municipal United States 
Government has its separate seat of government in Washington, DC and its
 own postal service known as the UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE or USPS, 
and the offices of the US POSTMASTER GENERAL and US POST MASTER 
GENERAL.  It also flies the war flag.  
Please notice that the duties of the
 Postmaster on the sea connect with the duties of the Post Master on the
 land in the institution of the Customs Houses which are international 
post offices maintained in Coastal Districts and ports of entry 
throughout the country.  
The Postal Service worldwide  
overseen by the Universal Postal Union (UPU) creates a nearly contiguous
 world-spanning global network and the Postal Treaties control egress 
and ingress along the sea lanes and post roads in every country.  This 
overlooked and little-appreciated fact and the web of postal treaties 
supporting this global network and granting it land interests within 
every nation (Post Roads and Post Offices) gives rise to a clear and 
present danger that virtually all national governments have ignored. 
As, one by one, national governments
 have incorporated as for-profit business entities and as franchises 
created by the Roman Curia, they have lost their sovereignty.  
Even though nothing on the surface 
appears to have changed, the character of the government and its 
institutions has been radically changed and reduced to nothing more than
 a large number of money-grubbing service corporations intent on selling
 the largest number of services at the highest price.  They are not 
operating as true national governments anymore.  They are not sovereign 
entities and they are not owed sovereign immunity. 
The Universal Postal Union operating
 as an association of private national postal service organizations is 
operating as a sovereign entity.  It has land jurisdiction bequeathed to
 it, sea jurisdiction bequeathed to it, a seat of government in 
Switzerland.  
There's your new world government wrapped up with bow and waiting in the wings.  
The reply to this challenge to 
national sovereignty is for all the people around the world to do what 
we have done: wake up, shed the "incorporated" shell, and begin 
operating your own lawful land jurisdiction government again.  En masse.
See this article and over 700 others on Anna's website here: www.annavonreitz.com
 
 
 
1 comment:
based on the magna carta, the right of trade and of ingress into the kingdom and the right of egress therefrom...
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