Thread: Swiss Banks
View Single Post
  #14  
Old 04-28-2008, 08:16 AM
David Merrill's Avatar
David Merrill David Merrill is offline
Come and Get Some!
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Colorado.
Posts: 6,274
In summary, I think the Swiss may be enjoying a vestigial reputation from before they pooled into SDRs with the UN's IMF Fund. Albeit I have not proven that the Swiss have actually done so. Once you get onto that wagon though, it is on the presumption that nobody, not even one man or woman is redeeming lawful money. And the more recent joiners like China in 2005 are at the top of the heap, Switzerland is #6 and the US is at the bottom of like 180 nations. The US having invented the SDR in the mid-Seventies:

http://www.ecclesia.org/forum/images.../SeizeGold.jpg

The presumption of any SDR member nation is that nobody is owning anything in that nation. Whereas if you demand lawful money with your paycheck, the Treasury cannot hold that First Lien on anything you buy with their private credit and therefore you can actually own it in allodium.

It would appear that the US Treasury first lien process has effected Swiss Banks and they are exercising it very carefully to protect the illusion money is safer there. That is to say that even from the Mile High City the process of debt is admiralty jurisdiction:

http://www.ecclesia.org/forum/images...s/Warrant1.gif
http://www.ecclesia.org/forum/images...s/Warrant2.gif

The objective is to get your funds out of that realm - private credit from the Fed. Once redeemed in lawful money you own the cash and you own the things you buy with the cash.


Regards,

David Merrill.

P.S.


Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewmitch
http://www.swissprivacy.com/swiss_annuity.htm

(although most states have qualified investments such as IRA and 401K as being judgement proof...the reason being is you can't touch the money until age 59 1/2 and therefore you don't have control/ownership of it yet but I am sure that won't stop the IRS)

That is what I was talking about - "credit on account". When in the form of credit, there is no taxation possible. Oftentimes the IRS will convince somebody they will tax an account balance though. But you have a perfect example of what I mean right there. Technically a retirement or any savings account amount is not taxed until it is withdrawn - and I am saying you write a demand for lawful money on the Withdrawal Slip.
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoonra
It is worth noting that the fealty to the Pope, which you cited for its explicit mention of the Templar abbey in Dover, is the legal basis for the invalidation of the Magna Carta after it was sealed at Runnymede.
During discussion about the Treaty of 1213 and the Magna Charta (1215).

http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/magframe.htm
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/john1a.html
Reply With Quote