Go Back   Suijuris Forums > Educational & Learning > Banks, Collectors, and CRAs
User Name
Password

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 10-04-2007, 08:54 AM
William Ridgway William Ridgway is offline
Waking Up
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 3
365 day private calender versus 360 day fiscal calender

Hi

I am new to this forum, but not new to the redemption process.

I have some info I would like to share.

As you may or may not know, we have two calenders operating side by side, private 365 day and fiscal 360 day.

The private is us the flesh and blood living person. The fiscal is the fiction or a better way to put it, the accounting.

From what I understand, in order for a draw (Charge, new money) to occur it must first come from the private side, then recorded and held in the fiscal. This recognises us as the principal (source of money) to begin with. Take 365 divided by 360 = 1.0138.

That .01 is the draw (new money). What I believe is occuring is when a Bill is sent to you. The draw has already occured. What is needed from us now is to indicate our acceptance. Our acceptance is our agreement that they can have this draw in exchange for goods and services they provide. We get their deduction and they get a new issue (our exemption).

What they want us to do is provide a payment item. The reason they want this is so they can get a Capital Gain and new funding. When you give them a cheque, you are giving them an order to pay. The retailer (sophisticated ones) know they have the obligation to the Principal. Your cheque has pay to the order and you write their name. That is an order for them to pay.

The problem with this is when the account you write the cheque on has money in it, a block occurs and the money cannot go back to where it came from (thin air)
An execution of law has to now occur and the vendor is elligible for refunding, in addition they get a capital gain.

The money in your account are actually bonds. So when we write the cheque, we are taking possession of the item and giving the bond for the priviledge. The bond we give can be declared by the vendor as a capital gain and pay minimal tax on it.

So you can see how the vendor will do everything in his power to try and make the transaction go via execution of law.

I am Canadian and here we have an Act called the Bills of Exchange Act. The act clearly states, The Maker Of A Bill Of Exchange is The Drawer. This in my opinion is the draw from 365 to 360 calender. The act also clearly states under the rules of ACCEPTANCE. The mere signature of the acceptor is notification to the drawer of the acceptors assent to the drawer. This in my opinion is simply agreeing to the draw.

Even though I am Canadian, this has to be universal.
Because every private person operates on a 365 day calender. Every fiction corporation operates on 360 day fiscal.

I have done a few things using acceptance and they have met with success, but not without challenges. The key to meeting these challenges is I believe a firm foundation of knowledge. This is why I have joined this forum. To both contribute and recieve knowledge.

Bill
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 10-04-2007, 11:01 AM
William Ridgway William Ridgway is offline
Waking Up
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 3
Something more to consider

As I showed in the post 365 divided in to 360 =1.0138

This is where the calculation of Principal and interest comes from. The one to the left of the decimal is principal. The numbers to the right is interest.
Of course all these numbers represent an algebra equation, 1 = X$ and .01 = X$
The interest is a fractionalization of the principal.

My understanding is the reason for principal and interest is the rate of decay. Principal, when brought in to existense begins decaying. Because it reflects the item you purchased. Credit cards usually have a high interest rate, because they usually reflect items that decay quickly in value. Autos and mortgages are lower as they decay slower (The rise in equity comes from the land, not the home).

The formula they are using is interesting when you get in to studies. What I have discovered is the actual mechanism for this is the DNA , RNA, growth and decay cycles of our bodies. It is quite a study.

It is complicated, but not necessary to know to apply acceptance. The fact they send a bill, which they have drawn Principal and possibly interest if it goes to arrears
is being sent to our principal residence. That is recognizing us as the principal.

Bill
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 10-04-2007, 08:28 PM
robhalford88's Avatar
robhalford88 robhalford88 is offline
Practice Makes Perfect
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 408
Welcome Bill. Damn fine posts. I agree with your first post 100%. I believe that is EXACTLY how the exemption works. The presentment to you is merely seeking your authorisation to access your account to offset and adjust.

Yes, those details from the bills of exchange act are universal. Commercial law is universal. Australia has an act with the exact same name.
__________________
RIP Vajo Jnr.
Valentine A.J. Olszak Jr. (1944 - 2007)

RIP Yankee Jim
James Leshkevich 1955-2008
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Canada a foreign corporate fiscal racquet esse Articles & News 5 12-03-2006 07:03 PM
In esse versus In posse HenryBowman Citizenship & Jurisdiction 1 10-30-2005 09:51 PM
The Promise versus The Problem! gregtu Religion 3 05-19-2005 04:37 PM
Federalism versus Nationalism weishaupt1776 Citizenship & Jurisdiction 5 03-30-2005 06:13 PM
dispute the debt versus validate the debt reformer Banks, Collectors, and CRAs 6 09-22-2004 06:44 AM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 02:14 AM.
Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 2.4.0
2003-2007 Copyright by Law Research Group, LLC Terms of Use | Sitemap | Privacy Policy | Notice/Disclaimer