The gold fringe originates from something called Maritime Law. This was a technique that countries used back in the days of Naval fleets that needed to barter and or sign treaties between nations. Each ship flew a flag of its country to denote its legal domain. This flag was honored as the legal domain over that ship. If one were to step onto that ship, one was subject to the written and recorded laws of that flag’s country.
The gold fringe on the United States flag is a legal holdover from these times. When one walks into the courtroom or any other institution with a gold fringe, one has surrendered to the bylaws of that Corporation and NOT the Constitution.
I don't see what shipping laws have to do with the distinction between federal corporations with clever names like "State of California" vs the actual California state.
Does anyone have anymore information on how to research this kind of distinction?
Its called Maritime Law or Maritime Admiralty law
https://resistance2010.com/profiles/blogs/the-us-corporation-and-the
The gold fringe originates from something called Maritime Law. This was a technique that countries used back in the days of Naval fleets that needed to barter and or sign treaties between nations. Each ship flew a flag of its country to denote its legal domain. This flag was honored as the legal domain over that ship. If one were to step onto that ship, one was subject to the written and recorded laws of that flag’s country.
The gold fringe on the United States flag is a legal holdover from these times. When one walks into the courtroom or any other institution with a gold fringe, one has surrendered to the bylaws of that Corporation and NOT the Constitution.
So Maritime Law is a global set of laws or there is a set of Maritime Laws for each country?
It's global set of laws, dating back to Pharoahs/ Phoenicians later Venetian.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/maritime-law
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=KNP_Sd27pEs
I don't see what shipping laws have to do with the distinction between federal corporations with clever names like "State of California" vs the actual California state.