It was superseded on March 4, 1789 upon activation Constitution for the united states of America (CfusA, ratified 1788): https://infogalactic.com/info/United_States_Constitution
Constitutional Convention of 1787: https://infogalactic.com/info/Constitutional_Convention_(United_States)
Articles of Association 1774 (precursor to AofC): First Continental Congress: https://infogalactic.com/info/Continental_Association
Articles of Confederation: https://infogalactic.com/info/Articles_of_Confederation
A brief chronological history of the Founding Period:
1774 (September 5 to October 26, 1774) - First Continental Congress/Continental Association approves Articles of Association
1776 (July 4) - Declaration of Independence
1777 (Nov 15) - Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union approved and sent to the states, founding the country with 12 states (Maryland refused to ratify until all other states ceded their western land claims, but was pressured by French navy)
1781 (Mar 1) - finally signed by Maryland in Philadelphia (ratified on 2-2-1781)
1781 (Oct 17) - American Republic secured victory and surrender from Britain, ending the American Revolution
1783 (Sep 3) - Treaty of Paris 7 years bankruptcy law (not country yet from International Banker perspective) 1783-1790 to pay back $6M. By 1788 it was $18M; Chapter 11 declared in 1790.
1787 (May 25 to Sep 17) - Constitution was written at Philadelphia Convention by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay [The Federalist Papers]
1788 (Jun 21) - Trust I agreement established with the Constitution for the united states of America (CfusA, 1788); ratification by 9 states activated, 13 states join total
1789 (Mar 4) - New Constitution becomes active per ratification process
1789 (Sep 24) Judiciary Act-establishes jurisdiction for protecting Constitutional Rights
1789 (Sep 25) Bill of Rights passed by Congress [ratified 12-15-1791]
1790 - 'HOA' in the form of the Federal Gov't hired to perform the 19 specific duties outlined in the Constitution
1791 (Feb 25) - "Banking Act" starts the 70 year clock to pay back debt is started; All Federal lands and buildings including Washington DC are used as collateral to permit additional debt borrowing; interest payments are remitted to debt holders through the First Bank of US, established in 1791 with a 20 year charted set to expire in 1811.
The REAL History Part 1 from Debt Collateralization Perspective: https://greatawakening.win/p/16ZDcSEa5Z/the-real-history-of-the-american/
Wondered if anyone was going to say anything about that.
I saw chatter in some previous posts, but I had this one ready to drop as a preamble to my "History via Banker collateralization" series which I'm putting together.
from u/MAGAdeburger per previous post:
The "two foundings" myth is simply not supported by historical reality. The country, the nation, the UNION known as the United States of America was founded by the Declaration of Independence in 1776. Arguably, the Union itself was formed by the Articles of Association in 1774, albeit still maintaining political allegiance to the British Crown, in spite of their protests against the abuses of Parliament. But after the King colluded with Parliament and the entire Crown had violated British Law by making war against the American Colonies, the Union became one independent of the British Empire, again in 1776. One Founding, the articles of incorporation, so to speak. As for the country's bylaws, it was initially a confederation, titled the United States of America, a process of formation that began immediately following the Declaration of Independence, with the creation of the Articles of Confederation (approved by Continental Congress in 1777, ratified by the states in 1781.
https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/artconf.asp
There would indeed by an alteration in the form of government utilized by the country, a shift from a confederation to a federation, the result of the Constitutional Convention (1787) and subsequent ratification of the Constitution (1788) and implementation (1789).
No, the adoption of the Constitution was not a "second founding" and no, the creation of the 1st Bank of the United States was not a "third founding." One Founding, 1776. Alterations in form of government, in the country's bylaws, yes, but the USA came into being in 1776 and never ceased to exist, still existing today, albeit under hostile occupation.
Yes, the complex history of the banking/government connection is of much importance to reveal which forces, who really has controlled the USA, but be careful not to let these speculations and theoretical narratives undermined undeniable historical, legal facts.
Thanks for the bump!
I recently discussed this timeline here as well
https://greatawakening.win/p/16ZDzy8aX2/x/c/4TnPyACQcpN
This day in 1777 was indeed one of the most important days in US History.