The arcane origins of “The Law of the Sea,” today known as Admiralty Law, are rooted in a nefarious view of humanity as a never-ending source of revenue through monetized servitude.
In previous articles, the esoteric precepts of the Law of the Sea were introduced and the origins of common financial terms were explained in detail.
The language and symbolism associated with this concept suggest that humans are treated as commercial entities from birth to death. Terms like “liquidation,” “berth,” “manifest,” and “birth certificate” symbolize the commercialization of individuals.
Revenue, taxation, and the continuous nature of income are connected to the sea commerce language.
The esoteric language of commerce reflects the interweaving of life, death, and the cyclical nature of human existence.
It implies that humans are vended/sold into financial servitude, with their cash value being systematically erased after death.
The symbolism of money, cash, burial, and valuable items reinforces the notion of humans being held as commodities and monetized throughout their lives.
In essence, the arcane origins of Admiralty Law depict a system where humanity is viewed as an endless cycle of revenue, perpetuating monetized servitude from birth to death.
Words and Phrases: Making the Connections to this Arcane “Code of Commerce”.
Berth/Port/Dock/Manifest/Liquidation/Birth Certificate/Post/Post Office
The connection between the Language of Sea Commerce and humans being used as capital-generating resources is articulated in the esoteric interpretation of the term “liquidation.”
In this context, liquidation involves terminating a business operation by using its assets to discharge liabilities, but it also carries the connotation of eliminating a competitor, akin to the murder of a competitor.
The term “liquidate” is phonetically connected to “liquid date,” linking it to the waters of the sea. The analogy extends to ships sitting in berths with a certificate of manifest that is “liquid dated.”
This draws a parallel to a person’s “berth day” (birthday), symbolizing their entry into the world through the hips, where the anagram “ship” and the concept of the “mother ship” come into play. Humans, considered liquid-dated ships, are brought to port through their mother’s birth canal, docked (by a docker, or doctor), and issued a certificate of manifest (birth certificate) as a symbol of their commercial entry into life.
After being born (berthed), humans are now “off ice” (holding a commercial office) and are posted for duty – which is why there is a “post office (post off ice) administration. When they go to work, they are re-porting (reporting) for duty and fulfilling their post (position).
This suggests that, from birth, humans are considered monetized commercial entities, docked at port, and are part of a system where they re-port for duty (work) under their designated post, contributing to the commercial and economic activities of financial slavery.
Note: The term “off ice” (office) signifies a state where a person is no longer “on ice,” the opposite of being eliminated or unproductive. This aligns with the notion that individuals, from birth, are regarded as commercial entities and hold an “office” of duty in the commercial slave system.
Revenue/Taxation/Internal Revenue Service
Revenue is known as the entire amount of income before any deductions are made. According to the government, revenue is the income that comes from taxation. In the context of commerce and the sea, revenue is reflected in the term “revenueer,” which refers to a revenue officer or boat involved in revenue collection. The etymology of revenue is derived from the Latin “revenire,” meaning to come again. In the language of government commerce, revenue implies a “coming again” or “always coming” source of income, reflecting its continuous nature and connection to taxation.
Humans Being “Vended” Into Financial Servitude
The esoteric language of commerce (Law of the Sea) reflects an interweaving of the commercial aspects of life, death, and the cyclical nature of human existence.
The terms and phrases within the language indicates connections between being sold into commercial slavery during life and the post-mortem (also related to mort gage or mortgage) process of burial, symbolically depicted as being “put on ice.”
The term “vendu,” meaning a sale, finds a phonetic parallel in “sail.” Latin terms such as “wente” and “wenthus,” or “venti” and “ventus,” conveying wind, become pivotal in emphasizing its necessity to fill sails. The French term “vant,” translating to sail, accentuates the association with sea commerce.
The term “vendu” connects with “venter,” meaning womb. This points to the concept of selling humans into commercial slavery through birth, rebirth and regeneration, giving rise to commercial terms like “vendor” or “vendors.”
The term “slave trader” is connected to the Latin term “wenalichi,”. The Latin term “wenalichi” translates to “slave dealer” or “slave vendor,” emphasizing the commercial aspect of trading in human lives.
This etymology reinforces the notion of humans being sold into commercial slavery, aligning with the broader theme of commerce. The term emphasizes the dehumanizing aspect of this practice, reducing individuals to commodities traded in the marketplace of life.
In other words, humans are vended/sold out of the mother’s womb, monetized, and sold into commercial slavery.
The mind’s “cache,” a repository of memories and experiences, becomes synonymous with cash money.
This reveals a profound theme of humans being purchasable and sold into financial servitude and cash value being erased after death, aptly described as being “cleaned out” or “cashed out” of monetization.
Post-mortem (after being mortgaged), individuals are symbolically “put on ice,” representing a state of frozen assets, taken off ice during life, and returned to this state after death, epitomizing the cyclical nature of existence. The saying “cold hard cash” accentuates this connection.
The dead, buried in boxes, symbolize humans being held as valuable items, and “cash” (cache) originally meant a money box. This signifies a state of being out of money or energy (being dead broke) after death.
This cyclical process is completed with the dead being buried as valuable items being held in a money box and reborn/re-charged (charged again for financial compensation).
This language paints a bleak picture for the way its esoteric origins embody the essence of ancient sea commerce (which eventually evolves into Admiralty Law), and the symbolism associated with the process of capturing (enslaving) the human journey as a monetization scheme.