Romero Institute: U.N. Condemns Doctrine of Discovery

Am re-blogging this again Ron; if popey has to revoke these papal bulls, he may as well go the whole hog; all the way back to the perpetual edict which started this mess;

In the year 134 Hadrian returned to Italy. He built a temple to Trajan in Rome, a colossal double temple to Venus and Roma, and the gigantic mausoleum on the right bank of the Tiber, which constitutes the kernel of the castle of Sant’ Angelo. At his villa near Tivoli he copied the monuments and landscapes that had made the strongest impressions on him during his travels. In order to unify jurisprudence throughout the entire empire, he ordered the prætor Salvius Julianus to revise and codify systematically the prætorian edicts and the annual supplementary edicts. In the year 131 this “perpetual edict” (edictum perpetuum) obtained force of law by virtue of a decree of the senate; the same force was given to the opinions of the jurisconsults in all points wherein they were agreed among themselves, in order, that the system of the law might continue to develop. He bestowed the highest administrative offices on men of knightly rank, instead of on freedmen as heretofore, and regulated the succession of these officers.

The un-Holy Roman Empire is alive, but not well; Babylon shall not rise again; in peace

Ronmamita's Blog

Logo of the Vatican, Empire of the Holy See
This is worthy of discussion and sharing.
I read the Press Release that claim:
“UNITED NATIONS DECLARES THE HOLY SEE LEGALLY RESPONSIBLE AND ACCOUNTABLE TO INDIGENOUS PEOPLES FOR EFFECTS AND LEGACY OF RACIST COLONIAL BULLS AND DOCTRINES”

Is this a promising sign we can use to build upon in our community efforts?
What I mean by this is that some tribes, villages, and communities do not wish to be a part of chartered (incorporated) governance as handed down from ancient Babylon and Roman empires with deceptive ecclesiastical law and banking to own and manage all things on Land and Sea; at least that is my clear wish.

I see the deception in the claims by institutions that state some indigenous people are extinct, but the Taino, and other indigenous communities that existed prior to the invading European missions are still present and not extinct.

The Roman Catholic Church

View original post 837 more words

Leave a comment