Tuesday, October 12, 2010

King George III, The American Revolution and the Treaty of Paris

It may very well be that King Louis XIV of France (formerly King Louis XIII) held at least two royal thrones at once. It has been said that King Louis XIV of France, the Sun King, was also King Saint Louis of France. King Louis, it appears, was quite an adventurer. There is some indication that King Louis came to the New World of America earlier than Cristopher Columbus and claimed all of the Americas for the French Monarchy of himself, King Louis of France, Immortal. Apparently, King Louis of France was also King George of England and King Louis Phillipe of Spain, at the same time, and, with a dispensation from the Avignon Pope (himself) he was simultaneously married to the Queens of England, France, and Spain. In any event, by the year 1550 it is said that King Louis XIV summoned every vassal, every cousin, and every adventurer available and used the French Fleet to sail to the Port of New Orleans, and then move up that river to found the French cities of Saint Louis (his namesake), Kanas City, Omaha, Yankton, Vermillion, Bellevue, Chicago and Milwaukee. When the French got to those cities they found that their american druid cousins were already there. This is proved by the fact that there are land deeds in secret vaults in Saint Louis, Chicago, and Milwaukee going back to 100,000 B.C. Moreover, the French soldiers and ships which helped the Thirteen American Colonies win the Revolutionary War against the illegal Military Dictatorship of General's Howe and Cornwallis, really came from New Orleans. Also, the alleged Louisiana Purchase Treaty which purported to sell all the land west of the Mississippi to the newly formed America, was totally void and illegal since the United States entered into the treaty with the rogue dictator, Napoleon Bonaparte. In fact, it is said that the Treaty of Paris provided that the boundaries of the newly formed United States only extended 50 miles in from the Atlantic Ocean, and everything else was designated Sovereign French Territory of the French Monarchy of King Louis XIV of France, Immortal. This is confirmed by the fact that the Treaty of Paris is authored and signed by King George of England and of France (namely King Louis XIV). It is clear that, following the United States Supreme Court Case of Johnson vs. MacIntosh (1823), all Royal French land grants are legally valid and enforceable from Western Pennsylvania, west to Nebraska and Dakota, and beyond. The King of France, King Louis XIV claimed and conquered all the land of the Americas under the International law Principles of Discovery and Conquest prior to Columbus and prior to the Spanish, the Portugese, the Dutch and the English. Apparently, the real Registrar of Deeds Office for the Federal Royal French Territories of Nebraska and Dakota Territory is located in Saint Louis.
(C)Copyright 2010 by Anthony J. Fejfar