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First in Time: A Pacific Transcription
First in Time: A Pacific Transcription
First in Time: A Pacific Transcription
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First in Time: A Pacific Transcription

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There is a legal maxim, "fictio cedit veritati" that means fictions yields to truth. "First in Time" includes the transcription of conversation between two longtime "pacifists" which clearly evidences a "Living Truth" beyond the presumption of any fictitious record or narrative created specifically to gain access to One's genuine nature via trespass, as well as a highly deductive and learned exposition by the Author as to the lawful scope of such enlightened testimony. It is a must read for anyone with "eyes to see" the absurdity and confusion of a world completely devoid of Truth.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 11, 2024
ISBN9781977273369
First in Time: A Pacific Transcription

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    First in Time - Kurtis R. Kallenbach

    First in Time

    A Pacific Transcription

    All Rights Reserved.

    Copyright © 2024 Kurtis R. Kallenbach

    v9.0

    The opinions expressed in this manuscript are solely the opinions of the author and do not represent the opinions or thoughts of the publisher. The author has represented and warranted full ownership and/or legal right to publish all the materials in this book.

    This book may not be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in whole or in part by any means, including graphic, electronic, or mechanical without the express written consent of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

    Outskirts Press, Inc.

    http://www.outskirtspress.com

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2023924202

    Cover Photo © 2024 Fiverr. All rights reserved - used with permission.

    Outskirts Press and the OP logo are trademarks belonging to Outskirts Press, Inc.

    PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

    Table of Contents

    Beginning of Author’s Testimony

    Author’s Exposition

    Ex uno disces omnes - From one thing you can discern all

    Bouvier’s Law Dictionary

    The Zygote

    "The zygote is the first diploid cell formed following fertilization by fusion of the haploid oocyte (egg) and spermatozoa (sperm) resulting in the combination of their separate genomes. The zygote will therefore form the conceptus, the embryonic (embryo, fetus) and extra-embryonic (fetal membranes, fetal component of the placenta) cellular products of fertilization."

    https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Zygote

    Monad

    The term monad (from Ancient Greek μονάς (monas) ‘unity’, and μόνος (monos) ‘alone’) is used in some cosmic philosophy and cosmogony to refer to a most basic or original substance. As originally conceived by the Pythagoreans, the Monad is the Supreme Being, divinity or the totality of all things.

    Wikipedia

    Supreme

    Supreme. Superior to all other things.

    Supreme power. The highest authority in a state, all other powers in it being inferior thereto.

    Supremacy. The state of being supreme, or in the highest station of power; paramount authority; sovereignty; sovereign power.

    Black’s Law Dictionary 5th Edition

    Being

    1a: the quality or state of having existence; b (1): something that is conceivable and hence capable of existing (2): something that actually exists (3): the totality of existing things c: conscious existence: LIFE

    2: the qualities that constitute an existent thing: ESSENCE - especially: PERSONALITY

    3: a living thing - especially: PERSON

    Adjective: PRESENT

    Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary

    father

    Middle English fader, from Old English fæder he who begets a child, nearest male ancestor; also "any lineal male ancestor; the Supreme Being, and by late Old English, one who exercises parental care over another," from Proto-Germanic *fader (source also of Old Saxon fadar, Old Frisian feder, Dutch vader, Old Norse faðir, Old High German fatar, German vater; in Gothic usually expressed by atta).

    This is from the PIE root *pəter- father (source also of Sanskrit pitar-, Greek pater, Latin pater, Old Persian pita, Old Irish athir father), which is presumably from baby-speak sound pa. The ending formerly was regarded as an agent-noun affix. The classic example of Grimm’s Law, where PIE p- becomes Germanic f-.

    The spelling with -th- (15c.) reflects a widespread phonetic shift in Middle English that turned -der to -ther in many words, perhaps reinforced in this case by Old Norse forms; the spelling caught up to pronunciation in 1500s (compare mother (n.), weather (n.), hither, gather).

    As a title of various Church dignitaries from c. 1300; the meaning creator, inventor, author is from mid-14c.; that of "anything that gives rise to something else is from late 14c. As a respectful title for an older man, recorded from 1550s. Father-figure is from 1954. Fathers leading men, elders" is from 1580s.

    Etymology Online

    I and my Father are one.

    John 10:30 KJV

    To Wit,

    The moment dad’s sperm fertilizes mom’s ovum, the moment of divine creation, the moment I am physically and spiritually assembled, I am, for all intents and purposes, first in time. Having such specie-specific knowledge preserving One’s authentic full measure of self-government is an equitable fair warning to all from the start.

    "The notion that first in time is first in right is an ancient one. It determines the resolution of numerous human conflicts both in law and custom. The legal rules about finding, water rights, nuisance, prescription, patents, wild animals, creditors’ rights, franchises, recording and priorities in realty, and scores of other issues are wholly or partially governed by it. People follow it as unwritten law in their social interaction."

    An Analysis of the Doctrine That First in Time Is First in Right by Lawrence Berger

    Ancient. Old; that which has existed from an indefinitely early period, or which by age alone has acquired certain rights or privileges accorded in view of long continuance. –Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Edition (1910)

    My organized entirety begins as a pellucid membrane enveloped single-celled Zygote floating down mom’s waters towards a uterine wall landing site (implantation/conception) with Nature’s orderly continuous and contiguous ways and means extending via umbilical cord and navel proving evolutionary due process beyond a reasonable doubt as to One’s whole mind/body/spirit presence spanning a singular and faultless alpha to omega state nunc pro tunc.

    Nunc pro tunc."now for then —used in reference to a judicial or procedural act that corrects an omission in the record, has effect as of an earlier date, or takes place after a deadline has expired"

    At the threshold to the external environment beyond mom’s swampy womb, I, for One, experience a disgraceful severance of my direct personal link to One’s godly estate/kingdom with the unnatural hewing and removal of my undelivered jus cogens fetal membranes (limb) resulting in a sacred/principal cross section of my godly estate/kingdom falling behind presumed abandoned, sacrificed, donated, etc., to the State, Public, or somebody foreign to me, the naturally neutral native being/owner. Said vestigial pruning and subsequent official record memorializing a divers born alive infant bundle provides an heirloom/dowry via motherland banco/avulsion or condemned composition of matter proving mayhem, larceny, and genocide at the port of entry to the new world.

    Medical definition of delivery. "the expulsion or extraction of a fetus and its membranes."

    Membrana. Lat. In old Civil and English law, a skin of parchment. The ancient rolls usually consist of several of these skins, and the word membrana is used, in citations to them, in the same way as page or folio, to distinguish the particular skin referred to. – Black’s Law Dictionary 5th Edition (1979)

    Larceny. Felonious stealing, taking and carrying, leading, riding, or driving away another’s personal property, with intent to convert it or to deprive owner thereof. The unlawful taking and carrying away of property of another with intent to appropriate it to use inconsistent with latter’s rights. U. S. v. Johnson, 140 U.S.App.D.C. 54, 433 F.2d 1160, 1163. The essential elements of a larceny are an actual or constructive taking away of the goods or property of another without the consent and against the will of the owner and with a felonious intent. People v. Goodchild, 68 Mich.App. 226, 242 N.W.2d 465, 468. Obtaining possession of property by fraud, trick or device with preconceived design or intent to appropriate, convert or steal is larceny. John v. United 793 States, 65 U.S.App.D.C. 11, 79 F.2d 136; People v. Cook, 10 Cal.App.2d 54, 51 P.2d 169, 170. (See: Theft Act 1968 / UK Public General Acts)

    goods. "includes the unborn of animals and growing crops and other identified things attached to realty as fixtures." U.C.C. § 2- 1 05(1).

    Said violently removed federally reserved measures are deemed necessary and proper in a realm secured by artfully commingled deposits.

    Deposit, n. A bailment of goods to be kept by the bailee without reward, and delivered according to the object or purpose of the original trust. In general, an act by which a person receives the property of another, binding himself to preserve it and return it in kind. The delivery of chattels by one person to another to keep for the use of the bailor. The giving of the possession of personal property by one person to another, with his consent, to keep for the use and benefit of the first or of a third person. Something intrusted to the care of another, either for a permanent or a temporary disposition. Money lodged with a person as an earnest or security for the performance of some contract, to be forfeited if the depositor fails in his undertaking. It may be deemed to be part payment, and to that extent may constitute the purchaser the actual owner of the estate. The act of placing money in the custody of a bank or banker, for safety or convenience, to be withdrawn at the will of the depositor or under rules and regulations agreed on. Also, the money so deposited, or the credit which the depositor receives for it. Deposit, according to its commonly accepted and generally understood meaning among bankers and by the public, includes not only deposits payable on demand and subject to check, but deposits not subject to check, for which certificates, whether interest-bearing or not, may be issued, payable on demand, or on certain notice, or at a fixed future time. A quantity of ore or other mineral substances occurring naturally in the earth; as, a deposit of gold, oil, etc. – Black’s Law 5th Edition

    One’s original peaceable assembly and genuine innocence begins at genesis and thus a birth-certificated fault (separation) between fertilization and last breath is an error juris nocet.

    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." - The First Amendment of the United States Constitution

    To maintain international peace and security, and to that end: to take effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace, and for the suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of the peace, and to bring about by peaceful means, and in conformity with the principles of justice and international law, adjustment or settlement of international disputes or situations which might lead to a breach of the peace; United Nations Charter - Chapter I: Purposes and Principles Article 1

    "I the underwritten, the Servant of God, Taher Ben Abdelkack Fennish, do certify that His Imperial Majesty my Master (whom God preserve) having concluded a Treaty of Peace and Commerce with the United States of America has ordered me the better to compleat it and in addition of the tenth Article of said Treaty to declare, "that if any Vessel belonging to the United States shall be in any of the Ports of His Majesty’s Dominions or within Gunshot of his Forts, she shall be protected as much as possible and no Vessel whatever, belong either to Moorish or Christian Powers with whom the United States may be at War, shall be permitted to follow or engage her, as we deem the Citizens of America our good Friends." - The Moroccan-American Treaty of Peace and Friendship - 28 June 1786

    Error juris nocet. Error of law injuries. A mistake of the law has an injurious effect; that is, the party committing it must suffer the consequences. Macheld. Rom. Law, § 178; 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 139, note. – Black’s Law Dictionary 2nd Edition (1910)

    After many years of private investigation, I hereby declare any protective regency, gratuitous bailment, unnatural act - real, presumed, or otherwise - upon One’s perfect godly estate/kingdom encumbering One’s natural right of way progress at any point whatsoever between fertilization and last breath to be void in the first place, a trespass, or stratagem of war. It includes, but is not limited to, any pre-conceived notion, particular end, general law beneficiary, etc., fixed/borne per influential Gregorian/Civil account contrary status quo ante bellum to evolutionary due process of Natural Law. As a matter of fact, when there are two or more competing equitable interests, (such as in the case of the feto-maternal placenta) the equitable maxim qui prior est tempore potior est jure (he who is earlier in time is stronger in law) applies. Note: the singular product of creation/fertilization (Zygote) is prior to the product of conception/implantation (Maternal Accretion) happening many days later.

    "After the passenger owner had left the car, forgetting to take the package with him, the plaintiff knew the package was not lost property. It or the custody of it did not belong to him then any more than it did while its owner was in the car. He saw and knew the owner had forgotten it, had left it by mistake. It then had become in the custody and the potential actual possession of the defendant. It was the right of the defendant and its duty to become as to it and its owner a gratuitous bailee. It was its right and duty to possess and use the care of a gratuitous bailee for the safekeeping of the package until the owner should call for it. ( Regina v. Pierce, 6 Cox Cr. Law Cases, 117; State v. Courtsol, 89 Conn. 564; Regina v. West, 6 Cox Cr. Law Cases, 415; Kincaid v. Eaton, 98 Mass. 139; McAvoy v. Medina, 11 Allen, 548; Foster v. Fidelity Safe Deposit Co., 264 Mo. 89; Hoagland v. F.P.H. Amusement Co., 170 Mo. 335; Ferguson v. Ray, 44 Oreg. 557; Hamaker v. Blanchard, 90 Penn. St. 377; Deaderick v. Oulds, 86 Tenn. 14; Griggs v. State, 58 Ala. 425; Regina v. Moore, 8 Cox Cr. Law Cases, 416; People v. M’Garren, 17 Wend. 460; State v. McCann, 19 Mo. 249.) - Foulke v. New York Consol R.R. Co., supra, 228 N.Y.2d, at 274 (1920)

    War. 2b "a struggle or competition between opposing forces or for a particular end." - Merriam-Webster Dictionary

    What you now hold in your hands is an erudite discourse differentiating One’s naturally seamless/evolutionary due process and present state of being from the undue influence of an indulgent artfully stranded infant vessel frozen in time - via birthday - on an historical record. Everything elucidated via this mature and spirited diplomatic dispatch proves beyond a reasonable doubt One’s irreducible rule and autonomous self-determination over a timeless mystery based wholly upon One’s initial little g genesis. Any objections to One’s firsthand account must be made within sixty days publication of First in Time/A Pacific Transcription or everything peaceably assembled/equitably resolved via One’s copyrighted first edition tome stands for ever and everyone as unrebutted. Silence is acquiescence.

    The Author/Pacifist

    The original unedited audio of this transcription can be heard at:

    www.supremebeing.life

    Definition of first - "before another in time, space, or importance"

    Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary

    BEGINNING OF AUTHOR’S TESTIMONY

    Kurtis R. (00:00:04):

    I started the recording right now before I forgot.

    Linda M. (00:00:07):

    Before you ever said a word.

    Kurtis R. (00:00:09):

    Before I even said a word, because once I start talking my mind goes blank.

    Linda M. (00:00:15):

    Oh, I know. I do that too. Oh, you know what, before we start, I am going to get a different battery in this because it’s been being used and I don’t want to run out during the call. Those are AA or they are, but my recording will be recorded here. You muted?

    Kurtis R. (00:00:51):

    I’m there.

    Linda M. (00:00:51):

    I have it on right now, but I don’t want to take any chances that I run out.

    Kurtis R. (00:00:56):

    So, when you change batteries, it does stop the recording that moment?

    Linda M. (00:01:01):

    Yes. Yes it does.

    Kurtis R. (00:01:03):

    So there’s no residual energy source that keeps it going until you have a chance to replace it?

    Linda M. (00:01:09):

    No. It stores the ones that are recorded, but it doesn’t keep the recording going.

    Kurtis R. (00:01:14):

    Okay. All right.

    Linda M. (00:01:16):

    Yeah. So now it’s, now it’s going Yeah. It’s very old school.

    Kurtis R. (00:01:25):

    So are we.

    Linda M. (00:01:27):

    Exactly. It’s almost analog.

    Kurtis R. (00:01:34):

    Oh, yeah. It’s like straddling the analog and the digital, isn’t it?

    Linda M. (00:01:40):

    Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yeah.

    Kurtis R. (00:01:42):

    It records digitally, but it requires your analog fingers.

    Linda M. (00:01:46):

    Yes, it does require my analog fingers. So what you doing today? I know, uh, Charlie asked about The Memoir.

    Kurtis R. (00:02:02):

    Going over The Memoir. You mean the one that’s in the book?

    Linda M. (00:02:05):

    Yeah. Yeah. The one that’s in the book.

    Kurtis R. (00:02:07):

    That would be amazing but let’s keep... What else?

    Linda M. (00:02:11):

    Um, and then I had talked to you about jus soli and jus cogens.

    Kurtis R. (00:02:20):

    Jus soli and jus sanguinis.

    Linda M. (00:02:22):

    Yeah, jus soli and jus sanguinis. Yeah. And the third thing is, um, (speaking to sister) do we have time to get, um, another book before we leave? We got three weeks. As long as he sends it right away.

    Kurtis R. (00:02:40):

    If I send it today, I can send it today. I’m glad you brought that up. I am getting extremely proactive trying to start a fire, so to speak. And so almost every single response from me on Facebook is a combination of the link to New Word Order and Right of Way the book. So, and it’s really funny, by sending those combinations, I’m getting people to look at both New Word Order and the book itself. It’s time consuming but I think that the only way this Truth is going to get out there is by me getting extremely proactive.

    Kurtis R. (00:03:27):

    Not just waiting for people to wake up and listen and go, oh, wow, that it resonates. It is the truth. And have that one person sit on it for the next six months.

    Linda M. (00:03:39):

    Right, right. Yeah, absolutely. Well, I finally sent in my HHS (Health and Human Services) letter, and so I sent the book with it, and that’s why I need a new book.

    Kurtis R. (00:03:50):

    I’m going to send you...

    Linda M. (00:03:53):

    Yes, for now.

    Kurtis R. (00:03:54):

    Make sure I have an address, make sure I have the address right now.

    Linda M. (00:03:58):

    Oh. Okay.

    Kurtis R. (00:03:59):

    I mean, text it to me and I’ll send one out today.

    Linda M. (00:04:02):

    Okay. Okay. I’ll do that.

    Kurtis R. (00:04:03):

    So I’m getting extremely proactive. I have to because, to me, the more I look at the book - and this is me - I know what’s in the book.

    Linda M. (00:04:14):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:04:15):

    And the more I look at it, the more powerful it gets.

    Linda M. (00:04:18):

    Yeah. Well, I just sat down and wrote The Memoir yesterday, the new one out of the book, and I was just like... FN A.

    Kurtis R. (00:04:30):

    I think we can do The Memoir today. That’s in the book. The final version that I found final. And then I also think there’s a couple things that we need to do right now. Uh, and then we can do jus soli / jus sanguinis for clarification purposes. Is that everything? Was there a third thing?

    Linda M. (00:04:58):

    Well, no, you had brought up something. You said you had something really cool going on last time we talked and then we’ve missed because you were busy.

    Kurtis R. (00:05:07):

    I was out of...

    Linda M. (00:05:09):

    Yeah.

    Kurtis R. (00:05:10):

    First of all the call we did on the letter to, uh, World Health Organization, I just looked at the U.S.P.S. tracking site. It says your item departed a transfer airport in metropolitan area, Zurich, Switzerland on June 26th, 2023, at 10:37 AM. The item is currently in transit to the destination. I sent this...

    Linda M. (00:05:38):

    This is W H O?

    Kurtis R. (00:05:40):

    World Health Organization. Yeah.

    Linda M. (00:05:43):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:05:43):

    I sent this on the 15th.

    Linda M. (00:05:45):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:05:46):

    It’s the 27th.

    Linda M. (00:05:48):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:05:50):

    By the way, it didn’t even leave Newark, United States until the 24th, nine days later.

    Linda M. (00:05:57):

    Yeah. Well, as far as I know, the one I sent to the, um, Consular Affairs is still sitting at the Post Office.

    Kurtis R. (00:06:06):

    So I’m going to go upstairs and get some coffee. I am going to have to be downstairs in front of the computer, I think, for some of this stuff today, so, I won’t be up in the sunlight.

    Kurtis R. (00:06:20):

    I’ll be six feet under. (in the basement)

    Linda M. (00:06:23):

    You’ll be six feet under.

    Kurtis R. (00:06:25):

    I’ll be six feet under. Yeah.

    Linda M. (00:06:27):

    I’m going to open the windows so I can see out at least today.

    Kurtis R. (00:06:41):

    Let’s see. So this will be fun.

    Kurtis R. (00:06:50):

    I got to get an idea out there so people don’t get confused.

    Kurtis R. (00:06:53):

    I can tell by some of the responses I get that people don’t really know all the way down what I’m trying to say.

    Linda M. (00:07:03):

    Yeah. Well, It’s just so counter what, uh, counter indoctrination and you know, it’s just like, how can fertilization be so important, you know?

    Kurtis R. (00:07:17):

    Right.

    Linda M. (00:07:18):

    It’s, um, it’s so against all the training.

    Kurtis R. (00:07:24):

    Well, here’s the thing, before I forget, like I said, we can do the, I’ll get, I’ll pick up, I’ll go get my book and I’ll do The Memoir because I think it’s important that people understand what that is.

    Kurtis R. (00:07:37):

    Um, jus soli / jus sanguinis is going to be so obvious. Eventually you’ll, you’ll get it. It’ll make unbelievable sense and then it’s like light bulb city.

    Kurtis R. (00:07:49):

    Um, but right off the bat, the idea...

    Kurtis R. (00:07:54):

    Ok so... mom and dad lay together.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:02):

    In my case, mom and dad lay together somewhere late 1959 according to the Gregorian calendar.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:12):

    Late... December-ish.

    Linda M. (00:08:17):

    Uhhuh

    Kurtis R. (00:08:18):

    Uh, dad drops off some building materials at a job site called womb.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:22):

    Mom already had some building materials at that job site called womb.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:26):

    Dad’s building materials was sperm.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:29):

    23 chromosomes from dad.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:31):

    Mom’s 23 chromosomes came in a form of an ovum.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:34):

    These building materials, through a miraculous act of construction called fertilization produced a single-celled Zygote.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:51):

    A 46-chromosome Zygote.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:53):

    That’s my Godly Estate.

    Linda M. (00:08:56):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:57):

    That’s the entirety.

    Kurtis R. (00:08:58):

    All of me, and what is mine, is in one single cell - called the Zygote.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:05):

    And it lasts roughly about one day.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:11):

    Let’s say 24 to 30 hours-ish, and then it begins to subdivide within itself.

    Linda M. (00:09:18):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:18):

    So it has a finite, or an external frontier edge, let’s say, which is the outside of the cell.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:29):

    That’s the limits of my existence.

    Linda M. (00:09:33):

    Yeah.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:33):

    The outside of that cell.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:36):

    And then everything inside that is subdividing becomes everything to me.

    Kurtis R. (00:09:46):

    So you have the outside of the cell, which I’m going to call the frontier edge, and then everything subdividing inside, let’s just say, to keep it very simple, let’s say it subdivides into, the embryo, the umbilical cord, and then everything inside that outside wall.

    Linda M. (00:10:06):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:08):

    And, and by the way, when it starts to subdivide, the word or the term goes from Zygote, which is a single cell, to Conceptus.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:19):

    So the subdivision, the subdividing Conceptus, and I’m just going to say, baby, umbilical, and extra-embryonic materials/membranes.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:28):

    That, baby, umbilical, and extra-embryonic membranes is the Conceptus.

    Linda M. (00:10:33):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:34):

    Okay. Now you’ll see where I’m going with this. That material plants into the uterine wall. Mom’s uterine wall. I’m going to say mother’s uterine wall.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:46):

    Mom provided 23 chromosomes.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:50):

    Mother can be any female that can carry that Conceptus.

    Linda M. (00:10:57):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:10:58):

    As a carrier, a surrogate even, can carry that material.

    Kurtis R. (00:11:02):

    So what my mom and dad gave me - via chromosomes - can be carried by another female called a surrogate.

    Linda M. (00:11:15):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:11:16):

    But in my specific case, my mom was both mom and mother, the carrier. In my case. Okay.

    Kurtis R. (00:11:24):

    So my entirety is now in the wall of the uterus.

    Kurtis R. (00:11:29):

    It’s called implantation.

    Linda M. (00:11:31):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:11:36):

    About, let’s just say 280 days-ish later, the water breaks, the membrane breaks, and baby now falls off the wall so to speak - still attached to the umbilical cord - but now, like Humpty-Dumpty, in the egg, baby falls off the wall but it is still attached to the wall via the umbilical cord.

    Linda M. (00:12:04):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:05):

    So baby, umbilical, and extra-embryonic material are all one unit.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:09):

    Remember, they’re always only one unit.

    Linda M. (00:12:12):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:13):

    But it looks like there’s three things.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:15):

    It looks like there’s a baby. It looks like there’s a stem or an umbilical cord attaching the baby to the rest of baby. And then that material’s attached to mom, or mother, or the carrier, or the surrogate.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:26):

    But it’s still baby, umbilical, and extra embryonic as one biological estate.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:33):

    One Godly Estate.

    Linda M. (00:12:35):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:36):

    Now, here’s the thing...

    Linda M. (00:12:39):

    They were within that original, um, the edge of the frontier. All of that is still evolved within that membrane.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:53):

    That singularity.

    Linda M. (00:12:56):

    That singularity. Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:58):

    It’s all one biology.

    Kurtis R. (00:12:58):

    All it’s all exactly the same DNA. And thank you for pointing that out. It’s all exactly the same material, the same DNA.

    Linda M. (00:13:07):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:13:10):

    The baby looks different than the umbilical cord, which looks different than the embryonic material, but it’s all one. It’s all the same. It’s all identical DNA.

    Linda M. (00:13:20):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:13:22):

    It’s called evolutionary process.

    Linda M. (00:13:24):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:13:26):

    I have evolved from a single cell. That’s evolution. Regardless of what any religious believers, any of the faithful want to believe, all of us have evolved from a single cell.

    Linda M. (00:13:40):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:13:41):

    That’s that simple. You, you don’t have to believe it. You’re just lying to yourself.

    Linda M. (00:13:46):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:13:47):

    Okay, so here’s why this is all important. Baby then, by extension of the umbilical cord, travels through the birth canal and out the gate, out the port, using the port-of-entry i.e. the vagina, into the New World.

    Kurtis R. (00:14:13):

    So baby, which was inside of the extra-embryonic material as the Captain.

    Kurtis R. (00:14:19):

    Think of the baby as Noah and the remaining material back there as the Ark.

    Kurtis R. (00:14:24):

    Noah’s Ark.

    Kurtis R. (00:14:25):

    Noah and the Ark.

    Linda M. (00:14:27):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:14:28):

    And remember that baby used to be fetus, and fetus used to be embryo. And embryo used to be one singularity called Zygote. It’s all one thing. That’s the whole point of this. It’s all one.

    Linda M. (00:14:41):

    Kurtis R. (00:14:41):

    Okay. Now here’s the thing. Baby comes out, hospital, doesn’t matter where, baby comes out attached to the umbilical cord, which is attached to the wall of the uterus, typically. Its all one thing. Now baby’s out in the present moment in full view of witnesses, but then there’s a cord that straddles the two worlds of the unborn and the born. The baby is born but then has unborn material still back in the waters of mother.

    Linda M. (00:15:12):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:15:13):

    It remains back there.

    Kurtis R. (00:15:15):

    So when they clamp and cut the cord, they create a false duality for my existence.

    Kurtis R. (00:15:19):

    There’s me, as an indigenous person now on the land, in the air, the dry world, the environment of the dry world, the New World outside of the womb, but then the rest of me is still back there in the waters of mother.

    Kurtis R. (00:15:35):

    So you have the indigenous person on the land, but then you have this other earliest version - this vestige of you - left behind in the waters of mother still attached to the wall of the uterus, in fact, in most cases. Now, they clamp and cut the cord and they create a false duality.

    Linda M. (00:15:57):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:15:58):

    So here I am talking to you, 63 plus years later, according to the earth going around the sun.

    Linda M. (00:16:06):

    Mm-hmm.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:08):

    I’m still using exactly the same biology.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:10):

    I’ve evolved a long time since the Zygote but I’m still exactly the same DNA.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:19):

    I’ve never not possessed it.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:22):

    I’ve never not occupied it.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:23):

    I’m always the sole owner of all of that material.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:28):

    Always.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:29):

    From the beginning.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:29):

    Ab initio.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:30):

    From fertilization to this moment it’s only me.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:35):

    And it’s only my property.

    Linda M. (00:16:38):

    Yep.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:38):

    That’s my point.

    Linda M. (00:16:42):

    Yeah.

    Kurtis R. (00:16:43):

    Now here’s the thing, there’s a lot of people that listen to these calls that think I’m trying to go back there where they cut that material. I’m trying to go back there and reclaim it. They think I’m trying to re-attach it, or go back and get it. I’m not! I’m not trying to go back to infancy. That’s what the birthday does to you. By claiming the birthday you keep reclaiming infancy. I’m not doing that. I’m recognizing the truth of the matter - which is fertilization to this moment as one unit - but I’m not trying to go back there to get it.

    Linda M. (00:17:21):

    You already have it.

    Kurtis R. (00:17:22):

    I already have it.

    Linda M. (00:17:24):

    You don’t have to go back there.

    Kurtis R. (00:17:24):

    I’ve never not had it.

    Kurtis R. (00:17:25):

    I’ve never not had it.

    Linda M. (00:17:27):

    Correct.

    Kurtis R. (00:17:29):

    They’re saying that I abandoned my vessel; my boat; my ship; the Ark of the Covenant with God. They’re saying I abandoned it 63 years ago. I didn’t! I’m still using it. It’s just in a different form.

    Linda M. (00:17:46):

    Yep.

    Kurtis R. (00:17:47):

    What used to be a single cell; what used to be two cells; what used to be a thousand cells... is now trillions of cells, and I’m speaking through it right now.

    Linda M. (00:17:56):

    Yep.

    Kurtis R. (00:17:56):

    Or I’m yelling through it right now.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:02):

    I can’t make this clear enough, Linda.

    Linda M. (00:18:05):

    I know.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:05):

    People think I’m going back to pick this shit up. It’s dead. It’s been dead for 63 years. Why do I want to drag it around with me?

    Linda M. (00:18:18):

    I sure don’t.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:20):

    What it is, is people think they’re missing something.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:24):

    If they believe they need to go back there they’re admitting to the cut.

    Linda M. (00:18:29):

    Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:31):

    I don’t need that shit. I don’t need to be beneficiary of some fictitious character they made up for me 63 years ago. I don’t need any of that. I don’t need to go back there. I’ve never been without.

    Linda M. (00:18:46):

    Right.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:47):

    I’ve never been without it.

    Linda M. (00:18:49):

    Mm-hmm. You can’t be without it and be alive. If you’re without it, you’re not alive.

    Kurtis R. (00:18:56):

    Again, I’m not trying to go get it.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:01):

    If I even acknowledge the cut, Linda, I’m accepting the death. I’m accepting the decedent estate.

    Linda M. (00:19:09):

    I know. I keep telling people the same thing.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:12):

    Only an idiot would try to go back there by acknowledging the decedent estate saying, I want my stuff back.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:18):

    No, I don’t.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:19):

    I don’t want it back... because it’s never been missing.

    Linda M. (00:19:23):

    Right. Exactly.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:25):

    I would shake these idiots awake if I could, but I can’t.

    Linda M. (00:19:30):

    I know. I know.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:31):

    But the biggest thing is, Linda, people think that because this shit was placed as the res of the In God We Trust - as a deposit in that trust account, they think that there’s billions of dollars waiting for them.

    Linda M. (00:19:46):

    I know.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:47):

    They actually think there’s something in it.

    Kurtis R. (00:19:49):

    It’s the WIIFM, what’s in it for me. They want something that doesn’t belong to them. They want the blood money of that account. That’s what they want. They want something for nothing.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:01):

    And so if you’re pursuing that shit, I don’t want anything to do with you.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:06):

    I don’t want anything to do with people that want to be considered a beneficiary to the blood pool.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:16):

    I don’t want anything to do with people that want something for nothing.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:23):

    If you haven’t earned it, it’s not yours.

    Linda M. (00:20:27):

    Yep.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:29):

    Done. I’m moving the podium away now, the fire and brimstone is done for the day.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:36):

    I get so riled about this because so many people go, how can we get it back?

    Linda M. (00:20:42):

    Yeah. I know. I wonder how long it took me to get that.

    Kurtis R. (00:20:49):

    It’s not easy though, is it?

    Linda M. (00:20:51):

    No. Um, it took me a while to not, to real. I mean, I was in that pursuit myself. And, um, um, then I, but #1, it never felt quite right, and #2, once I learned the truth, then it, I think there... Well, so I looked up the word vestige because that’s the one that you used. And in Etymology (Online), it’s from the 1600s. French.

    Kurtis R. (00:21:23):

    Let me get there real quick, hang on.

    Linda M. (00:21:25):

    Okay.

    Kurtis R. (00:21:26):

    This is, this is what you do best. All right. Etymology Online. Vestige?

    Linda M. (00:21:36):

    Yeah. V E S T I G E.

    Kurtis R. (00:21:39):

    Okay. I’m with you.

    Linda M. (00:21:40):

    Okay. So c. 1600, from French vestige a mark, trace, sign (16c.), from Latin vestigium footprint, trace, So I just think it’s interesting because in a way, we put our footprint in the womb when we landed, um, a mark. But no matter how much of an imprint we put into the wall of the uterus, they’re still separate. My mom’s, uh, DNA, or mother, um, and my DNA never interfaced. Um, but I also think it’s...

    Kurtis R. (00:22:31):

    Wait, be careful. They do interface. They don’t mix.

    Linda M. (00:22:34):

    I’m sorry. I mean, but they never...

    Kurtis R. (00:22:36):

    They do interface, but they don’t mix.

    Linda M. (00:22:38):

    Uh, yes. They don’t mix. Yes.

    Kurtis R. (00:22:40):

    When I plug a cord into

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