Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 "Born" of final Ratification on November 12, 1776, as first "Conceived" on July 02, 1776: The Declaration of Independence [Abstract] The thesis herein outlined is that America's most famous State Paper, The Declaration of Independence [ in 1776, entitled differently: "A Declaration by the Representatives of the United States of America in General Congress assembled," and so dated for July 04 ] was officially "conceived" on the day that the sovereign Independence of the United States was declared enacted, July 02, 1776; and more than four months later on, only then on November 12, 1776 was "A Declaration" officially "born," on the opening day of a State constitutional convention, in Halifax, North Carolina. This event marked the 13th and completing ratification, and as well, marked the constitutional "birth" of "A Declaration," the Declaration of Independence. Consequently, in the context of the cosmically considered birth of the United States of America in July 1776, the July 04 event of agreement to distribute the text of "A Declaration" edited by the Committee of the Whole in the Continental Congress is without any significant cosmic efficacy. The unmistakable trajectory of the founding events of July 1776 was: first, the statutory "declared enactment" of Independence on July 02, the actual sovereign birth event of the U.S.A., and then: the enactment's promotion through the instrumentality of Jefferson's heroic propaganda manifesto, summarizing the explanation and justification for the July 02 enactment of sovereign Independence. Furthermore, by implication, the culprit contributing to the confusion of July "04" with July "02", was dear old Mercury retrograding, which did its contributory part to causing the official printer for Congress, John Dunlap, to have affixed, confusedly, the wrong date in the upper legend of the broadside of "A Declaration." Undoubtedly, this justly famous State Paper should have been dated, truthfully and without confusion, for July 02, 1776. However, be that as it may, some seven months later on, as a result of the 13 ratifications completed between July 09 and November 12, the Continental Congress, at last, officially published on January 31, 1777, by the duly signed authentication of President John Hancock, "The unanimous Declaration of the united States of America," in the documentary form of the "Goddard Broadside." From that date in 1777, this State Paper, henceforth officially referred to as the "Declaration of Independence," and still dated erroneously for July 04, 1776, was officially recognized to be constitutionally in effect. Historians Usually Have the Last Word: And now, moreover, in the following citation from an astute historian, whose insight may be the much simpler and equally truthful explanation of the fact of the entire matter, I detect a telltale sign of that periodic spoiler, Mercury retrograding in the 4th degree of Cancer, and its unsettling influence on the historic events of July 02 and July 04: The official printer, John Dunlap of Philadelphia, placed July 4 at the top of the printer's proof-copy of the Broadside, [ that is to say, his own ready to print-press, executing draft copy of "A Declaration by the Representatives of the United States of America in General Congress assembled" ] and thus, accidentally, that July 4 came to be celebrated with the pomp and ceremony John Adams expected to be given over to July 2, the day Congress actually declared independence. [unquote] (p.187).David Freeman Hawke, HONORABLE TREASON: The Declaration of Independence and the Men Who Signed It, New York: Viking Press, 1976, 240 pp. ************************************************************************************************************************************ ************************************************************************************************************************************* November 12: "A Declaration" [ so dated July "04" ] finally "ratified" by the State of Norh Carolina in convention. [ Halifax, North Carolina, LMT +5:10:22 ] "Birth" moment: @ 11:35:31 . Lagna . 07.Capricorn.24; Moon: 15.Scorpio.44 & Sun: 00.Scorpio.12, 10 H. ************************************************************************************************************************************** July 02, 1776: Independence officially "declared enacted" [ = "resolved" ] by the Continental Congress. [ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, LMT +5:00:39 ] "Conception" moment: @ 16:49:09 . Moon 02 H . 07.Capricorn.24 . Lagna: 15.Scorpio.44 . Sun, 08 H. [Lahiri] Conception for the November 12 birth was not by the July "04" adoption of the edited text of "A Declaration," but, by the July "02" U.S.A. birth itself, which birth triggered this, the 13th of 13 ratifications of "A Declaration". [Compare the July "02" SAMVA rectification: clock time, 16:48:07, with this July "02" connexity for November 12: clock time, 16:49:09 unrectified: the variance between SAMVA, and the July 02 connexity for November 12: 62 seconds (13 minutes/arc, both in the 16th deg/Scorpio). Consider this correlation as one among other, further substantiations of the accuracy of the SAMVA rectification for July 02, 1776.] *********************************************************************************************** ***********************************************************************************************. A possible alternative connexity rejected, based on evidence in the historical record: July 4th for Nov 12, 1776: July 04, 1776 @ 16:45:11 . Moon 03 H . 06.Aquarius.11 . Lagna: 16.Scorpio.31 . Sun, 08 H. November 12 @ 13:04:31 . Lagna . 06.Aquarius.11 . Moon: 16.Scorpio.31 & Sun: 00.Scorpio.16, 09 H. A July "04" connexity as a conceivable alternative to that of July "02" has been hereby rejected: According to the Journal of Congress and Paul H. Smith, [editor, Library of Congress, Quarterly Journal, October 1776] the text of the "A Declaration" was Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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