Canonum De Ius Fidei
Canons of Fiduciary Law

one heaven iconIII.   Fund

3.3 Privy Fund

Article 147 - (1782) Privy Council of Ireland

Canon 7647 (link)

The Privy Council of Ireland is a type of Privy Fund first formed in 1782 under the Constitution of Ireland Act of 1782, which instituted a number of reforms and recognized the semi-autonomy of Ireland to make legislation without obstruction of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Instead, the new Privy Council of Ireland held the power and rights of appeal and the role of the Lord Lieutenant became a figurehead. However, after the 1798 failed Irish independence revolution, the Constitution was abolished and removed from the Statutes of Westminster, the earlier statutes of Ireland were deliberately burned and destroyed and deliberately false claims were inserted that the Privy Council had existed since 1662 under Charles II of England.

Canon 7648 (link)

In respect of the Privy Fund known as the Privy Council of Ireland:

(i) The Privy Fund known as the Privy Council of Ireland was first formed within a statute of Westminster in 1782 (now deliberately removed and destroyed) regarding the rights and semi-autonomy of the Irish Parliament as well as the limitations of the Lord Lieutenant to abrogate certain rights, privileges or liberties. Now that the Constitution of Ireland Act of 1782 has been removed, no constituting instrument exists in either British or Irish statute as to the origin of the formation of the Privy Fund known as the Privy Council of Ireland; and

(ii) The introduction of the Constitution of Ireland Act of 1782 and the creation of the Privy Fund known as the Privy Council of Ireland had the effect of encouraging calls for independence within Ireland, giving rise to the failed revolution for independence in 1798, which was only quashed by the importation by the Parliament of Great Britain of over 50,000 foreign mercenaries into Ireland along with more than 40,000 British soldiers and the murder of over 200,000 Irish men, women and children; and

(iii) The Statutes pre-1782 of Westminster provide compelling evidence that the Privy Fund known as the Privy Council of Ireland could not have existed prior to 1782, as demonstrated by the Westminster act of 1719 entitled “An act for better securing the dependency of the kingdom of Ireland upon the crown of Great Britain”; and

(iv) The deliberate alteration of the Statutes of Westminster to remove any reference and record of the Constitution of Ireland Act of 1782 and subsequently to insert a myriad of false statutes pertaining to the Parliament of Ireland is prima facie evidence of crimes against humanity and the illegitimacy of any claim of the continuation of the Privy Council of Ireland beyond 1798; and

(v) The fact that the Constituting instrument of its formation has been corrupted and removed from history and the fact that references have been willfully and deliberately inserted as multiple examples of fraud is proof that the Privy Council of Ireland has no legitimacy or valid existence.