Protocols of Governance of The United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl - Revised Draft 2

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Protocols of Governance of The United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl - Revised Draft 2

Working draft for review. This draft is prepared from the latest source document, /home/royal.ukoy.net/Protocols of Governance of The United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl (2).md. It preserves the original governing architecture and revises the instrument in a more sovereign protocol voice with inline Torah citations. Explanatory material from chat discussion has not been carried into the instrument as doctrine unless it belongs in governmental form.


Preamble

We, the descendants of the children of Yisra'eyl who fled into Africa during the time of Gedaliah and now reside in the Caribbean, the western hemisphere, and abroad, in recognition of our divine heritage and in obedience to the commandments1 of יֶהֱוֶה Yeh'ehweh, establish these Protocols of Governance for the United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl.

The United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl stands under יֶהֱוֶה, King of the universe, and proceeds by Torah, righteous judgment, royal command, ordered administration, and the restoration of the Kingdom. The government is established to administer justice2, preserve inheritance, uphold the statutes and judgments given through Moshe3, provide public order, and carry the authority of the throne through all houses, courts, chambers, offices, registers, territories, and peoples placed under its charge.

The United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl is constituted as a world governing body for the people of Yisra'eyl and for all peoples, households, territories, and nations brought into lawful order under the Kingdom.

Structure of Government

The government of the United Monarchy is ordered through three principal Houses of Government under the sovereign throne:

  1. The House of Law.
  2. The Executive House of the Monarchy.
  3. The House of Judgment, בֵּית הַדִּין Bayth Ha'Deen.

These Houses proceed under4 יֶהֱוֶה, Torah, and the throne. Each House has its proper work, officers, records, instruments, and jurisdiction. Each House shall act within the Torah's prescriptions, standards, and constraints.

The House of Law

The House of Law preserves, orders, codifies, and promulgates Torah-bound law, royal protocols, public statutes, legal determinations, and administrative instruments. It gives legislative form to Torah-bound government by arranging the judgments, statutes, decrees, and protocols necessary for the Kingdom to govern.

The authority of the House of Law is grounded in the Torah provision that difficult matters of judgment are brought to the appointed judges and priestly authority, and the people shall do according to the sentence declared5. The boundary of that authority is Torah itself: no determination may add to, diminish from, overthrow, or contradict the commandments6, statutes, and judgments of יֶהֱוֶה.

The Executive House of the Monarchy

The Executive House of the Monarchy carries the King's command into administration. It executes royal orders, administers the chambers of government, supervises public works, guards the realm, manages treasury and storehouse functions, coordinates services, maintains the instruments of government, and directs the officers appointed to carry out the works of the Kingdom.

The House of Judgment

The House of Judgment, בֵּית הַדִּין Bayth Ha'Deen, hears causes, gives judgment7, records proceedings, resolves disputes, orders restitution, preserves due process according to Torah8, and guards justice against bribery, false witness17, partiality, violence, and deceit9.

Article 1: General Provisions

Section 1.1 Supremacy of Yeh'ehweh

יֶהֱוֶה Yeh'ehweh is the Supreme Authority over all existence, the King of the universe, the giver of Torah, and the source of lawful dominion, judgment, inheritance, and government.

All statutes, protocols, offices, judgments, appointments, courts, chambers, decrees, fiscal instruments, and public administrations of the United Monarchy shall conform to Torah. Every officer acts as a steward under the throne and before יֶהֱוֶה.

No office may set aside the commandments, statutes, and judgments. No chamber may use its charge to produce what Torah forbids.

Section 1.2 Structure of Government

The United Monarchy is administered by the House of Law, the Executive House of the Monarchy, and the House of Judgment. The King is the sovereign head of the government under יֶהֱוֶה and Torah. The Houses of Government proceed under royal authority and perform their appointed works.

The Houses of Government shall maintain the offices, courts, registries, instruments, seals, archives, communications, treasuries, records, and public administrations necessary for the rule of the Kingdom. Each shall proceed by lawful appointment, written authority, righteous judgment, and record under Torah and the throne.

Section 1.3 Global Governing Body

The United Monarchy of Yisra'eyl stands as the governing body of the Kingdom and as the lawful world governing authority for all peoples, territories, households, and nations brought into obedience, protection, service, and administration under Torah.

It shall maintain offices capable of receiving petitions, recording status, administering public services, issuing instruments, judging disputes, registering lawful relations, receiving territory and households into order, and extending the King's governance across the earth.

Section 1.4 National and External Relations

The Chamber of Foreign Affairs, or such chamber as is lawfully designated, shall conduct external relations, communications, agreements, and public representations with peoples, territories, communities, and nations outside the direct administration of the Kingdom.

All external relations shall preserve the supremacy of Torah and the authority of the throne. Agreements shall be written, registered, bounded, and kept from covenantal entanglement10 that would require disobedience to Torah.

Section 1.5 International Collaboration and Treaties

The United Monarchy may enter agreements, treaties, covenants of service, memoranda, trade arrangements, territorial receptions, and cooperative instruments where such instruments serve Torah purposes and preserve the sovereignty of the throne.

No treaty or agreement is valid against Torah. No officer may bind the Crown beyond delegated authority. All such instruments shall be entered into the proper register.

Section 1.6 Sovereign Wealth Fund

The Sovereign Wealth Fund shall be further governed by the Treasury, Storehouse, Currency, and Sovereign Wealth Act and by such schedules as are lawfully ratified under Article 6 of these Protocols.


The Sovereign Wealth Fund is established as a treasury instrument of the Kingdom for the preservation, increase, and lawful deployment of resources for the benefit of the Kingdom, the people, public works, storehouses, infrastructure, education, protection, and household restoration.

The Fund shall operate according to righteous stewardship, honest accounting, proper record, and restrictions against unlawful gain. It shall not be used to build the Kingdom through permanent debt bondage11, dispossession, fraudulent weights12, oppression of the poor, or merchant-rule over public necessities.

Section 1.7 Digital Governance and Cybersecurity

The government shall preserve the integrity of its records, instruments, communications, archives, seals, identification, and public notices. The officers charged with these systems shall protect them against fraud, corruption, unauthorized alteration, and loss.

Section 1.8 Economic Policies and Fiscal Responsibility

The Chamber of Treasury, with the Chamber of Commerce and other appointed offices, shall govern fiscal policy, public accounts, storehouse administration, currency, procurement, lawful dues, public works funding, and economic planning.

Economic policy shall distinguish lawful exchange from Canaanite merchant extraction. Commerce shall be ordered by honest weights, truthful measures, lawful contracts, protection of inheritance, release from unlawful bondage, and judgment against fraud.

Section 1.9 Aid, Relief, and Public Provision

The government may provide aid, relief, and public provision to households, communities, territories, and nations according to lawful priority, public records, treasury capacity, and the King's command.

Aid shall serve restoration, order, and life. It shall not be used to purchase unlawful allegiance, weaken households, create dependency for control, or place the Kingdom under foreign command.

Section 1.10 Kingdom Currency

The Kingdom Currency, its denominations, backing, record, replacement procedure, anti-counterfeiting protections, audits, ledgers, and public reporting shall be governed by the Treasury, Storehouse, Currency, and Sovereign Wealth Act and its ratified schedules.


The government may establish instruments of exchange and treasury record for lawful commerce and public administration.

Currency shall be administered by the Treasury, protected against counterfeiting, recorded with integrity, and governed by just weights and measures13. Monetary instruments shall serve exchange, provision, public works, and household stability. They shall not become instruments of fraudulent measure or hidden bondage.

Article 2: The House of Law

Section 2.1 Composition and Authority

The House of Law is responsible for the legislative, codifying, and promulgating functions of the government. It ensures that laws, statutes, regulations, instruments, and protocols are derived from and constrained by Torah.

The House of Law may include the Supreme Administrator, the House of the Nazerite Levitical Administration14, the Legislative Assembly, the Torah Law Committee, the Legal Codification Committee, scribes, registrars, and such officers as are appointed.

Section 2.2 Supreme Administrator

The Supreme Administrator, כֹּהֵן גָּדוֹל where that title is lawfully held and properly applied, leads the House of Law, supervises the legislative and codifying process, coordinates with the other Houses, and ensures adherence to Torah principles.

Section 2.3 Legislative Assembly

The Legislative Assembly consists of appointed representatives, officers, scholars, scribes, and administrators chosen for Torah knowledge, wisdom, service, judgment, and administrative competence.

The Assembly prepares and reviews proposed statutes, protocols, rules, codifications, and public instruments. Its work is an ordered governmental function under the throne.

Section 2.3.1 Torah Law Committee

The Torah Law Committee interprets, applies, organizes, and prepares Torah-based law for the needs of government. It shall not add to or diminish the commandments.

Section 2.3.2 Legal Codification Committee

The Legal Codification Committee compiles, edits, arranges, numbers, and prepares legal instruments for promulgation and public record.

Section 2.4 House of the Nazerite Levitical Administration

The offices, councils, vows, duties, records, transitional Levitical functions, teaching authority, and inter-house coordination of this House shall be prepared in the House of the Nazerite Levitical Administration Protocol and shall take force only by ratification under Article 6 of these Protocols.


The House of the Nazerite Levitical Administration, בֵּית הַנְּזִירִים הַכְּהֻנָּה הַלְּוִיָּת, is established within the House of Law to preserve the Torah character of government.

It performs interim Levitical-administrative duties where restoration conditions require such service, gives Torah guidance to the House of Law, assists the House of Judgment in matters requiring Torah interpretation, guides the Executive House where statutes must be implemented, and advises the Treasury concerning tithes, firstfruits, offerings, storehouse matters15, and lawful fiscal conduct.

The Nazerite Levitical Administration acts under the throne and within the boundaries of Torah.

Section 2.5 Duties and Protections of Citizens and Subjects

Citizens, subjects, residents, protected persons, and those received under the Kingdom owe obedience to lawful Torah-bound authority, truthful record, respect for judgment, and fulfillment of lawful obligations.

The government shall preserve righteous judgment, guard against false witness, protect the poor, fatherless, widow, and stranger16 under care, and provide lawful petition and hearing according to status and jurisdiction.

Section 2.6 Justice, Duty, and Ordered Standing

The Kingdom recognizes standing, rank, duty, household order, office, sex, age, appointment, and lawful distinction. Justice under Torah is righteous judgment according to commandment, without bribery, false witness, or partiality.

Section 2.7 Citizenship and Representation

Citizenship and representation shall be administered according to lawful status, household relation, territory, service, appointment, and record. Representation means ordered presentation of needs, petitions, reports, and conditions through appointed or recognized channels.

Section 2.8 Social Justice and Community Development

Community development shall be framed as household restoration, local administration, public provision, and righteous order. The government may establish programs for poor relief, education, service work, local development, housing, food, water, and public works according to Torah and treasury capacity.

Section 2.9 Information and Public Affairs

The House of Law shall coordinate with the proper public information offices to publish statutes, protocols, legal notices, public explanations, and summaries of lawful rights, duties, offices, and procedures.

Section 2.10 Youth Engagement and Formation

Youth formation is a public concern. The government shall provide pathways for children and youth to receive instruction in Torah18, language, history, service, household duty, discipline, and public responsibility.

Section 2.11 Passports, Identification Cards, and Licensing

The government may issue passports, identification cards, credentials, licenses, and other instruments of status, access, travel, office, service, and lawful recognition. Such instruments shall be registered and protected against fraud.

Section 2.12 Amendment Process

The House of Law shall maintain procedures for proposing amendments, corrections, renumbering, codification updates, and conflict control. Ratified instruments shall preserve version history and effective dates.

Article 3: The Executive House of the Monarchy

Section 3.1 Composition and Authority

The Executive House of the Monarchy, בֵּית נָגִיד הַמַּלְכוּת Beyth Nah'geedh HaM'Malkhoth, administers the works of the Kingdom under the King's command. It consists of the King, the Royal Cabinet, the Royal House of Yisra'eyl, the Giverah Gedolah HaMalkot where her executive office is defined, the Queen Consorts where their rank and service are defined, the Royal Court where assigned, executive offices, chambers, principalities, and public administrative bodies.

Section 3.2 The King

The King is the sovereign executive head19 of the monarchy under יֶהֱוֶה and Torah. He appoints officers, commands the Executive House, issues decrees, directs public administration, preserves the Kingdom, and ensures that all works of government proceed in righteousness.

Section 3.2.1 The Royal Cabinet

The chambers, officers, reports, commissions, appointment rules, delegated powers, and administrative limits of the Royal Cabinet shall be further governed by the Executive House and Royal Cabinet Act and by ratified cabinet schedules.


The Royal Cabinet advises the King and carries delegated responsibilities through chambers of government. Its members serve by appointment and commission. Cabinet authority is bounded by the instrument appointing the office.

The Royal Cabinet may include the Chamber of Defense, Chamber of Justice, Chamber of Health, Chamber of Treasury, Chamber of Energy, Chamber of State, Chamber of Labor, Chamber of Domestic Security, Chamber of Commerce, Chamber of Education, Chamber of Veteran Affairs, Chamber of Housing and Urban Development, Chamber of Transportation, Chamber of Agriculture, Chamber of the Interior, Chamber of Foreign Affairs, Chamber of Technology and Innovation, Chamber of Public Welfare, Chamber of Environmental Protection, Chamber of Human Resources and Civil Service, Chamber of Information and Public Affairs, Chamber of Infrastructure, and such additional chambers as are lawfully chartered.

Section 3.3 The Royal House of Yisra'eyl

The Royal House of Yisra'eyl is the dynastic and household-state center of the monarchy. Its records, lineage, offices, dignities, royal protocols, palace administration, household order, and ceremonial functions are essential to the continuity and public standing of the Kingdom.

Section 3.4 The Giverah Gedolah HaMalkot - Queen Regnant

The Giverah Gedolah HaMalkot, the Queen Regnant, holds the executive and queenly station defined by the royal and governance protocols. Her office shall be described with exact title, rank, authority, reports, staff, and jurisdiction in the ratified Royal Dynasty protocols and executive office instruments.

Section 3.5 The Queen Consorts

The Queen Consorts hold the rank, dignity, and service defined by the royal protocols. Their place, honor, duties, and relation to the King, the Queen Regnant, the Royal House, and the women's order shall be recorded in the Royal Dynasty protocols.

Section 3.6 The Royal Court

The Royal Court handles royal household matters, internal discipline, ceremonial matters, household petitions, and matters assigned by the King or protocols. It shall not displace the House of Judgment where public judicial jurisdiction is required unless expressly authorized.

Section 3.7 Executive Offices of the Monarchy

The executive offices, staff rosters, records, counsel functions, communications, household-administration interfaces, and office procedures of the monarchy shall be further governed by the Executive Offices of the Monarchy and Royal Household Administration Act and by ratified office schedules.


Executive Offices serve the King and the Executive House in administration, records, budget, policy, communications, crisis management, counsel, science and technology, trade, environmental quality, and other functions assigned by office charter.

Section 3.8 Office of Principalities

The Office of Principalities administers assigned royal, territorial, dynastic, or public responsibilities relating to principalities and such offices as the King establishes.

Section 3.9 Financial Provisions

Financial provisions shall be administered through the Chamber of Treasury, Office of Management and Budget, public accounts, lawful dues, royal revenues, storehouses, appropriations, and fiscal reports.

Section 3.10 Human Resources and Civil Service

Civil service offices shall administer appointment, qualification, discipline, training, records, compensation, duties, and removal of officers and workers of the government.

Section 3.11 Public Health and Welfare

The Chamber of Public Health and Welfare shall administer health, relief, public care, household support, emergency welfare, and protection of vulnerable persons according to Torah and lawful public policy.

Section 3.12 Education and Culture

The Chamber of Education and Culture shall administer public education, formation, instruction, language, history, service training, and cultural preservation according to Torah and royal policy.

Section 3.13 Cultural and Historical Preservation

The government shall preserve the history, records, language, protocols, lineage, public memory, and cultural inheritance of Yisra'eyl.

Section 3.14 Housing, Land Stewardship, and Urban Development

Housing and development shall be governed according to Torah principles of land, inheritance, rent, use, protection of households20, public works, and prevention of dispossession. Contemporary building, zoning, infrastructure, and urban instruments shall serve righteous order.

Section 3.15 Agriculture

Agriculture shall be administered for food provision, land stewardship, storehouse support, seed, harvest, labor, and protection of the poor according to Torah.

Section 3.16 Municipalities, Local Administration, and Corporations

Local administration may be ordered through districts, cities, towns, postal codes, blocks, gates21, service cells, and administrative corporations where such instruments are chartered under the Kingdom.

Municipal and corporate instruments shall serve public administration. They shall not become sovereign lords over the people, land, inheritance, or public records.

Section 3.17 Infrastructure and Technology

The Chamber of Infrastructure and Technology shall administer roads, communications, public systems, records technology, cybersecurity, and technical services needed for the Kingdom.

Section 3.18 Transportation

Transportation systems shall serve public order, commerce, relief, defense, education, agriculture, and the movement of the people under lawful administration.

Section 3.19 Energy and Resources

Energy and resources shall be administered as public necessities under righteous stewardship, treasury accountability, and protection from unlawful monopoly and merchant capture.

Section 3.20 Scientific Research and Technological Advancement

Scientific and technological advancement may be pursued where it serves life, order, knowledge, public works, defense, education, health, and lawful prosperity.

Section 3.21 Companies Act

The government may charter, register, regulate, and recognize companies, public bodies, service bodies, associations, and enterprises. Their status, duties, powers, ownership, and limits shall be recorded. No company may exercise sovereign power unless expressly chartered and bounded by law.

Section 3.22 Disaster Management and Crisis Response

The government shall maintain disaster management, emergency response, public warning, evacuation, relief, medical coordination, security coordination, storehouse release, and recovery procedures.

Section 3.23 Public Safety and Emergency Services

Public safety and emergency services shall protect life, records, households, royal persons, government offices, public order, and emergency needs.

Section 3.24 Environmental Stewardship

Environmental protection shall be administered as stewardship of land, water, animals, agriculture, health, and inheritance.

Section 3.25 Interior Affairs

Interior Affairs shall coordinate local administration, public order, territorial records, local offices, household service, and internal government relations.

Section 3.26 Sustainable Development and Economic Diversification

Development shall strengthen households, public works, lawful enterprise, agriculture, education, infrastructure, treasury stability, and the Kingdom's capacity to serve.

Section 3.27 Health and Wellness

Health and wellness programs shall promote bodily discipline, public health, household stability, training, care, prevention, and righteous service.

Section 3.28 Kingdom-Owned Enterprises

Kingdom-owned enterprises may be established where state ownership is required for public works, treasury stability, infrastructure, education, storehouses, land restoration, or other lawful Kingdom purposes. They shall operate by charter, accounting, public purpose, and Torah boundaries.

Section 3.29 National Defense and Security

The command structures, defense offices, domestic-security offices, emergency-service rules, mobilization records, training standards, and crisis procedures of this section shall be further governed by the National Defense, Domestic Security, and Emergency Service Act.


Defense and security shall protect the Kingdom22, the Royal House, government records, the people, public order, infrastructure, land, and lawful service. Command shall be disciplined, recorded, and bounded by Torah.

Section 3.30 Royal Family Administration and Management

Royal Family administration shall be governed by the Royal Dynasty protocols and by executive instruments concerning lineage, household, offices, security, education, care, ceremony, and records.

Article 4: The House of Judgment

The courts, registrars, judicial officers, procedure, appeals, mediation, enforcement, records, public reports, and court forms of this House shall be further governed by the House of Judgment and Courts Act and by ratified court schedules.


Section 4.1 Composition and Authority

The House of Judgment, בֵּית הַדִּין Bayth Ha'Deen, is the judicial house of the United Monarchy. It consists of courts, judges, registrars, clerks, enforcement officers, mediators, and such judicial bodies as are appointed.

Section 4.2 The Global Court

The Global Court hears matters assigned by the King, protocols, or lawful jurisdiction where the matter concerns the Kingdom as world governing body, multiple territories, national questions, or matters requiring highest judicial attention.

Section 4.3 Supreme Courts

Supreme Courts hear matters of high appellate, constitutional, public, or national significance according to Torah and the protocols.

Section 4.4 Specialized Courts

Specialized courts may be established for trade, technology, environmental stewardship, family, criminal wrongdoing, civil obligations, treasury obligations, intellectual works, land and inheritance, and other matters requiring specialized competence. These categories are administrative divisions under Torah-bound judgment.

Section 4.5 Judicial Appointments and Terms

Judges shall be appointed according to wisdom, Torah knowledge, truthfulness, competence, absence of bribery23, and loyalty to righteous judgment. Terms, duties, discipline, and removal shall be set by lawful instrument.

Section 4.6 Judicial Accountability

Judges shall be accountable for corruption, bribery, false judgment, partiality, abuse of office, failure to keep record, and violation of Torah.

Section 4.7 Legal Processes and Fair Proceedings

Proceedings shall provide notice, proper record, lawful witness24, opportunity to answer, protection against false witness, and written judgment where the matter requires record.

Section 4.8 Dispute Resolution and Mediation

Mediation may be used to restore peace and resolve disputes where justice is preserved. Mediation shall not conceal crime, oppression, inheritance theft, or matters requiring public judgment.

Section 4.9 Community Engagement and Legal Education

The House of Judgment may teach the people concerning lawful process, witness duties, petitions, restitution, household disputes, and righteous judgment.

Section 4.10 Final Authority of the King

The King retains final authority under Torah in matters reserved to the throne.

Section 4.11 Appeals Process

Appeals may be made according to the court rules and protocols. Difficult matters may be escalated according to Torah and royal order.

Section 4.12 Judicial Oversight Committee

A judicial oversight committee may review court administration, conduct, records, delays, corruption, and procedure.

Section 4.13 Enforcement of Court Decisions

Court decisions shall be enforced by proper executive officers. Enforcement shall be recorded, proportionate, and bounded by judgment.

Section 4.14 Judicial Training and Continuing Education

Judges and court officers shall be trained in Torah, procedure, records, witnesses, restitution, public duty, and specialized court matters.

Section 4.15 Public Access to Justice

The people shall have orderly pathways to petition, request judgment, submit complaints, and seek lawful remedy. Access may be structured by status, jurisdiction, subject matter, and public order.

Section 4.16 Transparency and Public Reporting

The House of Judgment shall publish reports as appropriate. Sensitive matters may be sealed or restricted.

Section 4.17 Anti-Corruption Measures

Bribery25, false witness, concealment, deceitful record26, misuse of office, and judgment for gain shall be judged severely.

Article 5: Hierarchy of Law, Instruments, and Royal Household Governance

Section 5.1 Hierarchy and Interpretation

All governance instruments shall be interpreted according to the following order:

  1. יֶהֱוֶה and Torah.
  2. The sovereign throne acting under Torah.
  3. Ratified Protocols of Governance.
  4. Ratified Protocols of the Royal Dynasty where royal household matters are concerned.
  5. Royal decrees, state instruments, judgments, charters, commissions, appointments, and public notices.
  6. Office charters, administrative rules, forms, manuals, and public procedures.
  7. Agreements, contracts, and other subordinate instruments.

Section 5.2 Status and Scope of the Protocols of the Royal Dynasty

The Protocols of the Royal Dynasty govern the Royal House, royal household offices, lineage, ceremonies, household order, royal women's ranks, handmaids, security, education, health, family administration, and other dynastic matters. Where a dynastic matter affects public government, the protocols shall be harmonized by sealed directive or proper amendment.

Section 5.3 Treaty and Agreement Authority

Treaties, agreements, and external instruments must be authorized, recorded, and bounded. No officer may bind the Crown beyond delegated authority.

Section 5.4 Due Process Baseline for Household Adjudication

Household adjudication shall provide notice, record, proper authority, and righteous judgment according to the sensitivity of the matter. Sensitive family, child, security, and royal matters may be restricted.

Section 5.5 Promulgation, Amendment Synchronization, and Conflict Control

All major protocols shall be promulgated with title, effective date, authority, version, and archive record. Amendments shall identify affected sections and preserve prior versions.


Article 6: Acts, Charters, Annexes, Schedules, and Instruments of Government

Section 6.1 Classes of Subordinate Instruments

The government may create Acts, charters, annexes, schedules, procedures, manuals, forms, commissions, appointments, public notices, and other instruments necessary to carry these Protocols into administration. These instruments shall serve Torah, the throne, and the ratified Protocols, and no subordinate instrument may add to, diminish from, overthrow, or contradict the commandments, statutes, judgments, and lawful hierarchy established herein30.

Section 6.2 Acts

An Act is a formal governing instrument made under these Protocols to regulate a defined area of government. Acts may establish duties, offices, registries, procedures, rights of petition, public records, enforcement rules, schedules, and administrative powers for the domain named in the Act. Acts shall be prepared through the House of Law or such office as the King designates, reviewed for Torah conformity and governmental fitness, and presented for royal ratification.

Section 6.3 Charters and Commissions

A charter establishes or recognizes an office, chamber, commission, public body, kingdom-owned enterprise, public trust, registry, or other lawful entity. A commission appoints a person or body to an office, charge, mission, or delegated work. Charters and commissions must state the granting authority, purpose, scope, limits, reports, records, effective date, and revocation or amendment conditions.

Section 6.4 Annexes and Schedules

An annex or schedule is an attached instrument that carries tables, lists, maps, forms, rosters, technical standards, office chains, record classes, currency denominations, jurisdiction schedules, public-service routes, implementation phases, or other supporting material. An annex or schedule shall have force only when expressly adopted by the parent Protocol, Act, charter, decree, or other lawful instrument.

Section 6.5 Procedures, Manuals, and Forms

Procedures, manuals, and forms govern daily administration under the authority of a Protocol, Act, charter, decree, commission, or office rule. They may not create an authority that has not been granted by a higher instrument. They shall be written plainly, versioned, stored, and made available to the officers and people who must use them.

Section 6.6 Proposal, Review, Ratification, and Promulgation

Every major Act, charter, annex, schedule, and state instrument shall identify its title, purpose, proposing office, reviewing authority, ratifying authority, effective date, version, registry number, custody office, and amendment history. Matters requiring judgment, interpretation, or ordered determination shall be brought to the appointed authority, and the people shall do according to the sentence lawfully declared within Torah's bounds31. Instruments intended for public obligation shall be promulgated by Gazette, register, decree, or other public notice so that the command is known, recorded, and preserved32.

Section 6.7 Corpus Pages and Draft Instruments

Draft corpus pages may be used to preserve, classify, and prepare future Acts, charters, annexes, schedules, and procedures. Such draft pages are not final authority by their existence. They become binding only when reviewed, ratified, promulgated, and recorded according to this Article. The corpus map and draft instruments are maintained for orderly preparation and cross-reference: Protocols of Governance Corpus - Instrument Map, Protocols of Governance Restoration and Instrument Classification Plan, and Annex and Schedule Index for the Protocols of Governance.

Article 7: Public Records, Gazette, Registries, and State Instruments

The public-records, gazette, registries, custody rules, access classes, record numbering, correction process, and archival rules established here shall be further governed by the Public Records, Gazette, and Registrar General Act.


Section 7.1 State Instruments

State instruments include decrees, proclamations, appointments, commissions, charters, recognitions, public notices, judgments, administrative orders, treasury orders, land records, office directives, external agreements, memoranda, emergency orders, and protocol amendments.

Section 7.2 Gazette and Public Notice Register

The government shall maintain a Gazette or Public Notice Register for official notices. Public explanation may be published elsewhere, but official acts shall be entered into the proper register.

Section 7.3 Registrar General

The Registrar General shall preserve official records, including offices, appointments, instruments, judgments, public notices, charters, status records, land and inheritance records, treasury instruments, and local administration records.

Section 7.4 Record Classes

Records shall be public, restricted, sealed, archival, or internal. Each class shall be governed by access rules and custody requirements.

Article 8: Land, Inheritance, Rent, Debt, and Public Provision

Section 8.1 Land and Inheritance

Land shall be governed according to Torah principles of inheritance, possession, stewardship, redemption, and household continuity27. The government shall maintain land and inheritance records as needed.

Section 8.2 Lawful Rent and Use

Rent for the temporary use of property, housing, room, land, facility, tool, equipment, or office is lawful when bounded, honest, recorded where required, and not used for oppression or dispossession.

Rent shall not become permanent alienation of inheritance, debt bondage, hidden seizure, or tribute over existence.

Section 8.3 Debt, Obligation, and Release

Obligations may be recorded for settlement, restitution, redemption, release, and judgment. Debt shall not be used to create perpetual bondage or to strip inheritance28 contrary to Torah.

Section 8.4 Treasury and Storehouse

The Treasury and Storehouse shall receive, record, preserve, and distribute lawful revenues, offerings, dues, firstfruits, royal revenues, public stores, emergency reserves, and public works resources. The Treasury and Storehouse shall be further administered pursuant to the Treasury, Storehouse, Currency, and Sovereign Wealth Act and its ratified schedules.

Article 9: Companies, Partners, Proxies, and Kingdom-Owned Enterprises

The classification, registry, chartering, public representation, reporting, and lawful limits of state organs, kingdom-owned enterprises, partners, proxies, and independent companies shall be further governed by the Companies, Partners, Proxies, and Kingdom-Owned Enterprises Act.


Section 9.1 Entity Classification

Every entity acting in relation to the Kingdom shall be classified by instrument or registry. Classifications may include state organ, royal household office, government department, kingdom-owned enterprise, sovereign wealth engine, public trust, crown-chartered body, commissioned body, independent partner entity, proxy entity, authorized service provider, recognized institution, or private company under agreement.

Section 9.2 Partner and Proxy Boundaries

Independent partner and proxy entities may serve the Kingdom and the people according to agreement, recognition, commission, or charter. They do not possess sovereign authority unless such authority is expressly granted and bounded by lawful instrument.

Public records, judgment, land inheritance, state instruments, official status, royal offices, and treasury authority shall remain under the proper organs of government.

Section 9.3 Public Representation of Partners

When a partner, proxy, company, or authorized provider is named in public materials, its status shall be stated according to the register. No entity shall be represented as property of the monarchy unless it is lawfully owned, chartered, or controlled as such.

Article 10: Local Administration and Public Service

The districts, gates, cities, territories, postal-code jurisdictions, block service areas, municipal charters, public-service routes, and Twelve Pots implementation rules shall be further governed by the Local Administration, Municipalities, and Public Service Jurisdictions Act.


Section 10.1 Local Administration

Local administration may be ordered by gate, district, city, region, postal code, block, territory, service jurisdiction, or other lawful structure. Local officers serve by appointment29, commission, or recognition under the Kingdom.

Section 10.2 Twelve Pots

The Twelve Pots shall be defined by a separate ratified instrument as material categories of household and local administration. They shall guide public provision, service mapping, local reporting, household restoration, and government planning.

Section 10.3 Public Service Portals

The government may maintain public portals for service requests, petitions, household assessments, education, status inquiry, records requests, and lawful public communication.

Article 11: Ratification and Final Provisions

Section 11.1 Draft Status

This draft has no final binding status until ratified by His Royal Majesty through the proper royal and governmental process.

Section 11.2 Revision

Articles, sections, subsections, numbering, and placement may be revised before ratification.

Section 11.3 Signature Area for Ratification

Ratification shall include the proper name, office, seal, date, witnesses where required, and registry entry.

Citation Notes

1. Devarim 4:2 Devarim 12:32
2. Devarim 16:18-20
3. Devarim 17:8-20 Devarim 31:9-13
4. Devarim 17:8-13
5. Devarim 17:8-13
6. Devarim 4:2 Devarim 12:32
7. Devarim 16:18-20 Shemoth 18:13-26
8. Devarim 19:15-21
9. Shemoth 23:1-9 Wayyiqra 19:15-18
10. Shemoth 23:32-33 Devarim 7:1-6 Yehoshua 9
11. Devarim 15 Devarim 23:19-20
12. Wayyiqra 19:35-36 Devarim 25:13-16
13. Wayyiqra 19:35-36 Devarim 25:13-16
14. Bemidbar 6
15. Wayyiqra 10:10-11 Devarim 33:10
16. Shemoth 22:21-24 Devarim 10:17-19 Devarim 24:17-22
17. Shemoth 23:1-9 Wayyiqra 19:15-18
18. Devarim 6:4-9 Devarim 31:9-13
19. Devarim 17:14-20
20. Wayyiqra 25:23 Bemidbar 27:1-11 Bemidbar 36 Devarim 19:14 Devarim 27:17
21. Devarim 16:18 Shemoth 18:21-26 Ruth 4:1-11
22. Devarim 20
23. Shemoth 18:21-26 Devarim 16:18-20
24. Devarim 19:15-21
25. Shemoth 23:8 Devarim 16:19
26. Devarim 25:13-16
27. Wayyiqra 25:23 Bemidbar 27:1-11 Bemidbar 36 Devarim 19:14 Devarim 27:17
28. Devarim 15 Devarim 23:19-20
29. Devarim 16:18 Shemoth 18:21-26 Devarim 1:13-17
30. Devarim 4:2 Devarim 12:32
31. Devarim 17:8-13
32. Shemoth 24:3-7 Devarim 31:9-13 Devarim 31:24-26