Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Emulation amid Marketing?



POTUS45 is advertising for My Country via Emulation of my Absolute, Constitutional Monarchy.  He is acting like a King on purpose.  The USA was ordered originally to market My Country - using UEIR/Egyptian letterhead and business cards into making commercials, SNL events, infomercials, product placement and public notices, to expand our reach to our Citizens living in USA and abroad.  This is more to do with Intelligence (CIA) than Politics. 

- Pharaoh M7, Kingdom of Niihau, United Egyptian Imperial-Republic
Copyright 2020 M7, All rights reserved.


Monday, February 24, 2020

Currency/Trade - value of Kahelelani Currency in USD...



In the Kingdom of Ni'ihau (UEIR) the currency is the Kahelelani, which is based on the Ni'ihau Shell of that name.  Ni'ihau Shells are Hawaiian Gold in terms of value/Trade.  They are rare and only found on Ni'ihau and washed on the shores of Kaua'i.  So the currency is set to one strand of Ni'ihau Shells (value).  Each Kahelelani (or Kah.) = $1,000 each in paper money/UEIR Credit that appears in business card format (from Pharaoh M7).  So 500 Kah. = $500,000 USD.  

Sales Tax: 5% of all sales of Kah. Currency to benefit the People of Niihau.  

M7C 2020.



Saturday, February 15, 2020

Fuzzy Math...


Math Problem:

"If 100-Million Millionaires each bought 10 copies of my stolen First Novel at $100,000 each, and I own the Copyright to the book, and the book is selling on the Dark Web or other venue (contraband, as it is stolen property), how much of that amount is mine?"

Hint: It's Eye of the Pharaoh.

- Pharaoh M7, 2020.




Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Egyptian Antiquity Law



https://www.egypttoday.com/Article/1/81491/Parliament-initially-passes-amendments-to-Law-of-Antiquities

CAIRO - 10 February 2020: The Egyptian Parliament initially passed the new amendments to the Law of Antiquities per which the crime of possessing or selling an artifact in abroad auctions is punishable by toughened imprisonment and paying a fine of LE 1 million.

At the General session of the Parliament, presided by Ali Abdel Aal on Sunday, the Parliament passed the amendments to Law No. 117 of 1983 and referred them to the State Council for its advisory opinion.

He who possesses or sells an Egyptian antiquity or a part of an Egyptian antiquity outside Egypt in any auction house shall be handed down a toughened punishment and be fined with at least LE 1 million.

As per the new amendments drafted by the government, if a person was found in any archeological site or a museum without getting permission of his/her presence, he/she shall be imprisoned for one month at least and be fined with not more than LE 100,000. The same penalty is also applicable to everyone who climbs an antiquity without getting permission for this act. The penalty will be doubled if these two acts are accompanied by debauchery or blasphemy against the state.

The Legislative Committee of the Parliament stated that the new amendments come within the Constitution as they aim at protecting the country’s antiquities from the common phenomenon of archaeological antiquities trafficking.

In July 2019, Egypt has called on the European countries' ambassadors to support it in recovering a bust of young Pharaoh Tutankhamun before being sold in Christie's auction house in London. However, it failed to stop auctioning the statue which was sold for £4.7m, according to the Guardian.

In 2015, the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities and the Northampton Borough Council were at loggerheads over auctioning an ancient statue by Christie's. However, the Egyptian government failed to stop selling the statue.

Despite its failure in reclaiming smuggled artifacts, the government managed to get back some antiquities; in 2018, Egypt got three pieces from Luxor’s Valley of the Kings, which were smuggled out of the country in 1927. The pieces were captured by the American authorities after being offered for sale in a New York City auction house.

In 2018, the Egyptian authorities arrested a camel driver and another girl accused of helping two Danish tourists climb the Great Pyramid of Giza where they photographed themselves naked on top of the 139-meter pyramid.


This does not apply to anything owned prior to this Law.  It only covers "in auction houses," not private Museums or collections.  (The UEIR owns Egypt; the UEIR bought the Tut artifact in 2019 for our Museum, via CIA - Pharaoh M7 is Tutankhamon previously). 

- Pharaoh M7, 2020.