Law on ancestral homelands

Dolmens are the resting place of ancient eurasian people.

A federal law in the Commonwealth of Australia about ancestral homelands. This law has two parts:

1) A council open to all people on the great Southern continent about regaining legal ownership of unfairly invaded territory.

At this council, any person can put forth a case to regain legal ownership of unfairly invaded lands.

The council is open to all people, everyone is equal, and there is no centre of power. All people present at the council must agree before any action is taken.

The council determines the boundaries of unfairly invaded territory, indicates its new owners, then delivers its recommendation to Commonwealth parliament for unanimous ratification of a full, unlimited and unrestricted grant of sovereignty to the new legal owners.

A diplomatic relation with the Commonwealth of Australia may then be negotiated by normal parliamentary procedure and with the support of international planetary organisations.

The council is allocated a budget from the Commonwealth of Australia Treasury to fund its operation and implement its decisions. All proceedings of the council will be livestreamed via Periscope and a big screen will be in place for Skype callers to be present at the council.

In Russia, we call this kind of meeting Вече.



2) A council open to all people in the Commonwealth of Australia about ancestral homelands. 

Together, we acknowledge that the Earth is a national treasure and must be cared for with attention and love.

Every person has a fundamental right to take care of a piece of our country, to look after plants and animals, and to create a resting place for their ancestors and descendants.

An ancestral homeland is a piece of land which is retained in one's ancestral line as long as it is occupied. It is not bought or sold.

The inhabitants of each ancestral homeland form their own government made up of their own family line. All laws which apply on the ancestral homeland are unwritten. Any tax is optional.

Any piece of land may be officially registered as an ancestral homeland by its legal owners.

Those without legal ownership of land may put forth a case to the council to gain legal ownership of an available piece of land for the purpose of creating their own ancestral homeland, in keeping with our common aspirations for sustainable development.

Land owners may join the council and there donate land for allocation. Anyone may also take the initiative to invite prospective land donors to attend the council.

All people present at the council must agree before any action is taken, and the council is allocated a budget from the Commonwealth of Australia Treasury to fund its operation and implement its decisions. All people are equal and there is no centre of power. In Russia, we call this kind of meeting Вече.

All ministers of the Commonwealth parliament are required to live on an ancestral homeland as their primary residence. They may also invite their friends to live near them.