A law code is a written, organized compilation of laws intended to provide a comprehensive legal framework for a society. The practice of codifying law is ancient, dating back thousands of years. The earliest known evidence comes from clay tablets discovered in the archives of Ebla (modern-day Tell Mardikh, Syria), dating to around 2400 BC. Among the most celebrated ancient codes is Babylon's Code of Hammurabi, which established rules governing everything from commerce to criminal punishment. The Romans also developed early legal records, most notably the Law of the Twelve Tables (451–450 BC), though their most significant codification effort — the Code of Justinian — wasn't completed until AD 529–565, well after the fall of the Western Empire. The Germanic tribes that conquered Roman territories produced their own legal codes as well, including the Salic Law of the Salian Franks. Throughout the later Middle Ages, Europe saw the emergence of collections of maritime customs that gradually gained widespread authority among merchants and legal professionals across the continent.
The common law tradition developed along a different path. Unlike formal law codes, early common law was not built around defined rights but around procedural remedies — essentially, the legal tools available to seek relief. Over centuries, as courts worked through these remedies case by case, a more rights-centered system gradually emerged. This means that modern legal rights are largely the product of accumulated judicial decisions rather than top-down legislation. In fact, English common law continued to be shaped primarily by judges, not lawmakers, well into the late 1800s.
My case, institutional cruelty, I found this:
"the legal reality of Article 7(3) with the broader theme of modern corruption of ancient protective law:
On the surface, a definition. Beneath it, a battlefield.
The Rome Statute was born in 1998 with a profound purpose — to prosecute individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression. Wikipedia It was meant to be a shield for the most vulnerable. An ancient principle — that systematic cruelty against human beings must be named, pursued, and punished — finally encoded into international law."
Taking peoples consciousness in a professional arena, which happened countless times over the years, could be classed as a crime against humanity and crimes of aggression. I met someone in the 90s that this happend to, this happend to me, neuro-psychologists over the world were likely practicing this. Esoteric, spiritual or occult phenomena is no supposed to occur in science based rehabilitation units! I am in no doubt this has occurred in many other arenas also, so this is a crime against humanity, happened in health services for me and the one I heard about but I have suspicion this can take place anywhere with the correct occult knowledge. This cannot continue and requires recompense.
Article 7 section 3. Ancient law. Buried deep constitutional amendment law.