This book addresses a narrow but consequential question: can identity continuity be examined "on the record" when official classifications changed repeatedly over centuries? Centered on the Mississippi Basin and its mountain-to-river system, Primordial Sovereignty Codex Mantra: Origins of Earth & Peoplehood builds a judge-readable, evidence-first framework for evaluating peoplehood patterns through time.
Rather than relying on rhetoric or belief, the text works across multiple evidence streams-geology and hydrology (basins, floodplains, navigable corridors), archaeology (mound-builder civilizations and continuity debates), demography (pre-1492 population questions and later census categories), and legal history (administrative labeling, enrollment vs lineage tensions, and modern rights frameworks including UNDRIP alignment). It also examines how colonial knowledge systems and scientific racism shaped what was recorded, what was ignored, and how communities were later described.
A core feature of the book is its strict scope control. It explicitly excludes biological-origin disputes, prophecy/theology, and any territorial or sovereignty claims. It also includes a detailed separation statement rejecting sovereign-citizen / pseudo-legal ideologies and keeping the analysis distinct from doctrinal systems. The aim is clarity: a neutral, reproducible method that lets readers evaluate continuity claims without overreach.
The appendices support the main argument with a structured basin matrix (Mississippi Basin / IAMMR), a glossary, and a full reference section (APA) plus a table of authorities (Bluebook), so the inquiry stays transparent and checkable.