OK. Sorry I even accused you of such.
It appears you have a misunderstanding of celestial coordinate systems. This discussion needs to back up a bit.
Two orthogonal unit vectors are needed to define a coordinate system in three dimensional space. (The third unit vector is fixed once those first two are defined.) One way to do this is to define a fundamental plane. A normal to the plane defines one of the unit vectors, a line on the plane defines another, and the cross product of these defines the third.
Two widely-used fundamental planes in astronomy are the Earth's equatorial plane and the Earth's orbital plane.
These planes intersect along a line. That line defines one of the unit vectors. This is the x-hat vector and is common to both the equatorial and ecliptic based systems. At the vernal equinox (a point in time), the Sun as viewed from the Earth lies more or less in the direction of the x-hat axis. The equatorial z-hat unit vector points from the center of the Earth to the North Pole (more or less). The ecliptic z-hat unit vector is normal to the ecliptic plane with sign defined so that the projection onto the equatorial z-hat unit vector is positive. The y-axis completes the right-handed coordinate system.
Thus we have two sets of right-handed orthogonal unit vectors, the equatorial and ecliptic axes. Now a reference frame needs an origin and a set of axes. For geocentric references, the origin is the center of the Earth. Another reference frame can be defined by choosing a different origin. The heliocentric ecliptic frame shares the same set of unit vectors as does the geocentric ecliptic frame, but the origin is now the center of the Sun rather than the center of the Earth.
Note that at any time, if the geocentric position of the Sun is \vec r_{\text{Sun}}(t), then the heliocentric position of the Earth is \vec r_{\text{Earth}}(t) = -r_{\text{Sun}}(t). Now think of what this means the vernal equinox. From the perspective of the Earth, the Sun will be at 1 AU in the x-hat direction. From the perspective of the Sun, the Earth will thus be at -1 AU in the x-hat direction.
Spherical coordinate are another way to express a vector. Ecliptic latitude and longitude (along with radial distance) are spherical coordinates. The Earth's heliocentric longitude at the vernal equinox is 180 degrees.