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Old 04-02-2007, 07:04 PM
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aksis aksis is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Universal Kingdom of God; Earth
Posts: 1,112
David Merrill,

When you brought the word credit to mind, I began wondering if there is more credit on accounts then their are total Notes of any species/kind in circulation representing this total credit.

I hear you about the desire for evidence. That is what inspired this thread/article.

David, from the quote, where are the "new forms I mentioned" described? Do you know off hand? What was the difference between pre-New Deal and post-New Deal bank accounts?

Also, like a 'stock certificate' or 'title', the human's "body" being the 'stock' or 'property', are stock certificates/titles trusts?

I always pictured them held in trust, but not trusts them selves... prehaps the default is the FAMILY trust

And I keep thinking about the word resident...



As to the birth/death certificate being simultaneous...

Does a fetus have a value? What of stem cells? Seems like a comodity that already has a very high value, and thus the need to form the product's Certificate so this asset can become registered and calnculated in the Gross National Product. (even a cadaver has a pretty high value - what does a med school spend on cadavers in a year?)

What would the admilrity term be for sezing wreck?

Salvage?

Was the fetus salvaged for research and other purposes?

What happens to an aborted fetus? Who has the claim on it? Are they throwen away? Sold to research labs? Are the sales documented? Who recived the credit to their accounts from the sale?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Jamie L. Perry and David P. Kuehn
...

Before dissection became legal in 1831, anatomy schools relied on grave robbers who sold bodies to schools and theaters, and bodies were illegally exported and sold to other countries. In 1831 the Massachusetts Anatomy Act was passed, allowing medical schools to receive corpses that remained unclaimed, thus moving the cadaver into the laboratory setting (Dyer & Thorndke, 2000).

...

The main disadvantages of using cadavers are the cost of cadavers, which in Illinois is currently $1,450 each, and the cost and availability of laboratory space. Depending on the program's policies, these costs can be offset at least partly by assessing student lab fees.

http://www.asha.org/about/publicatio...5/f060905c.htm

P.S. I know this is a little morbid, yet we are discussing some pretty sick people.
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