Thread: Goverment ID
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Old 01-11-2008, 05:25 AM
David Merrill's Avatar
David Merrill David Merrill is offline
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Colorado.
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under the constitution

I suppose Lawdog has me on his Ignore List.

What he said, said it all though. - About being under the Constitution. Another way to look at it is if I was walking around at a large corporation like Hewlett Packard without a badge hanging from my shirt or belt. It would of course be a HP ID that people, coworkers and security would be looking for. At Honeywell people were encouraged to call others for not having a Honeywell-issued ID card on display - while inside any of the buildings anyway; especially while in the cleanrooms and especially if they were wearing goggles and even masks...

Same goes for government-issued ID cards and the seeming convolution between publick and private. Public means private to government. The collection arm is the BAR, by whatever name. And that stems from the International Bar Association on yet another extraterritorial campus called the Sovereign and Independent City of London.

One thing that distinguishes this triad of extraterritoriality is their own police force. The City of Manhattan (The Five Boroughs), the City of London and the Vatican all share this special region characteristic. For instance I have been in a chat with an Assistant District Attorney in City of NY to find among other things, he is not a state official in the boroughs, he is paid by the City of NY.

All that modelling of METRO by any other name aside. We can find the debate between Lawdog and Rottweiler about black and white easily explained by Lawdog being an attorney. (attached) http://www.quatloos.com/qforum/profi...ewprofile&u=15



Regards,

David Merrill.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoonra
It is worth noting that the fealty to the Pope, which you cited for its explicit mention of the Templar abbey in Dover, is the legal basis for the invalidation of the Magna Carta after it was sealed at Runnymede.
During discussion about the Treaty of 1213 and the Magna Charta (1215).

http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/magframe.htm
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/john1a.html
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