View Single Post
  #36  
Old 04-24-2008, 05:29 PM
dorkenbutt dorkenbutt is offline
Practice Makes Perfect
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 206
See response below.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mnchicago
From dorkenbutt:

>Tell me lawpuppy, how can a birth certificate be mine >if I had no part in its creation?

Do you claim ownership of other things in your life over
which you had no part of creating? NO Can anyone come
into your home and take things because you did not
create them? Furniture, food, clothing, etc. Yes, but who would want them?

Have you refuted your birth certificate? Like David, I do not have a Birth Certificate

>How can the name (legal fiction) written upon it be
mine if I had no part in registering it?

Have you refuted your legal fiction name, or do you
have a driver's license, are you registered to vote, do
you pay taxes, et al? Or do you use that "name?" No to all of your questions. BTW, do I have a legal fiction name and does it belong to me?


>How can something (BC) the STATE claims ownership
>of and will not give up the original be mine/yours?

You provide the answer in the question. Just showing lawpuppy how ridiculous his assertion of being "your" Birth Certificate is.

>Is the Birth Certificate a registration of an event?

Are these trick questions? LOL!!!

>Can a Birth Certificate be used as identification?

All the time, in equity jurisdiction. lawpuupy asserted only that which has a picture on it can be used as identification, thus the reason for my question. BTW, what does the BC identify?


>Does government ID that has a picture on it identify
>the man/woman or government property?

All of the above. Wrong!!!

>BTW, I don't expect honest answers to these
>questions or even answers at all from you. You are
>very good at obfuscation.

I have to disagree here. The answers provided have a
certain validity to them, if you subscribe to the
jurisdiction under which he labors. Do I "subscribe to the jurisdiction under which he labors?

>Heck, even the day I was born or where I was born is
>unknown to me. No first hand knowledge, too young to
>know.

Quite a compelling argument. I'll bet you have waived
it many times over. I do not recognize the day I was supposedly born. Like I have said I do not know when that was or where, do you know when you were born?
Reply With Quote