
03-22-2007, 11:07 PM
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Location: Illinois(chi-town)
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supersoul, welcome to the suijuris forum.
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Resolution pending
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03-24-2007, 08:09 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 187
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Get Right On It!
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Originally Posted by David Merrill
Very clever:
http://www.usps.com/forms/_pdf/ps3682.pdf
http://pe.usps.gov/text/imm/welcome.htm
You have some reading to do before you answer that question Grench. At a glance I see, before you mail outside the US... loosely stipulated. Therefore the interrogation with the Postmaster acting like a policewoman of some sort.
In other words Congress may see it that the compact states are countries,* but not the Post Office. So if they make you cry, you will pull it off nowhere near as funny as Kramer did on Seinfeld - that's for sure.
Not to discourage you. Construct this all properly around the truth and then apply the IMM and forms! Please spend some time posting and explaining the process blow by blow. This is a very interesting subject.
Regards,
David Merrill.
* Rottweiler's interesting post:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/ht...7----000-.html
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Get right on it!
Regards,
Phil
Without Recourse
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"You Are What You Say" ~Phillip Gillon
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05-01-2007, 04:26 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 90
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1st trial with non-domestic
my friend in tennesse and i [virginia] tries the non-domestic mailing experiment and both got hit with postage due. i used a 3 cent stamp and he 3 1 cents stamps.
we both dropped in mail box. both got postage due.
is there something else we should have done different? charlie sewell
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05-01-2007, 06:45 PM
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Colorado.
Posts: 6,148
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It has been so long...
"general delivery" lower case letters;
Hand the .02 cent postage letter to the general delivery clerk.
That is what I did.
Regards,
David Merrill.
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05-01-2007, 09:41 PM
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Mental Jujitsu
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 600
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by cdsea10
my friend in tennesse and i [virginia] tries the non-domestic mailing experiment and both got hit with postage due. i used a 3 cent stamp and he 3 1 cents stamps.
we both dropped in mail box. both got postage due.
is there something else we should have done different? charlie sewell
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Looks like you mailed through a PO whose sorters can spot incorrect postage.
Put the correct and required postage on it next time, which has gone up again as of today.
Incidently, it is a felony to intentionally attempt to mail a first class item without the incorrect postage on it.
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05-01-2007, 10:05 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Illinois Republic
Posts: 3,173
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Notorial dissent
Incidently, it is a felony to intentionally attempt to mail a first class item without the incorrect postage on it.
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I did not know that.
Man, they get you coming and going!
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05-02-2007, 11:32 AM
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Practice Makes Perfect
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 415
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Originally Posted by Shoonra
I think that SFBFKADVP's quibbling about who had or owns the post office buildings is a red herring.
This thread started on the nonsensical idea that pasting a postage stamp onto court pleadings - or onto the blank side of the page of court pleadings - had some magical effect that would guarantee this or that outcome.
I have checked the entire Lexis database of court decisions, and several of the most important texts on court procedure (e.g., Moore on Federal Practice, Wright & Miller's Federal Practice & Procedure, etc.) and not found a single mention - favorable or otherwise - attaching a postage stamp onto court or other legal papers. Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
All we get from SFBFKADVP are convoluted arguments that pile up his silly notions but not one statement from a court addressing this superstitious ritual.
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And, being a lawyer, to you, if it isn't in a decision or a statute, it doesn't exist. Do you even realise how limiting that is to someone with intellect? I doubt it, or you would not be on the path that you are on.
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RIP Vajo Jnr.
Valentine A.J. Olszak Jr. (1944 - 2007)
RIP Yankee Jim
James Leshkevich 1955-2008
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05-02-2007, 11:50 AM
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Practice Makes Perfect
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 415
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by fulltitle
Without Prejudice.
AFAIK there remains difference between the two. However, I guess what I was aiming to get at was the importance of considering things in the light of: 1) flow or exchange of clergy from one to the other or back and forth, 2) the conflicts between the two realms, 3) potential interests of one gaining control over the like.
Consider the notion--if I remember correctly--of the English Bill of Rights not allowing Catholics (at least at one point) the right to keep and bear arms. And imagine the kinds of animosity that might've stirred up that even reaches to this day. Consider say the Orange Order vs. the United Irishmen. The Irish Republican Army. Guy Fawkes--which "Guy Fawkes" day is celebrated in a holiday like fashion (4th of July style) in one or more "Commonwealth Countries".
Indeed, the point was: the potentially wide scope of doctrinal issues, historical issues might make it all make more sense. And I'm not neccessarily saying that it make sense to me!
And yes maybe it somehow ties into the Magna Charta--perhaps that is what I was getting at the expression or manifestation of their differences showing or coming through all of that.
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The Bill of Rights 1688 merely restates the law as it stood before the actions of the king prior to William of Orange.
__________________
RIP Vajo Jnr.
Valentine A.J. Olszak Jr. (1944 - 2007)
RIP Yankee Jim
James Leshkevich 1955-2008
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05-02-2007, 01:06 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 50
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Inside the Post Office building...
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Originally Posted by cdsea10
we both dropped in mail box.
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I went inside the lobby and dropped mine in the outgoing mail slot.
Quote:
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Originally Posted by outlaw
I, too, have successfully sent mail matter from one state to another, and received a response back (non-domestic mail locations at each end), both ways stamped with 3 - 1 cent stamps.
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http://www.suijuris.net/forum/106864-post134.html
Quote:
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Sec. 22. And be it further enacted, That the rate of postage on all domestic letters transmitted in the mails of the United States, and not exceeding one half ounce in weight, shall be uniform at three cents; and for each half ounce, or fraction thereof of additional weight, there shall be charged an additional rate of three cents, to be in all cases prepaid by postage stamps plainly affixed to such letter.
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http://memory.loc.gov/ll/llsl/012/0700/07370705.tif
Jay Scott.
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05-02-2007, 01:07 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 50
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--duplicate post--
Last edited by outlaw : 05-02-2007 at 01:08 PM.
Reason: duplicate post
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