Termyn8or -> RE: Common-law Right to Travel (2/1/2010 12:34:22 AM)
|
Wait, I might be off base here. Videos ? I thought everybody knew that I don't do videos much. Whatever, I don't care what they did in the videos, I made the offer. I may have erred here, and I will admit it. Whatever I say, everybody bear this in mind. The success rate against them in traffic court is down to about 2%. Up to 10% might pull this and get reduced charges, but still get convicted of something. Then they get the max sentence for that. You don't fight goliath at the drop of a hat. The win rate against the IRS is down to 10%. Of course that is amidst a lawyer who claims visits to prostitutes as a medical deduction. Perhaps they call it prostrate milking ? Many win, and recently case law was made that certain tuitions are tax deductible. That happened recently. Lori Singleton-Clarke won, and what made it more newsworthy was the fact that she represented herself pro se. Overall though, people who beat the IRS have not filed, well over half. This case was significant in other ways though. Y'all may think this is intermingling the tax situation with the driving situation, but I didn't do it. They did. They tax the roads that we paid for. On another interesting note, afoot in Texas is a move to privatize the highways. Every road will be a toll road once they are sold to private entities. It's being promoted in part by Rothchild NM, so it might just happen. I know it is ridiculous, but they are posturing for it in more states than just Texas. This might be another urban wet dream or whatever they call it. But really if the public roads come under private ownership, what now ? This is about the same as those other crackpot theories, like charging per email because it is costing the post office money, and charging people rent for their own cash anytime it is out of the bank. While all these schemes are probably deadenders, we didn't make them up, they did. In each case there is consideration, or weight given to these schemes in our belloved government. Shit like this never goes through, but.................. From this perspective think of intellectual property rights. Copright a song and it lasted a bunch of years but then was in what's called public domain. Well somebody has bought alot of what was in public domain, so where is my check ? Likewise if they sell our roads, shouldn't we get the money ? In minor ways though, things like this can and do happen, albeit not all the time. But somehow public domain went out the window so fast nobody even saw it. Not even me. I am more concerned about what happens if people don't fight, than what happens if they do. T
|
|
|
|