Real0ne
Posts: 21189
Joined: 10/25/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: SL4V3M4YB3 There is in reality no such thing as allodial title as you think of it. Ask yourself what happens to the land if it is owned by a dead person with no heir? Additionally look up the terms 'Eminent domain' or 'Compulsory purchase' you never own something that is always yours no matter what your financial situation. If you actually owned something then being bankrupt or having dangerous property would be no reason for the government to take it away. "Oh that bicycle is dangerous I'll have that!" When there were more houses than people, when you could build a shed in the middle of the runway number one at Heathrow (because it didn't exist.). That is when people held property with allodial title. Simple times the bronze age. Let me take these rose tinted specs off, ah that's better/worse. People still do hold alod title quote:
In English law, a fee simple (or fee simple absolute) is an estate in land, a form of freehold ownership. It is the most common way that real estate is owned in common law countries, and is ordinarily the most complete ownership interest that can be had in real property short of allodial title, which is often reserved for governments. Fee simple ownership represents absolute ownership of real property but it is limited by the four basic government powers of taxation, eminent domain, police power, and escheat, and it could also be limited by certain encumbrancesdeed. or a condition in the [citation needed] How ownership is limited by these government powers often involves the shift from allodial title to fee simple such as when uniting with other property owners acceding to property restrictions or municipal regulation.[citation needed] The word "fee" is derived from fief, meaning a feudal landholding. Feudal land tenures existed in several varieties, most of which involved the tenant having to supply some service to his overlord, such as knight-service (military service) or where the overlord was the king, Grand Serjeanty, which might require providing many different services, such as providing horses in time of war, or simply to act as the king's ceremonial butler. These fiefs thus gave rise to a complex relationship between landlord and tenant, involving duties on both sides. For example the overlord, in return for receiving his tenant's fealty or homage, took upon himself the duty to protect his tenant. On the abolition of feudal land tenure, all fiefs became "simple", that is to say no conditionality was attached to the tenancy, other than payment of a ground rent, which was a substitution for feudal service, or where this had been converted to a cash payment, scutage. I rarely use wiki but they got it right! (must have been reading my posts!) fee simple as all land is held in America. In a feudal society (yours) the king the deal is and always has been a "contract" with the king such that the king protect the people and the people pay a percentage for that protection. In America there is NO PROTECTION gaurantee from government (911) which was the stated purpose of the contract and the people pay taxes as well for government sanctioned pals to have their monopolies on towns and cities. The worst is the school tax that turns out monumental idiots with lower academic levels every year. Alodial title is only land owned tax free and you are wrong. There are tonz of people in the US learning land law as I type because there are thousands of tracts of land that are owned if you will in alodium and they never paid tax on them. The only people who have to pay taxes on their property in America are those who obtained it by use of a mortgage. Imagine that huh? Always a bank fucking every one over eh? and I will leave it at that :) That is an unconscionable contract
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"We the Borg" of the us imperialists....resistance is futile Democracy; The 'People' voted on 'which' amendment? Yesterdays tinfoil is today's reality! "No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session
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