Impossible! The deficit is falling as well as unemployment Obama wrecking economy

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I was in a societal sense.

Edit: Serious discourse of economics or having the right to grow when your only right (edit: purpose)is to die is pretty impossible imho.
I am distinguishing between right and purpose here. I don't buy the Enlightenment idea that we have "natural rights". I was restricting the discussion of purpose to the way I originally read it: the "purpose" of existence, which when you peel the onion has theology at its center.
As far as economics are concerned ... that is a bewildering black box to me. Thus I haven't had much to say about that in this thread.

I'm game to have a societal discourse, but i think we have to agree on the terms and premises to some extent. I am attempting to calibrate. cn
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Now tell me, where is this nonsense about bonding coming from? According to you, if it's not in the statute, it's not the law. And yet...it's not in there, is it!?

Hey why not do your own work ya know? Why not start just searching for "bond" at Cornell under US Code(legislative) and CFR(administrative)? Do it in the UCC too find it yourself.


No one is claiming the Fed has the power to issue United States Notes; 12 USC 411 doesn't purport to give the Fed the power to issue United States Notes either. The logical extension of your bastardization of the court case is what reveals that your interpretation is flawed.

As you point out, authorization to issue United States Notes is tucked in the section of the code on money, which you deemed to be exceedingly significant a few pages back and evidence that only the treasury could issue money. Now the Fed has the power to issue money? Oh, only in a sense? Then why did the court say 12 USC 411 authorizes the Fed to issue a national currency that is lawful money? The court doesn't say it's just an authorization to redeem for lawful currency!

You are confused about what is money and Money, not me. Only Treasury can issue US notes and coins. Only Fed can issue FRN's. Fed and Treasury can both redeem FRN's. End of pointless debate on this. Your insistence court has declared any statute of Congress regarding this matter as unconstitutional has fell flat on its ass because of the "wacky" interpretations I presented to you. You are literally saying the cases you quoted declared the Acts unconstitutional and we are merely waiting on statutes from Congress that cancel out the original statutes in question. The former step hasn't happened that would be MAJOR news.


You proved no such thing. You grafted whole new sentences into court cases, distorted arguments, twisted quotation marks, ignored text, referred to irrelevant definitions, and resorted to other such amateur tactics.

Tax protestors like David Merrill are pathologically opposed to taxes; they feel that they should not constitutionally have any legal obligation to pay them, and by drawing a John Nash A Beautiful Mind-style map of the law, they're right. Alas, it is exceedingly obvious from a brief examination of any of his arguments that David Merrill has zero legal training and apparently zero experience with legal stuff as well. He's just a crackpot who wants to deny reality so that he has no obligation to pay taxes, even though the courts have dismissed every tax protest argument as utter bullshit. It has nothing to do with the truth.

More tax argument from you. I'm a good boy I pay my taxes, my conclusion is that's how it works right now, I actually am hoping benefit from what I consider a large sum I have contributed to the cause someday especially SS. So you whining about tax protesters while I am explaining how different types of money have different obligations one of which is to bear interest as you have claimed FRN's don't. It's a debt that bears interest. I am just showing you how wrong you are in the spirit of "I will soon learn as others have" which according to you is fed notes carry no interest and are not debt instruments when in point of fact in law they do and are.


I said they hadn't been issued in more than four decades and that that the $300 million amount makes them irrelevant to financing a government that spends $10 billion a day. That doesn't mean they aren't authorized. Unfortunately for your case, $239 million of that amount has been issued and outstanding for a very long time, which leaves only $61 million even available to be issued for this redemption scheme...without a single dollar of notes issued in four decades.

The fact that the currency is authorized does not make your case plausible.

Smoke yourself to absolute memory loss? I showed you treasury accounting of the public debt that accounts for the notes redeemed you simply shrugged it off and said it was talking about the old notes obliged by specie.


Absolutely. That doesn't alter the fact that the law is what those inferior courts say it is unless and until the supreme court says otherwise (or congress weighs back in). Do you really not understand that?

Ya wiki covers it pretty well, lots of sources, I don't recall it goes back to the Crusades but go ahead get started here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_the_United_States

There have been multiple schemes in American history to stuff extra justices on the supreme court in order to get favorable decisions. Adding justices to the court can literally change the law.

Potato says what?

The bullshit is everything you graft on about United States Notes, not the redemption part. Milam is Federal Reserve Notes for Federal Reserve Notes, and yet you insist that there's some unspoken, hidden upholding of the magical United States Notes wash that somehow happens on redemption.

Cite it then without all the yapping. Be sure to quote me right. You must show my quote, and quote what I quoted wrong. And source links for both. That's how it works.


My opinion isn't that they don't uphold redemption and you know it. My opinion is that they don't acknowledge or uphold the crackpot bullshit about United States Notes that they don't bother to mention at all.

OK so there's this ^^^^ and my opinion: Courts literally upheld the redemption in plain English also referencing well established definitions lawyers already know including old statutes and cased relevant to any references of the undisputed statutory definitions, including regulatory definitions.....but my shit is wack and you'rs makes sense????

Why would the court mention coins? If coins were at issue, they would mention coins, and they would go through the law on coins. But obviously coins were not at issue, because the case says Federal Reserve Notes and it says NOTHING about coins. Even if it did say something about coins, how would handing someone a penny and $1,000 in Federal Reserve Notes mean that they had received lawful money? 1 penny of lawful money versus $1,000 in not lawful money, and the court chooses to say that he received lawful money?

Obviously spurious. If the courts intended to draw these distinctions, they wouldn't have relied on you to do it for them.

Obviously (insert 5 dollar word here)! Courts job is to know all that shit. Period. No law requires them to define every little thing they quote in a decision. Especially shit that has not been contested since 1913 and 37th Congress.



Your claim is that the statute from the 37th congress is the definition of "lawful money currency notes" by any court. What you just quoted says that congress has answered the question of whether United States are legal tender. The court then quotes the statute, stating that United States Notes arelawful money and arelegal tender. The statute never claims to be a definition of lawful money and the court you just quoted doesn't call it a definition of lawful money either, despite your seeming insistence otherwise.

No court has ever said that your statute is a definition of lawful money.

They don't have to. Court decisions are written for who? Other courts dumbass.
The issue of the notes being legal tender was a huge source of controversy at the time..being technically Unconstitutional and all. Congress has always had a grip on them being lawful money and has settled on them being legal tender with Court approval which is contingent to that ever getting to court again.

Congress has declared US notes and coins lawful money and legal tender; FRN's merely legal tender; with absolutely no objection from any court. Get over it.

I have no idea what the "civil boundary" is, so you're going to have explain what you mean by that phrase. It's not a legislative term, so I'm not sure why you think I already know what it means. I don't remember drawing it either...please do quote it.

Sure sure.
tokeprep said:
The code is the code; the code says what the code says; the code is the law. All true. But we do not live in a civil law system; in our constitutional system, the courts are empowered to interpret the law and those court decisions have precedential effect--they are also the law, along with the statutes, unless and until congress expresses a contrary intent.
I'll be happy to answer any question you have about the authority of the courts, but you're going to have to make it more clear. What is that you want to know or what is that I said that you're disputing? I don't know what the difference is based on the "civil boundary." Perhaps you should just make your claim about the Judiciary Act in full and then let me have it.

Go read it and do your own work since you have already claimed full authority on the matter...off you go! Pursue the truth and reason you claim to seek!
.................................................................
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Alright, this just took looking up the Judiciary Act to dispense with: "A district court shall have original jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the states, of any civil case of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction, saving to suitors in all cases all other remedies to which they are otherwise entitled." This statute is about admiralty/maritime jurisdiction. That's it. And yet, according to David Merrill, this statute required a remedy against elastic currency to be written into the Federal Reserve Act?

Hey why not ask David Merrill?
I like this one
http://www.fjc.gov/history/home.nsf/page/landmark_02_txt.html
And this one
http://www.constitution.org/uslaw/judiciary_1789.htm


I dug up an older and fuller version of the original statute from an 1808 supreme court case: "...and shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, including all seizures...saving to suitors, in all cases, the right of a common law remedy, where the common law is competent to give it; and shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all seizures on land, or other waters..."

Hey I like that one too, nice.


Edit: I figured I might as well finish the video since I started watching it, so a few other points:

1) The statute doesn't give you the right to redeem money at your local bank: "They shall be redeemed in lawful money on demand at the Treasury Department of the United States, in the city of Washington, District of Columbia, or at any Federal Reserve bank." Writing a restrictive endorsement on a check is not presenting Federal Reserve Notes for redemption at a Federal Reserve bank. Bizarrely, David Merrill has several times referred to any holder of Federal Reserve Notes--including individual people--as a "Federal Reserve bank" in this video. You can redeem your notes in lawful money from yourself?

Technically you can endorse the check, and demand to be paid in coins to satisfy the statute. Ask your vault teller that orders the money where the coins and the notes come from. The Fed is the final clearing house on all checks....even the ones that go through your local bank.

But hey you already read all this stuff though.

2) Absolutely no evidence is presented that a Federal Reserve Note can function as a United States Note. The basis is a sentence in a FAQ on the treasury's web site: "United States notes serve no function that is not already adequately served by Federal Reserve notes." David Merrill pretends this means that "Federal Reserve Notes function as United States Notes when they aren't endorsed." Not only is that not what the sentence says, the words aren't and aren't claimed to be law. Why is someone so steeped in the code relying solely on that FAQ page to make this point?

"adequately served" does not mean "served" it means they serve adequately;as currency;as demand notes...however the accounting is handled...as evidenced by Milam...and you that laughs when Fed complies and swaps Fed notes for Fed notes....So do you think I am David Merrill in incognito or something? Borderline obsessive. Especially when you have already claimed to know this stuff.

3) Absolutely no evidence is given for bonding, endorsement, etc., as a block to redeeming money. It's pure assertion--he cites nothing.

Crossed over the borderline of obsession. You know he seems like an honest guy and lots and lots of people have asked him questions and gotten responses, why not give it a try?

I am speaking for myself on here not David Merrill and simply cannot comply with your request to interpret on his behalf. I have put into my own words everything I have learned about money from a myriad of sources lots of Austrians no big secret there RP being one I like as his books are always chock full a sources.
.................
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
I am distinguishing between right and purpose here. I don't buy the Enlightenment idea that we have "natural rights". I was restricting the discussion of purpose to the way I originally read it: the "purpose" of existence, which when you peel the onion has theology at its center.
As far as economics are concerned ... that is a bewildering black box to me. Thus I haven't had much to say about that in this thread.

I'm game to have a societal discourse, but i think we have to agree on the terms and premises to some extent. I am attempting to calibrate. cn
Totally understood I think. To the extent of localities? In which case, I agree.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
Now tell me, where is this nonsense about bonding coming from? According to you, if it's not in the statute, it's not the law. And yet...it's not in there, is it!?

Hey why not do your own work ya know? Why not start just searching for "bond" at Cornell under US Code(legislative) and CFR(administrative)? Do it in the UCC too find it yourself.
No, no, I want you and David Merrill to do the work. I didn't make these claims, you guys did. Why should I substantiate the claims you're making? Why should I research the truth of your unsourced assertions for you?

The UCC is irrelevant, as has already been noted. Under the UCC definition of "money," Federal Reserve Notes are money. That definition has nothing to do with the constitution or lawful money: ""Money" means a medium of exchange authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign government and includes a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two or more nations."

Medium of exchange: "Something, such as a precious metal, that is commonly used in a specific area or among a certain group of people as money." Alternatively: "(Economics, Accounting & Finance / Banking & Finance) anything acceptable as a measure of value and a standard of exchange for goods and services in a particular country, region, etc." http://www.thefreedictionary.com/medium+of+exchange.

12 USC 411: "Federal reserve notes...are authorized."

Federal Reserve Notes are certainly a medium of exchange, whether they are money or not, and they are certainly authorized by congress in 12 USC 411. Thus Federal Reserve Notes are a medium of exchange authorized by a domestic government--they are "money" under the UCC. Article 3 says that it is inapplicable to money. That's the end of it and there's no debate left on whether the UCC is applicable. You cannot invoke commercial law that declares itself to be inapplicable!

You are confused about what is money and Money, not me. Only Treasury can issue US notes and coins. Only Fed can issue FRN's. Fed and Treasury can both redeem FRN's. End of pointless debate on this. Your insistence court has declared any statute of Congress regarding this matter as unconstitutional has fell flat on its ass because of the "wacky" interpretations I presented to you. You are literally saying the cases you quoted declared the Acts unconstitutional and we are merely waiting on statutes from Congress that cancel out the original statutes in question. The former step hasn't happened that would be MAJOR news.
I'm not confused. You argued there was a distinction based on capitalization that was in error, and then you argued there was a distinction between "money" and "money of account" based on a note explaining that there was no distinction.

I never claimed any court declared anything unconstitutional and never gave any such implication. Interpreting statutes is not passing judgment on their constitutionality, so I don't understand why you just blatantly conflated them together. The act is perfectly constitutional, the only question is what "lawful money" means since there is no definition in the code. People have argued that lawful money doesn't mean Federal Reserve Notes and the courts have concluded otherwise.

No one's "waiting on statutes from Congress that cancel out the original statutes." Again, you're implying that there is some congressional project to make the code match court interpretations. This is not the case. Everyone knows that the code alone is not the law; any lawyer who's looking at a section of the code is going to look for court cases too. That's our system. The code is full of anachronisms, and the case law for some statutes spans hundreds of pages. You must consider everything together. In this case, the anachronism is meaningless and totally harmless, so there's no cause for anyone to care about its continued existence.

More tax argument from you. I'm a good boy I pay my taxes, my conclusion is that's how it works right now, I actually am hoping benefit from what I consider a large sum I have contributed to the cause someday especially SS. So you whining about tax protesters while I am explaining how different types of money have different obligations one of which is to bear interest as you have claimed FRN's don't. It's a debt that bears interest. I am just showing you how wrong you are in the spirit of "I will soon learn as others have" which according to you is fed notes carry no interest and are not debt instruments when in point of fact in law they do and are.
That doesn't alter the fact that these arguments were constructed as tax protest arguments. The tax issue is the Jesus to the Christianity of redemption; all of these arguments are centered around Federal Reserve Notes somehow not being taxable income.

The suggestion that a Federal Reserve Note can function as a United States Note is patently absurd. It has no statutory basis whatsoever--it is pure assertion, which is why the IRS is someday going to label this a frivolous tax argument and charge $5,000 penalties.

Smoke yourself to absolute memory loss? I showed you treasury accounting of the public debt that accounts for the notes redeemed you simply shrugged it off and said it was talking about the old notes obliged by specie.
If you think that's what the statement said, you misread it. Here's the most recent statement, page 11: http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/mspd/2013/opdm052013.pdf. It says that $239 million in United States Notes is presently outstanding. In 2002, there were $263 million in United States Notes outstanding. The amount of United States Notes in circulation over the past 10 years actually declined by $24 million.

Ya wiki covers it pretty well, lots of sources, I don't recall it goes back to the Crusades but go ahead get started here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_the_United_States
Did you not read the article?

"Under the doctrine of Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins (1938), there is no general federal common law. Although federal courts can create federal common law in the form of case law, such law must be linked one way or another to the interpretation of a particular federal constitutional provision, statute, or regulation (which in turn was enacted as part of the Constitution or after)..."

....it is universally accepted that the Founding Fathers of the United States, by vesting "judicial power" into the Supreme Court and the inferior federal courts in Article Three of the United States Constitution, thereby vested in them the implied judicial power of common law courts to formulate persuasive precedent; this power was widely accepted, understood, and recognized by the Founding Fathers at the time the Constitution was ratified.[44] Several legal scholars have argued that the federal judicial power to decide "cases or controversies" necessarily includes the power to decide the precedential effect of those cases and controversies."

Cite it then without all the yapping. Be sure to quote me right. You must show my quote, and quote what I quoted wrong. And source links for both. That's how it works.
Here's Milam:

Appellant has filed a substantial brief and an adequate reply brief and has argued his full share of allotted time in support for a demand that his $50.00 Federal Reserve Bank Note be redeemed in "lawful money" of the United States, which he says, in effect, must be gold or silver. Appellant refused appellees' tender of an equivalent value in Federal Reserve Notes.

Appellant's contentions, in our view, were put at rest close to a century ago in Juilliard v. Greenman, 110 U.S. 421, 448, 4 S.Ct. 122, 130, 28 L.Ed. 204 (1884), in which it was said:

" . . . Under the power to borrow money on the credit of the United States, and to issue circulating notes for the money borrowed, its power to define the quality and force of those notes as currency is as broad as the like power over a metallic currency under the power to coin money and to regulate the value thereof. Under the two powers, taken together, Congress is authorized to establish a national currency, either in coin or in paper, and to make that currency lawful money for all purposes, as regards the national government or private individuals. . . . " (Emphasis supplied.)

The power so precisely described in Juilliard has been delegated to the Federal Reserve System under the provisions of 12 U.S.C. § 411. Appellant's challenge to the validity of this legislation is meritless. Cf.31 U.S.C. § 392.

While we agree that golden eagles, double eagles and silver dollars were lovely to look at and delightful to hold, we must at the same time recognize that time marches on, and that even the time honored silver dollar is no longer available in its last bastion of defense, the brilliant casinos of the houses of chance in the state of Nevada. Appellant is entitled to redeem his note, but not in precious metal. Simply stated, we find his contentions frivolous.

Judgment affirmed.
Here's you on the magical wash process: "That says Milam refused "lawful money". Which were the notes offered to him in exchange. What you don't understand is the Fed is required to make them non-negotiable upon demand...meaning they can't be fractionally lent. Milam refused his 50 but if he didn't the Fed would have to account for them in a very different way than elastic currency...The Fed agreed to exchange notes for notes and redeem it's right there in what you quoted. Maybe this is over your head but you should be able to put it together from what's here in this thread. Milam wanted to redeem and the Fed complied as per 12usc411 and not in specie according to the Legal Tender Laws. Then Milam refused the redemption that was offered which was FRN's with the obligation REMOVED making them NON NEGOTIABLE just like US NOTES."

How can you say Milam was offered Federal Reserve Notes "with the obligation REMOVED making them NON NEGOTIABLE just like US NOTES" based on this case? You cannot.

OK so there's this ^^^^ and my opinion: Courts literally upheld the redemption in plain English also referencing well established definitions lawyers already know including old statutes and cased relevant to any references of the undisputed statutory definitions, including regulatory definitions.....but my shit is wack and you'rs makes sense????
You think that's how court decisions work? Court decisions are based entirely on authority. When they mean to reference a case, they explicitly cite that case; when they mean to reference a statute, they explicitly cite that statute. When a definition is important, they source their definition. This is not accomplished by secret handshakes and subtle references of "well established definitions lawyers already know including old statutes and cases relevant." You know what that means in plain English? "The court didn't say what I needed it to say, so I'm just going to claim that surely they meant it even though they didn't say it." Bullshit.

How peculiar that your entire argument is based on adhering to the literal language of 12 USC 411, and yet when it comes to court court cases interpreting that section you want to totally ignore the courts' literal language in favor of some unexpressed meaning you cull from the opinions. \

Obviously (insert 5 dollar word here)! Courts job is to know all that shit. Period. No law requires them to define every little thing they quote in a decision. Especially shit that has not been contested since 1913 and 37th Congress.
Yeah, it makes a lot of sense for courts to hide the ball in their published opinions. The decision was based on the presence of coins, but why would the court say that, since everyone knows coins are lawful money and that white washes the whole transaction anyway? Obviously not. If they made a decision based on coins, they would have said the decision was based on coins.

They don't have to. Court decisions are written for who? Other courts dumbass.
The issue of the notes being legal tender was a huge source of controversy at the time..being technically Unconstitutional and all. Congress has always had a grip on them being lawful money and has settled on them being legal tender with Court approval which is contingent to that ever getting to court again.

Congress has declared US notes and coins lawful money and legal tender; FRN's merely legal tender; with absolutely no objection from any court. Get over it.
You claim was that a court had upheld the supposed definition of "lawful money" you keep referencing. This court did not such thing, something you don't even seem to dispute in this post. The question the court answered was whether United States Notes were legal tender, and the answer was yes, based on the statute the court quoted. There is no attempt to define or distinguish either lawful money or legal tender in what you quoted from that court.

Indeed, congress has declared that about United States Notes, and congress has expressly declared Federal Reserve Notes "legal tender." None of that is in contention. The question of whether they are "lawful money" is not answered by statute because there is no definition of lawful money in existence, but the question has been answered by the courts, which say they are one in the same.

Sure sure.
Originally Posted by tokeprep
The code is the code; the code says what the code says; the code is the law. All true. But we do not live in a civil law system; in our constitutional system, the courts are empowered to interpret the law and those court decisions have precedential effect--they are also the law, along with the statutes, unless and until congress expresses a contrary intent.
Thank you. Now what do you think this "civil boundary" is, then? Because it's still totally unclear to me. I think you may have confused civil versus common law with civil versus criminal law. My purpose in the text you quoted was to differentitate the two different systems of law that predominate the modern world. In a civil law system, the law is literally the statute: cases are decided case-by-case without reference to other court decisions, which don't have precedential effect. In a common law system, the law is the statute and court cases interpreting the statute; the court cases have binding and precedential force on the effect of the statute. We my point was that we live in a common law system--the code is not the absolute authority for what the law is, it is merely a part of the law.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
No, no, I want you and David Merrill to do the work. I didn't make these claims, you guys did. Why should I substantiate the claims you're making? Why should I research the truth of your unsourced assertions for you?

The UCC is irrelevant, as has already been noted. Under the UCC definition of "money," Federal Reserve Notes are money. That definition has nothing to do with the constitution or lawful money: ""Money" means a medium of exchange authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign government and includes a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two or more nations."

Medium of exchange: "Something, such as a precious metal, that is commonly used in a specific area or among a certain group of people as money." Alternatively: "(Economics, Accounting & Finance / Banking & Finance) anything acceptable as a measure of value and a standard of exchange for goods and services in a particular country, region, etc." http://www.thefreedictionary.com/medium+of+exchange.

12 USC 411: "Federal reserve notes...are authorized."

Federal Reserve Notes are certainly a medium of exchange, whether they are money or not, and they are certainly authorized by congress in 12 USC 411. Thus Federal Reserve Notes are a medium of exchange authorized by a domestic government--they are "money" under the UCC. Article 3 says that it is inapplicable to money. That's the end of it and there's no debate left on whether the UCC is applicable. You cannot invoke commercial law that declares itself to be inapplicable!



I'm not confused. You argued there was a distinction based on capitalization that was in error, and then you argued there was a distinction between "money" and "money of account" based on a note explaining that there was no distinction.

I never claimed any court declared anything unconstitutional and never gave any such implication. Interpreting statutes is not passing judgment on their constitutionality, so I don't understand why you just blatantly conflated them together. The act is perfectly constitutional, the only question is what "lawful money" means since there is no definition in the code. People have argued that lawful money doesn't mean Federal Reserve Notes and the courts have concluded otherwise.

No one's "waiting on statutes from Congress that cancel out the original statutes." Again, you're implying that there is some congressional project to make the code match court interpretations. This is not the case. Everyone knows that the code alone is not the law; any lawyer who's looking at a section of the code is going to look for court cases too. That's our system. The code is full of anachronisms, and the case law for some statutes spans hundreds of pages. You must consider everything together. In this case, the anachronism is meaningless and totally harmless, so there's no cause for anyone to care about its continued existence.



That doesn't alter the fact that these arguments were constructed as tax protest arguments. The tax issue is the Jesus to the Christianity of redemption; all of these arguments are centered around Federal Reserve Notes somehow not being taxable income.

The suggestion that a Federal Reserve Note can function as a United States Note is patently absurd. It has no statutory basis whatsoever--it is pure assertion, which is why the IRS is someday going to label this a frivolous tax argument and charge $5,000 penalties.



If you think that's what the statement said, you misread it. Here's the most recent statement, page 11: http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/mspd/2013/opdm052013.pdf. It says that $239 million in United States Notes is presently outstanding. In 2002, there were $263 million in United States Notes outstanding. The amount of United States Notes in circulation over the past 10 years actually declined by $24 million.



Did you not read the article?

"Under the doctrine of Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins (1938), there is no general federal common law. Although federal courts can create federal common law in the form of case law, such law must be linked one way or another to the interpretation of a particular federal constitutional provision, statute, or regulation (which in turn was enacted as part of the Constitution or after)..."

....it is universally accepted that the Founding Fathers of the United States, by vesting "judicial power" into the Supreme Court and the inferior federal courts in Article Three of the United States Constitution, thereby vested in them the implied judicial power of common law courts to formulate persuasive precedent; this power was widely accepted, understood, and recognized by the Founding Fathers at the time the Constitution was ratified.[44] Several legal scholars have argued that the federal judicial power to decide "cases or controversies" necessarily includes the power to decide the precedential effect of those cases and controversies."



Here's Milam:



Here's you on the magical wash process: "That says Milam refused "lawful money". Which were the notes offered to him in exchange. What you don't understand is the Fed is required to make them non-negotiable upon demand...meaning they can't be fractionally lent. Milam refused his 50 but if he didn't the Fed would have to account for them in a very different way than elastic currency...The Fed agreed to exchange notes for notes and redeem it's right there in what you quoted. Maybe this is over your head but you should be able to put it together from what's here in this thread. Milam wanted to redeem and the Fed complied as per 12usc411 and not in specie according to the Legal Tender Laws. Then Milam refused the redemption that was offered which was FRN's with the obligation REMOVED making them NON NEGOTIABLE just like US NOTES."

How can you say Milam was offered Federal Reserve Notes "with the obligation REMOVED making them NON NEGOTIABLE just like US NOTES" based on this case? You cannot.



You think that's how court decisions work? Court decisions are based entirely on authority. When they mean to reference a case, they explicitly cite that case; when they mean to reference a statute, they explicitly cite that statute. When a definition is important, they source their definition. This is not accomplished by secret handshakes and subtle references of "well established definitions lawyers already know including old statutes and cases relevant." You know what that means in plain English? "The court didn't say what I needed it to say, so I'm just going to claim that surely they meant it even though they didn't say it." Bullshit.

How peculiar that your entire argument is based on adhering to the literal language of 12 USC 411, and yet when it comes to court court cases interpreting that section you want to totally ignore the courts' literal language in favor of some unexpressed meaning you cull from the opinions. \



Yeah, it makes a lot of sense for courts to hide the ball in their published opinions. The decision was based on the presence of coins, but why would the court say that, since everyone knows coins are lawful money and that white washes the whole transaction anyway? Obviously not. If they made a decision based on coins, they would have said the decision was based on coins.



You claim was that a court had upheld the supposed definition of "lawful money" you keep referencing. This court did not such thing, something you don't even seem to dispute in this post. The question the court answered was whether United States Notes were legal tender, and the answer was yes, based on the statute the court quoted. There is no attempt to define or distinguish either lawful money or legal tender in what you quoted from that court.

Indeed, congress has declared that about United States Notes, and congress has expressly declared Federal Reserve Notes "legal tender." None of that is in contention. The question of whether they are "lawful money" is not answered by statute because there is no definition of lawful money in existence, but the question has been answered by the courts, which say they are one in the same.



Thank you. Now what do you think this "civil boundary" is, then? Because it's still totally unclear to me. I think you may have confused civil versus common law with civil versus criminal law. My purpose in the text you quoted was to differentitate the two different systems of law that predominate the modern world. In a civil law system, the law is literally the statute: cases are decided case-by-case without reference to other court decisions, which don't have precedential effect. In a common law system, the law is the statute and court cases interpreting the statute; the court cases have binding and precedential force on the effect of the statute. We my point was that we live in a common law system--the code is not the absolute authority for what the law is, it is merely a part of the law.


Congress, Court, Treasury and the Fed made these claims for the record not "us". No need to read any further than this on your response.
You win long post of the year award. That is all.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
Alright, this just took looking up the Judiciary Act to dispense with: "A district court shall have original jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the states, of any civil case of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction, saving to suitors in all cases all other remedies to which they are otherwise entitled." This statute is about admiralty/maritime jurisdiction. That's it. And yet, according to David Merrill, this statute required a remedy against elastic currency to be written into the Federal Reserve Act?

Hey why not ask David Merrill?
I like this one
http://www.fjc.gov/history/home.nsf/page/landmark_02_txt.html
And this one
http://www.constitution.org/uslaw/judiciary_1789.htm
If you're going to parrot claims and assert them as truth then it's up to you to defend them. David Merrill didn't start this debate.

Why are you giving me more links to the statute? I already looked at the text--I just quoted it. What's your point? How how does a maritime/admiralty statute have anything to do with a remedy against elastic currency in the Federal Reserve Act?

Technically you can endorse the check, and demand to be paid in coins to satisfy the statute. Ask your vault teller that orders the money where the coins and the notes come from. The Fed is the final clearing house on all checks....even the ones that go through your local bank.

But hey you already read all this stuff though.
The statute says that Federal Reserve Notes shall be redeemed at any Federal Reserve bank. A check is not a Federal Reserve Note, it's an order to pay Federal Reserve Notes. How would stamping a check that's processed by a Federal Reserve bank with a demand suffice? The demand is for the check, right? It's an endorsement on the back that says "Redeemable in lawful money under 12 USC 411," correct? But the check is not redeemable in lawful money under 12 USC 411, only Federal Reserve Notes are. Thus a demand on the back of a check is not a demand on Federal Reserve Notes.

The Federal Reserve doesn't cash the checks, it just passes money around between the banks. How are Federal Reserve Notes ever presented to the Federal Reserve bank for redemption in this process? They aren't. As you point out, the Fed is just a clearinghouse.

"adequately served" does not mean "served" it means they serve adequately;as currency;as demand notes...however the accounting is handled...as evidenced by Milam...and you that laughs when Fed complies and swaps Fed notes for Fed notes....So do you think I am David Merrill in incognito or something? Borderline obsessive. Especially when you have already claimed to know this stuff.
I'm just trying to demonstrate that he's a crackpot. Milam says nothing about this. The sole source for his claim is that line in a treasury FAQ!

Crossed over the borderline of obsession. You know he seems like an honest guy and lots and lots of people have asked him questions and gotten responses, why not give it a try?

I am speaking for myself on here not David Merrill and simply cannot comply with your request to interpret on his behalf. I have put into my own words everything I have learned about money from a myriad of sources lots of Austrians no big secret there RP being one I like as his books are always chock full a sources.
You keep repeating the nonsense even though it's not sourced at all. If you believe this is the truth, you should want to know the answer, otherwise you're just believing in bullshit.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
If you're going to parrot claims and assert them as truth then it's up to you to defend them. David Merrill didn't start this debate.

Why are you giving me more links to the statute? I already looked at the text--I just quoted it. What's your point? How how does a maritime/admiralty statute have anything to do with a remedy against elastic currency in the Federal Reserve Act?



The statute says that Federal Reserve Notes shall be redeemed at any Federal Reserve bank. A check is not a Federal Reserve Note, it's an order to pay Federal Reserve Notes. How would stamping a check that's processed by a Federal Reserve bank with a demand suffice? The demand is for the check, right? It's an endorsement on the back that says "Redeemable in lawful money under 12 USC 411," correct? But the check is not redeemable in lawful money under 12 USC 411, only Federal Reserve Notes are. Thus a demand on the back of a check is not a demand on Federal Reserve Notes.

The Federal Reserve doesn't cash the checks, it just passes money around between the banks. How are Federal Reserve Notes ever presented to the Federal Reserve bank for redemption in this process? They aren't. As you point out, the Fed is just a clearinghouse.



I'm just trying to demonstrate that he's a crackpot. Milam says nothing about this. The sole source for his claim is that line in a treasury FAQ!



You keep repeating the nonsense even though it's not sourced at all. If you believe this is the truth, you should want to know the answer, otherwise you're just believing in bullshit.


The top of your last post is a big, huge, direct misquote, have we not been over this?

I gave you links to the Act not the statute but here ya go know it all.............http://143.231.180.80/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title28-section1333&num=0&edition=prelim

I am free to parrot anything I know from any source whatsoever you are not my master and do not control my actions.

Has the first Judiciary Act been overturned? How about all the statutes that facilitate redemption? The "symbolic" Fed note for Fed note swap been overturned? The right to redeem been overturned?

You claim they all have, show it then. Keep in mind it would have to be overturned in plain English with references to what is being overturned, then Congress has to issue a statute that negates the overturned statute......remember telling me they should have to define words they use? Not true, can't claim they overturned something incognito then claim they must spell out def's for you. Checkmate.

It is you that believe in bullshit i.e. Fed notes are lawful money waa waa they represent no debt waa waa society that uses them won't give me my "rights". What a crock of shit.

Why not go argue with the record, it's all there.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
As for the UCC because obviously your comprehension is way off about this. You just keep repeating the assertion of your conclusion as law. In your un-thorough skimming of it all you are simply mistaken the UCC defeniton of money to inclued Fed notes, here's why you are wrong again:


"(2) "Account", except as used in "account for", means a right to payment of a monetary obligation, whether or not earned by performance"........

Let's skip ahead towards the end of "Account" def in UCC to find the only mention of "money"...........

The term does not include (i) rights to payment evidenced by chattel paper or an instrument, (ii)commercial tort claims, (iii)deposit accounts, (iv) investment property, (v) letter-of-credit rights or letters of credit, or (vi) rights to payment for money or funds advanced or sold, other than rights arising out of the use of a credit or charge card or information contained on or for use with the card.

Account is a right to payment of a monetary obligation, even under no performance...like interest.....and not a right to payment for money.

This fits 31usc5101 money of account, redefines it as account for UCC purposes.

Please provide the link for
tokeprep said:

  • "(24) "Money" means a medium of exchange currently authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign government. The term includes a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two or more countries."







So "Money" includes money of account to UCC only. Does not trump the def of "Money" in the constitution or the def of "money" in UScode or the def of "lawful money" by 37th Congress.......which have already defined Federal Reserve Notes.....If I make a UCC, uniform cooking code I can define "Chicken" as "eggs from chickens".

So are you arguing the tax court may use this definition? Because the Supreme Court may not. The district court being common law may not. Back to square. Please explain tokeprep, is tax court an article III court? Can you have a jury? Would it be considered a civil court? Maritime Commercial Court? Constitutional? Military tribunal? May it rule on what is lawful money as defined by US Congress?
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
omg so fucking sick of losing shit with these captchas so done with long ass posts here.


You keep applying UCC "medium of exchange" to what District court quotes as lawful money or legal tender or just money...then insist UCC has no bearing on the discussion...."instruments" is the important thing. District court must uphold Commercial contracts between Fed and Treasury.

UCC def of "Money" does not trump it's own def of "Account" or "instrument" much less ANY Constitutional or Congressional definitions that are centuries old.

So back to competency.

Does tax court use UCC? Can they? Supreme court may not. District court rulings are common law so they may not which is why they use congressional def's and Constitutional def's.

Is tax court an article III court? Is it common law? maritime/commerce? civil? military tribunal?
Is it competent to redefine lawful money?

Please do share, you quoted them this is all on you to clear up correctly for everyone having provided the assumption they are competent to redefine the definitions you claimed.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
The 16th amendment was ratified in 1913. Federal Reserve Act was passed in 1913. The two must coexist for the fed to remain functional to its stockholders. We voluntary pledge ourselves as chattel. Am I a tax protester? Not in practice but I believe the income tax is evil....especially a progressive graduated one.....I would think someone who "despises marxism" would agree on both the bank and the tax being enemies of freedom.

Redemption is part of the Fed Act and must be for it not to be completely laughed off as Unconstitutional. That's the piece you are missing while still trying to play the game despite your skimming of the wiki article on US law I gave you for reference.....and the First American Judiciary Act that was given to me, which I gave to you. The Fed Act cannot exist in American law without Redemption which is common law Remedy for Commercial or Maritime "money" to be redeemed to Money.

This remedy provided by district court has exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of maritime jurisdiction. Civil cause of maritime/commercial Fed notes? Congress. Civil Contract facilitating commercial paper functioning as legal tender currency.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
from the statute in question:http://143.231.180.80/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title28-section1333&num=0&edition=prelim

"The district courts shall have original jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the States, of:
(1) Any civil case of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction, saving to suitors in all cases all other remedies to which they are otherwise entitled.
(2) Any prize brought into the United States and all proceedings for the condemnation of property taken as prize.
(June 25, 1948, ch. 646, 62 Stat. 931; May 24, 1949, ch. 139, §79, 63 Stat. 101.)

The “saving to suitors” clause in sections 41(3) and 371(3) of title 28, U.S.C., 1940 ed., was changed by substituting the words “any other remedy to which he is otherwise entitled” for the words “the right of a common law remedy where the common law is competent to give it.” The substituted language is simpler and more expressive of theoriginal intent of Congress and is in conformity with Rule 2 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure abolishing the distinction between law and equity."



If you're going to parrot claims and assert them as truth then it's up to you to defend them. David Merrill didn't start this debate.

Why are you giving me more links to the statute? I already looked at the text--I just quoted it. What's your point? How how does a maritime/admiralty statute have anything to do with a remedy against elastic currency in the Federal Reserve Act?

From the Act:http://www.constitution.org/uslaw/judiciary_1789.htm

" That the district courts shall have, exclusively of the courts of the several States, cognizance of all crimes and offences that shall be cognizable under the authority of the United States, committed within their respective districts, or upon the high seas; where no other punishment than whipping, not exceeding thirty stripes, a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or a term of imprisonment not exceeding six months, is to be inflicted; and shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, including all seizures under laws of impost, navigation or trade of the United States, where the seizures are made, on waters which are navigable from the sea by vessels of ten or more tons burthen, within their respective districts as well as upon the high seas; saving to suitors, in all cases, the right of a common law remedy, where the common law is competent to give it; and shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all seizures on land,"

I think you really are just confused on what is law and what is equity. I honestly don't expect you to know this merely having worked for some representative. Most of Congress is unaware of this which is the main source of "bullshit" today, in this economy in this time.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Your right to common law remedy is also your right to keep to common law terms and defs, common case law and right to be heard in civil district court....provided you used the remedy and made the demand for redemption you do not have to be aware of the accounting in equity..........common law is "competent" because common law defined the contract in equity and defined the remedy to return from equity money to common law money.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
The top of your last post is a big, huge, direct misquote, have we not been over this?

I gave you links to the Act not the statute but here ya go know it all.............http://143.231.180.80/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title28-section1333&num=0&edition=prelim

I am free to parrot anything I know from any source whatsoever you are not my master and do not control my actions.
The difference between the present and original language is irrelevant because it doesn't change what the statute is about. I'll mark up your preferred version to show it's the same result:

"And be it further enacted, That the district courts shall have, exclusively of the courts of the several States, cognizance of all crimes and offences that shall be cognizable under the authority of the United States, committed within their respective districts, or upon the high seas; where no other punishment than whipping, not exceeding thirty stripes, a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or a term of imprisonment not exceeding six months, is to be inflicted; and shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, including all seizures under laws of impost, navigation or trade of the United States, where the seizures are made, on waters which are navigable from the sea by vessels of ten or more tons burthen, within their respective districts as well as upon the high seas; saving to suitors, in all cases, the right of a common law remedy, where the common law is competent to give it; and shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all seizures on land, or other waters than as aforesaid, made, and of all suits for penalties and forfeitures incurred, under the laws of the United States. And shall also have cognizance, concurrent with the courts of the several States, or the circuit courts, as the case may be, of all causes where an alien sues for a tort only in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States. And shall also have cognizance, concurrent as last mentioned, of all suits at common law where the United States sue, and the matter in dispute amounts, exclusive of costs, to the sum or value of one hundred dollars. And shall also have jurisdiction exclusively of the courts of the several States, of all suits against consuls or vice-consuls, except for offences above the description aforesaid. And the trial of issues in fact, in the district courts, in all causes except civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, shall be by jury."

This part of this statute David Merrill highlights gives the courts admiralty/maritime jurisdiction; the "saving to suitors" clause gives people the right to file in state court for a common law remedy despite this grant of jurisdiction.

Has the first Judiciary Act been overturned? How about all the statutes that facilitate redemption? The "symbolic" Fed note for Fed note swap been overturned? The right to redeem been overturned?

You claim they all have, show it then. Keep in mind it would have to be overturned in plain English with references to what is being overturned, then Congress has to issue a statute that negates the overturned statute......remember telling me they should have to define words they use? Not true, can't claim they overturned something incognito then claim they must spell out def's for you. Checkmate.
I never said any of that was overturned. None of it has to be "overturned" to support my argument. The federal courts still have original jurisdiction over admiralty/maritime; people can still file in state court for a common law remedy in those cases. The statute still has redemption in it, and the "symbolic" swap of Federal Reserve Notes for Federal Reserve Notes was held to satisfy the statute. What's "overturned" in this chain?

Your fundamental flaw is believing that the law is only what congress says. You blatantly ignore and this misrepresent the courts in order to preserve this ridiculous redemption fantasy.

It is you that believe in bullshit i.e. Fed notes are lawful money waa waa they represent no debt waa waa society that uses them won't give me my "rights". What a crock of shit.

Why not go argue with the record, it's all there.
You're the one arguing with the record. This whole debate has made that exceedingly clear.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
WTF you literally copy me verbatim and attempt to explain away what I highlighted for you? You are just impossible, this is evidence redemption is not for you, in every sense of the word. You don't want it, that's your right to remain in equity. A lot of us want out so we can do something about the DEBT. To support your argument you have claimed court has overturned the common law and statutory UScode definitions of lawful money, money, Money and legal tender. You have claimed tax court to support your argument ignoring they do not establish common law.....You claim tax court overturned the definition of lawful money and still have failed to identify the competency of the tax court. Go get your shit together and come back more informed.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
God love you, Twostroke. I think you must just be a sadist because you're touching something else that I actually know a whole lot about--this is something else I actually had to work with. Let's explain why you're wrong again.

As for the UCC because obviously your comprehension is way off about this. You just keep repeating the assertion of your conclusion as law. In your un-thorough skimming of it all you are simply mistaken the UCC defeniton of money to inclued Fed notes, here's why you are wrong again:

"(2) "Account", except as used in "account for", means a right to payment of a monetary obligation, whether or not earned by performance"........

Let's skip ahead towards the end of "Account" def in UCC to find the only mention of "money"...........

The term does not include (i) rights to payment evidenced by chattel paper or an instrument, (ii)commercial tort claims, (iii)deposit accounts, (iv) investment property, (v) letter-of-credit rights or letters of credit, or (vi) rights to payment for money or funds advanced or sold, other than rights arising out of the use of a credit or charge card or information contained on or for use with the card.

Account is a right to payment of a monetary obligation, even under no performance...like interest.....and not a right to payment for money.

This fits 31usc5101 money of account, redefines it as account for UCC purposes.
Alas, that isn't the only definition of money in the code.

1-201: "(a) Unless the context otherwise requires, words or phrases defined in this section, or in the additional definitions contained in other articles of [the Uniform Commercial Code] that apply to particular articles or parts thereof, have the meanings stated.

(b) Subject to definitions contained in other articles of [the Uniform Commercial Code] that apply to particular articles or parts thereof:

...

(24) "Money" means a medium of exchange currently authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign government. The term includes a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two or more countries."

There's no further definition of "money" in Article 3, so this is it. This stuff about "account" is nonsense because we have a definition of money standing right in front of us.

So "Money" includes money of account to UCC only. Does not trump the def of "Money" in the constitution or the def of "money" in UScode or the def of "lawful money" by 37th Congress.......which have already defined Federal Reserve Notes.....If I make a UCC, uniform cooking code I can define "Chicken" as "eggs from chickens".

So are you arguing the tax court may use this definition? Because the Supreme Court may not. The district court being common law may not. Back to square. Please explain tokeprep, is tax court an article III court? Can you have a jury? Would it be considered a civil court? Maritime Commercial Court? Constitutional? Military tribunal? May it rule on what is lawful money as defined by US Congress?
"Money" means what the UCC defined it to mean. The UCC does not say "'Money' is whatever the United States constitution or congress or courts have deemed to be 'lawful money.'" Instead it simply says that any medium of exchange authorized by a domestic government is money.

The tax court, supreme court, and district courts may certainly use this definition if they're applying the UCC as state law. For example, if you argue that Federal Reserve Notes are negotiable instruments in any tax or district court, they can consider this UCC definition because negotiable instruments are governed by state law. In a state that has adopted the UCC (all of them), the UCC is the body of law that answers the question. The other definition is irrelevant because it is a definition in federal law, not a definition in state commercial law. Your mistake is conflating the two together and thinking that one definition is universal to everything.

The tax court is not an Article III court, and the point is not that the tax court has ruled Federal Reserve Notes are lawful money. I used some of its decisions for the statements of the law in order to show that you were misconstruing the other cases; the tax court merely follows the law. But I guess these tax court judges are much, much dumber than you and David Merrill and just unable to read, even though they probably actually went to law school and practiced with the tax code for a long time, so they probably know a lot about statutory interpretation. I get it, though, they aren't a "real" court, so you think the "judges" are irrelevant. Fine. Don't talk about tax court cases then, because there are plenty of others.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
God love you, Twostroke. I think you must just be a sadist because you're touching something else that I actually know a whole lot about--this is something else I actually had to work with. Let's explain why you're wrong again.



Alas, that isn't the only definition of money in the code.

1-201: "(a) Unless the context otherwise requires, words or phrases defined in this section, or in the additional definitions contained in other articles of [the Uniform Commercial Code] that apply to particular articles or parts thereof, have the meanings stated.

(b) Subject to definitions contained in other articles of [the Uniform Commercial Code] that apply to particular articles or parts thereof:

...

(24) "Money" means a medium of exchange currently authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign government. The term includes a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two or more countries."

There's no further definition of "money" in Article 3, so this is it. This stuff about "account" is nonsense because we have a definition of money standing right in front of us.



"Money" means what the UCC defined it to mean. The UCC does not say "'Money' is whatever the United States constitution or congress or courts have deemed to be 'lawful money.'" Instead it simply says that any medium of exchange authorized by a domestic government is money.

The tax court, supreme court, and district courts may certainly use this definition if they're applying the UCC as state law. For example, if you argue that Federal Reserve Notes are negotiable instruments in any tax or district court, they can consider this UCC definition because negotiable instruments are governed by state law. In a state that has adopted the UCC (all of them), the UCC is the body of law that answers the question. The other definition is irrelevant because it is a definition in federal law, not a definition in state commercial law. Your mistake is conflating the two together and thinking that one definition is universal to everything.

The tax court is not an Article III court, and the point is not that the tax court has ruled Federal Reserve Notes are lawful money. I used some of its decisions for the statements of the law in order to show that you were misconstruing the other cases; the tax court merely follows the law. But I guess these tax court judges are much, much dumber than you and David Merrill and just unable to read, even though they probably actually went to law school and practiced with the tax code for a long time, so they probably know a lot about statutory interpretation. I get it, though, they aren't a "real" court, so you think the "judges" are irrelevant. Fine. Don't talk about tax court cases then, because there are plenty of others.
great more repeating what I already said to you so you can save some face........we already established this is Commercial Code and remedy would exclude all these.....these apply to the accounting of redeemed notes of equity though, "elastic currency" that are "instruments".....according to the Remedy I am reading in the Act it specifically says suitors don't honestly have to know all the equity shit.

If they apply the UCC def of money then they must apply the def of "instrument" as well....the part you always leave out while repeating yourself over and over......the whole code must apply specifically each states rendition......which has provisions for what is "money" as pre-defined by government.....which fits my argument that "behind the counter" the accounting happens.......checkmate your move.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
You keep applying UCC "medium of exchange" to what District court quotes as lawful money or legal tender or just money...then insist UCC has no bearing on the discussion...."instruments" is the important thing. District court must uphold Commercial contracts between Fed and Treasury.
When did I ever apply the UCC "medium of exchange" to any court decision? I'm pretty sure I never did.

There are no commercial contracts between the Fed and the treasury. Federal Reserve Notes are by definition not negotiable instruments. If courts must hold otherwise, as you just claimed, where's the proof at?

UCC def of "Money" does not trump it's own def of "Account" or "instrument" much less ANY Constitutional or Congressional definitions that are centuries old.
Really? Because this is the first substantive provision of Article 3, after the title: "(a) This Article applies to negotiable instruments. It does not apply to money, to payment orders governed by Article 4A, or to securities governed by Article 8." Since we know without a doubt what "money" is in the UCC, and since it has nothing to do with either of those definitions, it makes no sense to suggest that unrelated definitions trump the literal definition of money in the code.

So back to competency.

Does tax court use UCC? Can they? Supreme court may not. District court rulings are common law so they may not which is why they use congressional def's and Constitutional def's.

Is tax court an article III court? Is it common law? maritime/commerce? civil? military tribunal?
Is it competent to redefine lawful money?

Please do share, you quoted them this is all on you to clear up correctly for everyone having provided the assumption they are competent to redefine the definitions you claimed.
Oh yes, as I just said, they can all use the UCC, and they do it all the time. You want me to quote some decisions where federal courts are using the UCC to make decisions? Because I can easily do that. Again, if you don't even understand how the UCC is applicable as law, why do you believe you're competent to discuss this subject? Of course, the UCC definition is irrelevant to defining "lawful money" in federal law. I didn't bring the UCC up, though, you did--it was you who argued Federal Reserve Notes were "negotiable instruments" in commercial law. I brought up the UCC definition of money solely to disprove that they are negotiable instruments, not as part of my case on what "money" is under federal law. I can see why this would be confusing if you think all definitions and all sources of law must be equivalent and say equivalent things, but that has never been my argument.

Incidentally, federal courts can apply state law whenever it's possible to obtain diversity jurisdiction. Again, you may not be aware of this, so you might think it's impossible (as you just suggested), but it happens all the time. Often state and federal courts are perceived as being "friendly" to different parties, so the parties play a big game of where things should be tried. The party that thinks it has a better case in front of a federal court will try to move the case from state court to federal court even when there's no question of federal law.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
The 16th amendment was ratified in 1913. Federal Reserve Act was passed in 1913. The two must coexist for the fed to remain functional to its stockholders. We voluntary pledge ourselves as chattel. Am I a tax protester? Not in practice but I believe the income tax is evil....especially a progressive graduated one.....I would think someone who "despises marxism" would agree on both the bank and the tax being enemies of freedom.
What legal basis is there for saying that? Because I see none. The Fed can exist without an income tax. Indeed, everyone complains that the purpose of the Fed is to print money to finance government spending, causing huge inflation, so it makes little sense to argue that they're dependent on the income tax to exist.

Redemption is part of the Fed Act and must be for it not to be completely laughed off as Unconstitutional. That's the piece you are missing while still trying to play the game despite your skimming of the wiki article on US law I gave you for reference.....and the First American Judiciary Act that was given to me, which I gave to you. The Fed Act cannot exist in American law without Redemption which is common law Remedy for Commercial or Maritime "money" to be redeemed to Money.
I never said it was unconstitutional. The question is whether redemption can be effective as law now that gold and silver redemption have ceased and all United States currency has been declared to be equivalent by the congress. The courts have answered yes, that a Federal Reserve Note for Federal Reserve Note swap is sufficient to give effect to the statute. Once again, this makes total logical sense. Paper is all they have to redeem with, so why wouldn't it satisfy the statute to redeem with paper, now that congress has eliminated the gold and silver it used to redeem for?

The Judiciary Act grant of maritime jurisdiction to the federal courts has nothing to do with this issue of money. Absolutely nothing.

This remedy provided by district court has exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of maritime jurisdiction. Civil cause of maritime/commercial Fed notes? Congress. Civil Contract facilitating commercial paper functioning as legal tender currency.
Civil cause of maritime/commercial Fed notes? Do you not know what "maritime" and "admiralty" are?
 
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