It should tell you something that one can be put in jail for refusing something the constitution specifically forbidsBible_Belt said:Wesley Snipes agrees. That's why he went to jail.
Of course its an 'ethics violation' :crackup: you can't give slaves the keys to their cells..income tax is robbery by the elite banks imposed on the American population through usurious debt simple and plain...all income from income tax goes DIRECTLY to fund bank debts not for school or infrastructure as most believe...the IRS is essentially a white gloved SS extraction agency with no legal foundation and everyone looks the otherway...Bible_Belt said:It's an ethics violation for an attorney to make the "income tax is unconstitutional" argument, even if that is what a client wants. There's an ethics rule that says you are not representing the client's best interest by making arguments that have no chance of success.
What happens, IN HER MIND, is that she comes to see you as WORTHLESS simply because she hasn't had to INVEST anything in you in order to get you or to keep you.
You were an interesting diversion while she had nothing else to do. But now that someone a little more valuable has come along, someone who expects her to treat him very well, she'll have no problem at all dropping you or demoting you to lowly "friendship" status.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
Yeah, remember back in school when they told you this was a free country? That was all bullsh!t. The US imprisons a higher percentage of its population than any other country. This country has wiped its @ss with the constitution long ago.Danger said:Kind of makes you ask, just how free are we again?
Read my post above... it is heavy reading but it outlines the issues very well.PairPlusRoyalFlush said:I don't know about the income tax being unconstitutional. I do think it's a disgusting practice and should be abolished. The Obamacare tax is FOR SURE unconstitutional.
No, deliberations between jurors are secret. The whole purpose of the deliberation process is to give jurors the opportunity to discuss the case and reach a common decision.scrouds said:Yeah they usually make sure to pick dumb jury members so that they don't try and think for themselves. voir dire is the name of the process they use to ensure only simpletons make it on the jury.
They ask in the jury questionnaire if you have any views about the law and if you will agree to follow instructions. There was a similar case detailed in this link: http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2899/whats-the-story-on-jury-nullification The defendant got charged with contempt, convicted, and then it was eventually overturned on appeal.Danger said:What if a Jury member informed the other Jury members during deliberation? Is there anything the court can do to that person?
Indeed it is.PairPlusRoyalFlush said:Legal realism is the worst. .
In an individual case. However, if you stand outside of court and indicriminately pass out pamplets on jury nullification to everybody and anybody, hopeful of reaching jurors but not targeting any juror in an exact case, that is okay.Bible_Belt:
It reminds me of jury nullification, which is a jury's right to refuse to convict someone, basically just because they don't want to. The few instances of it happening have been for non-violent drug crimes, or sometimes the murder of a serial pedophile. Every jury has that right, but no one is allowed to tell them. If a lawyer tells them in court, that's felony contempt of court. And if anyone tells them outside of court, that's felony jury tampering.
lol technically speaking yeah it was constitutional.PairPlusRoyalFlush said:Wrong. Was it Constitutional when the Court said black people weren't human?
still i don't think you are correct.PairPlusRoyalFlush said:You're right that slavery was constitutional. However, the specific case I am referring to(Dredd Scott) said that black people are not "persons" under the Constitution and therefore can't be citizens that have standing and rights under the Constitution. Which was totally wrong of course because there were many free blacks in the colonies before and after the ratification of the Constitution. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dred_Scott
Ah but you see - that was the dissent, meaning that the majority upheld the Fugitive Slave Act, ipso facto making it constitutional.PairPlusRoyalFlush said:Slaves counted as 3/5 not blacks.
From the dissent in Scott, Justice Curtis:
Furthermore:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/historics/USSC_CR_0060_0393_ZD1.html