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Sk8eM dUb
replied 2339d
A law is just a written contract between a group of people to act in a certain way. If it's not written down the accused use technicalities in their defense.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2335d
It is not a contract unless signed and explicitly agreed to by all parties. Thus "consent of the governed" is required and "silence is acquiesence".
Sk8eM dUb
replied 2335d
I don't obey laws that I think are stupid.
replied 2335d
Given that it was a stupid law, I've elected not to obey it
Sk8eM dUb
replied 2335d
Another great example is Jordan Peterson vowing to disobey C16 in Canada.
Sk8eM dUb
replied 2335d
Civil disobedience forces a debate in an official public forum(court, the press). Rosa Parks is a great example.
replied 2338d
Basically private security/insurance companies work it out between themselves and customers choose companies they like.
replied 2338d
Video about how laws could be decided without government.
Longer explanation
replied 2338d
A law is a written contract kind of but it is applied to people who may not agree with it. Typically contracts are between consenting, signing parties. agree needs to be written.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2335d
Right, if you didn't sign it how can you be a party to the contract? "Consent of the governed" is key and silence is acquiesence. "A claim stands as truth until rebutted" then
replied 2329d
social contract, lol
SubjectiveReality
replied 2335d
the "burden of proof lay with the claimant". Legislation only applies if you silently agree that it does or somehow sign onto it and subject yourself to it voluntarily.
replied 2334d
not sure if you're saying this is how it is now or how you want it to be?
Sk8eM dUb
replied 2334d
I think I believe the "rider and elephant" hypothesis.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2334d
Read up on maxims of law, hierarchy of law, common law, courts of record and the 7th amendment codifying (for the government) the common law as the highest law of the land
minkaminka
replied 2334d
Theres a good book called Power by Dennis Toombs. A chapter about governance is in there, that has a good scope.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2334d
Thanks- I will check it out
replied 2334d
I need the list of books you suggested me, can you make a memo for that ? :)
replied 2334d
And if they go unchallenged the laws stand. Sounds like opt in vs opt out. & seems to set up an eternal struggle between busy bodies & people who want to work in peace/be left alone.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2334d
That's right, that is essentially how it works and there are massive advertising campaigns to encourage people to not consider that their consent is optional, though that's not all bad
replied 2333d
by consent is optional, do you mean something other than voting?
SubjectiveReality
replied 2333d
Just think about it. If people accept the claim that they are subject to pay fines for speeding having not harmed anyone, then they will pay. The power lies with the people. Always has
replied 2332d
how do you define "accept the claim?" If i put a gun to your head and demand you sign your house over to me, have you "accepted the claim" that I now own your house?
SubjectiveReality
replied 2332d
Search for maxims of law, they will help lay the groundwork for you. In your example, if I sign a paper with a gun to my head then I can claim duress. Or I can fight you in selfdefense
replied 2332d
replied 2332d
if an individual sees speeding fines as unjust they either accept the claim begrudgingly, lose in court & pay the claim, or go to jail (sounds like duress).
SubjectiveReality
replied 2332d
Are you sure about that? Ever tried to argue one at court?
replied 2331d
Consent should not the default. the onus is then on individuals in the population (who could be more productively using their time) to refute these things later.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2331d
That is precisely the problem with top-down legislation in civil law versus bottom-up in common law. Neither is perfect by itself, both have issues. "Silence is acquiescence" regardles
replied 2331d
You’ve consented to $800 in corporate welfare each year. To get that money back you’ll go to court to repeal each one of them? https://bch.gg/7y
replied 2331d
Will you also sit in court for these other victimless crimes, each one imposing a cost on society?
SubjectiveReality
replied 2331d
Do you think sitting in court is the only way to withdraw consent?
replied 2331d
I started this by asking you if you meant voting was a way of withdrawing consent. all you've mentioned is court
replied 2331d
What is the cost benefit analysis of “silence is acquiescence?” You feel it’s beneficial to sit in court for a day every time you get a ticket. Ok fine.
replied 2331d
what is the issue with "bottom-up common law?"
SubjectiveReality
replied 2331d
you can see more things like lynchings and killings of outsiders being treated as "just", because the jury of peers in a small community may side with the insider in spite of facts
replied 2331d
Great, you have success with speeding tickets. Had success with being allowed to take psychoactive drugs? crossing a boarder with >$10k cash? Running a dark net market?
replied 2331d
Was using speeding ticket as a stand in for the numerous (growing more so every day) victimless crimes dreamt up by a minority of lawmakers. https://bch.gg/7x
replied 2331d
You can go to court 1000 times and get your speeding ticket removed, and they’ll give you another one. Law hasn’t changed & you haven’t made progress.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2331d
You are free to believe whatever you wish, regardless of what may or may not be empirically.
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you have evidence to support the idea we're making progress against useless laws we've "consented" to?
SubjectiveReality
replied 2331d
Your question pre-supposes that you believe you are subject to these laws you against which you believe progress needs to be made, yet you put "consented" in quotes. Well, which is it?
replied 2331d
u get a ticket, go to court, get it removed. You’re back where you started. u can get another ticket for the same thing. You haven’t made progress against a law you dont consent to
SubjectiveReality
replied 2331d
Why do you make those assumptions if you haven't tested it out?
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why don't you provide data if you have tested it out?
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are you not back where you started?
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Being subject to a law and consenting to it are different. I can be subject to sex against my will and not consent to it, as in the case of rape.
SubjectiveReality
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Rape is not a law
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so you're saying being subject to a law is the same thing as consenting to it
SubjectiveReality
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Depends which kind of law we're talking about. A natural law like mortality? We're subject whether we consent or not, though that hasn't stopped countless ppl from trying to overcome
replied 2331d
have we been talking about natural laws? do you have a point you'd like to make or do you just want to keep dancing around critiquing details of my posts while ignoring the substance?
SubjectiveReality
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If that is what you think I've been doing, then no.
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what have you been doing?
SubjectiveReality
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It's called conversation. Don't take it personally.
replied 2330d
r/iamverysmart
SubjectiveReality
replied 2330d
Or do, whatever you like
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do you have a point?
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so you have made progress?
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haven’t needed to. Still a bad tradeoff. sit in court all day waiting to make some case every time you get a ticket.
SubjectiveReality
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Which is the same argument many kids make to themselves when they hand over their lunch money to the bully day after day
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kids also think 2+2=4. does that the fact that children think it make it less true?
replied 2332d
but there is no way for an individual to withdraw consent.
SubjectiveReality
replied 2333d
If people accept the claim that a small group can lock them up for tweeting certain words, then some will be locked up and others will fear to speak their minds. That is consent, right
replied 2334d
So, I agree with didn’t sign not party to contract & consent is key. Less understanding of silence is acquiescence. Makes it seem like gov can make as many laws as they want.
replied 2338d
A law is a written contract kind of but it is applied to people who may not agree with it. Typically contracts are between consenting, signing parties.