Re: Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-28 Thread Ryan Carboni
"hell bent[sic] on destroying the planetary ecosystem that makes its own existence possible presents very few laughs." The EPA released tailings into the Animas River, and the immediate response was to limit legal liability through the use of waivers. This is the Chernobyl mindset. Sent with [

Re: Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-24 Thread Steve Kinney
On 5/23/19 6:47 PM, Ryan Carboni wrote: > To clarify, the worst injury that could occur if a prosecutor pursues a > weak case is having a worse percentage win rate when he decides to talk > up private practice. > > The idea that a prosecutor's self-gain overrides other considerations is > hereti

Re: Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-23 Thread Ryan Carboni
To clarify, the worst injury that could occur if a prosecutor pursues a weak case is having a worse percentage win rate when he decides to talk up private practice. The idea that a prosecutor's self-gain overrides other considerations is heretical, but in terms of cause and effect, an unrelated

Re: Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-23 Thread \0xDynamite
Everyone get the government that they fought for. There are no excuses. If you don't have power, it is because you don't have Truth. End of story. \0xDynamite

Re: Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-23 Thread Steve Kinney
On 5/23/19 1:41 AM, Ryan Carboni wrote: > The government is made of institutions. The press is an institution. Institution: A facility where people are locked up for their own good and the safety of society at large. Institutionalized: Confined in an institution, or, a personality rendered d

Re: Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-23 Thread rooty
Your the clownshow Original Message On May 22, 2019, 10:41 PM, Ryan Carboni wrote: > The government is made of institutions. The press is an institution. > > The government makes the law, but it doesn't do so in a commonly acknowledged > fashion, it does so by prejudicing the r

Fundamentals of Anglophonic Common Law

2019-05-22 Thread Ryan Carboni
The government is made of institutions. The press is an institution. The government makes the law, but it doesn't do so in a commonly acknowledged fashion, it does so by prejudicing the result, if the law is weak in an area. This is how new laws are passed, this is how old laws are reinterpreted