On Thu, 21 Sep 2000, mouss wrote:

> When you were young living in your parents house,
> did you use to say "I'm going home" or
> "I'm going to my parents home"?

Considering that "home" is where you live and not necessarily what you
own, I don't see your point here.  

> when you acquire a land, does it belong to you or the governement?

A little of both.  The title is yours, but you can't declare sovereignty,
and if the government has a compelling need for the land, they only need
give you fair market value (for utility companies to have right of way,
building roads...)

> since it is yours, can you sell it to another country so that it is no
> more part of the US (or whatever country you're in)?

Again I don't see your point.  Real property laws are completely different
than company resource issues.

> When you rent a car, can someone come and check it at night to see whether you
> respect the rules? if so, does he ask you for the key or does he use 
> another one?

They can, and they could do either.  They'd want to cover the possibility
in their contract (usage policy) so that there's no misunderstanding or
possibility of lawsuits due to privacy concerns.

Paul
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Paul D. Robertson      "My statements in this message are personal opinions
[EMAIL PROTECTED]      which may have no basis whatsoever in fact."
                                                                     PSB#9280

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