Paul, just saying something is yours does not make it yours. The US 
Constitution may grant the US government the power to regulate commerce, but 
that doesn't make it libertarian. The signers of the Constitution could not 
assign rights to me, nor take them away. Your "ownership" of the American 
markets is an entitlement, not a right, granted by the Constitution. If the 
Constitution said every American had a right to "free" public education and 
"free" health care, that would not make them libertarian programs.
   
  If I cannot sell the property that I own, then I do not truly own it and I 
have lost some liberty to a collectivist system. 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
  

Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  --- In [email protected], <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I am actually setting up the lemonade stand on MY property.  You are
NOT involved unless you wish to buy my lemonade.  It is EXACTLY a
matter of selling my lemonade on my property.  Morally you do not own
the markets.  Despite the constitution.  But I do offer you the
opportunity to prove your point.  Again.  Something you have not yet done.
> Continually repeating you stance is not proof.  You can say
incorrect things millions of times and that does not make them
correct.  You can say unproven assertions billions of times and that
will not constitute proof.
> 
> BWS


Wrong.  You're not setting up the lemonade stand on your property. 
You're setting it up on OUR property, namely the corporation.  I am
involved because I am a co-owner of the markets.  Morally I DO own the
markets.  I have proven this many times over.  

If a market is owned by all Americans (selling anything within the
borders of the U.S. makes it MY market and every other American's
market), you are one stockholder regardless of what property you want
to sell in it.  If you are selling goods made in America, you don't
have to pay any rent (tariffs) to sell your goods in OUR markets.  If
you choose to bring goods from another country into this one, you must
pay rent.  The fact that you are one stockholder out of 350 million
does not entitle you to use the company markets for free.  

At no point have I ever disputed your ownership of any goods you buy.
But owning goods does not entitle you to sell those goods inside of
America.  

Every single claim you make claiming that I don't own the markets is a
lie.  Every such claim is entirely false.  No matter how much you
claim the only parties involved are the buyer and seller, you will be
wrong every time you say it.  

America is the domain of all Americans.  Your claims that you have a
right to import goods to sell in America without paying a tariff are
no different than claiming you can setup a lemonade stand in my front
yard without my permission or live in my apartments without paying
rent.  It is no less trespass.  It is no less theft.  

Repeating your claims that you have a right to import and sell goods
in America or that I don't own the markets don't make them true.  You
have failed to prove your point at all.










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