You have failed to establish that Americans as a whole own access to 
all US markets from other 
countries.                                          
   Second  even if you establish that ( and you can't) then you must 
show how each and every owner can exercise their ownership rights or 
how any claim of delegation of authority can be rightfully authorized 
such as showing where all Americans at any time gave that 
authorization. In my state of Tennessee all property owners could not 
vote, even all property owners who were borned in Tennessee could not 
vote, less than a third of the adult population voted in favor of 
statehood in 1790, in most of the counties and towns in Middle and 
Western Tennessee most who could vote voted against statehood.--- In 
[email protected], "Paul" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], <boyd.w.smith@> wrote:
> > > 
> > The right to property is an absolute right.  I can move my 
property
> where I own or have secured the right of way.  If I own the 
property,
> then I own the right of way.  If you come on to my property and
> interfere with the movement of my other property or try to take some
> of my property then you are guilty of trespass, and theft and
> attempted theft.
> 
> You have not "secured the right of way".  The "right of way" belongs
> to the American people.  If you own land in America, it does not 
grant
> you the "right of way" to bring foreign goods into America and 
nothing
> you say will change that indisputable fact.  You want to cross MY
> borders, you must pay a toll.  If you claim I (and other Americans)
> don't own the borders of our own country, you deny national
> sovereignty and our conversation is over.   
> > 
> > The markets are created by specific individual buyers and 
sellers. 
> Your introduction of countries and borders are a red herring and a
> diversion form the topic at had, property rights.
> 
> If you want to say America doesn't own the markets, that's fine,
> America owns "access" to the markets and you've got to pay a toll to
> get in.  If I am a concert promoter, I don't own the venue, I don't
> own the band, but I am the one putting on the show, and if you want 
to
> see the concert, you've got to pay to get in.
> 
> 
> > I believe you said exactly that in a previous post.  Could someone
> find that in the archives to verify that, my access to those is
> limited by my work Internet access.
> 
> Feel free to look it up.  I never said it.
> 
> > 
> > For you to have ownership in the American markets without the
> constitution to state it, you would have to have a logically 
provable
> interest or a documented provable ownership interest.  You have 
shown
> neither in this discussion.
> > 
> > BWS
> >
> 
> 
> I have proven each and every single thing I've ever written in this
> and every other messageboard I've ever posted on.
>






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