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Tax Protestor Dummies 2 > Cases
("Damn, We Lost Again!
And why is it
that people who sell
tax protestor materials file their tax returns anyway . . .")
xxx;
Ever more torture. [These Congress critters don't even wash
their own coffee mugs. If they do anything they do it with
words. Looks like they're hypnotists.]
Since §451 makes DCUS a shell term for USDC or more correctly
makes all the courts a mere hypnotic suggestion to be reinforced
by defacto throwing up of marble/concrete buildings and
filling them with employees and flags is there a
corresponding shell term switch for DCUS prescribed in
Titles 18 and 26 and ?
Does there even need to be? Aren't the DCUSs prescribed
laundered by the language of §451? So haven't we been chump
to believe crime and tax and civil rights actions were intended
for Art. III DCUS?
And we're double chumps if we believe USDCs are established
in anything other than the public's imagination.
What are the THINGS or PLACES that are divided into or
comprise districts? States have proximity to geographical
territories known by certain names but these names are
NOT in the law dictionaries and when they appear in lay
dictionaries (usually they don't appear) their definitions
are very queer and irregular. Why are the districts not
defined by reference to land surveys in the public record? How
did George Washington define the districts he established (or
did Ol' George do the enumeration trick?)? Chapter 5 as
far as West's and Lawyer's Ed. reveal show that the genesis
for the 1948 districting goes back only as early as 1911.
1 USC §106(a) confesses that Congress never authorizes
laws to be promulgated. "Bury our meaningless utterances,<statutes> in
the archives"!
Gossamer, utterly gossamer is 28 USC for courts.
28 USC § 610. Courts defined (Isn'this is decoy? Doesn't §451
really control ?)
As used in this chapter the word
''courts'' includes the courts of appeals and district courts
of the United States, the United States District Court for
the District of the Canal Zone, the District Court of Guam,
the District Court of the Virgin Islands, the United States
Court of Federal Claims, and the Court of International Trade.
28 USC §451
As used in this title:
The term ''court of the United States'' includes the Supreme
Court of the United States, courts of appeals, district courts
constituted by chapter 5 of
this title, including (only) the Court of International
Trade and any court created by Act of Congress (if any) the
judges of which are entitled to hold office during good behavior.
The terms ''district court'' and ''district court of the
United States'' mean the courts constituted by chapter 5 of
this title. [Does this "constituted by" mean "set up or established
according to law"? Do chapters set things up or do they merely
contain provisions for setting things up? To be promulgated? §132 does
not set anything up, it observes what may come about by its
own accord or by the invisible hand of the IMF.]
.
The terms ''district'' and ''judicial district'' means the
districts enumerated in Chapter 5 of
this title.
The term ''department'' means one of the executive departments
enumerated in section 1 of Title
5, unless the context shows that such term was intended to
describe the executive, legislative, or judicial branches
of the government.
[When it comes down to law, there
ain't none. For judicial
procedures title <truth or consequences time> no judicial
districts are established, for the executive, no departments
are established.]
28 USC §132. Creation and composition of district courts
(a) There shall be in each judicial district a district
court which shall be a court of record known as the United
States District Court for the district.
[By the I.M. Fund, not
by Congress's authority.
No respectable President would promulgate upon such ridiculous
vague and evasive word craft as Congress employs. Congress
does not authorize nor direct any promulgation. ?In a legitimate
government would the supreme court Chief justice promulgate
a matter related to court functions if authorized and directed rather
than the President promulgating to another branch?]
28 USC § 84. California [Same structure as for all
States]
California
is divided into four judicial districts to be known as the
Northern, Eastern, Central, and Southern Districts of California.
[California
= an unknown in law. No Law Dictionary defines this term.
A political unit, a corporation joined the union. No territory
ever joined the union.]
[is
divided into = an observation not an act. Congress observes
that
the IMF has maybe done something on its own]
[to
be known as = a supposition about the future, not an act,
not
a prescription, a suggestion planted.]
NORTHERN
DISTRICT
(a) The Northern District comprises the counties of Alameda,
Contra Costa, Del Norte, Humboldt, Lake Marin, Mendocino,
Monterey, Napa, San Benito, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, San
Francisco, San Mateo, and Sonoma. [counties of, not
counties commonly known as, not the counties:]
Court for the Northern District shall be held at Eureka,
Oakland, San Francisco, and San Jose.
Cal·i·for·nia
Pronunciation: "ka-l&-'for-ny&
state SW U.S. * Sacramento area 158,693 sq mi (412,602 sq
km), population 29,760,020
tex·as
Pronunciation: 'tek-s&s, -siz
Function: noun
Etymology: Texas, state of U.S.; from the naming of cabins on Mississippi
steamboats after states, the officers' cabins being the largest
Date: 1857
: a structure on the awning deck of a steamer that contains the officers'
cabins and has the pilothouse in front or on top
Tex·as
Pronunciation: 'tek-s&s, -siz
state S U.S. * Austin area 267,339 sq mi (695,081 sq km), population 16,986,510
- Tex·an /-s&n/ adjective or noun
Vir·gin·ia
Pronunciation: v&r-'ji-ny&, -'ji-nE-&
state E U.S. * Richmond area 40,817 sq mi (106,124 sq km), population 6,187,358
Mas·sa·chu·set
Variant(s): or Mas·sa·chu·sett /"ma-s&-'chü-s&t,
-z&t also "mas-'chü-/
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural Massachusets or Massachuset or Masachusetts or Massachusett
Etymology: Massachuset, a locality, literally, at the big hill
Date: 1616
1 : a member of an American Indian people of Massachusetts
2 : the extinct Algonquian language
of the Massachuset people
Mas·sa·chu·setts
Pronunciation: "ma-s&-'chü-s&ts, "mas-'chü-, -z&ts
state NE U.S. * Boston area 8257 sq mi (21,468 sq km), population 6,016,425
Unit·ed States
Pronunciation: yu-'nI-t&d-, esp Southern 'yü-"
Function: noun plural but singular or plural in construction
Date: 1617
: a federation of states especially when forming a nation in a usually
specified territory <advocating a United States of Europe>
United States of America
Variant(s): or United States /yu-"nI-t&d-'stAts, especially
Southern 'yü-/
country N. America bordering on Atlantic, Pacific, & Arctic oceans; a federal
republic * Washington area 3,615,123 sq mi (9,399,320 sq km), population 249,632,692
1state
Pronunciation: 'stAt
Function: noun
Usage: often attributive
Etymology: Middle English stat, from Old French & Latin; Old French estat, from
Latin status, from stare to stand -- more at STAND
Date: 13th century
1 a : mode or condition of being <a state of
readiness> b (1) : condition
of mind or temperament <in a highly nervous state> (2) : a
condition of abnormal tension or excitement
2 a : a condition or stage
in the physical being of something <insects
in the larval state> <the gaseous state of
water> b : any of various
conditions characterized by definite quantities
(as of energy, angular momentum, or magnetic
moment) in which an atomic system may exist
3 a : social position; especially : high
rank b (1) : elaborate or luxurious
style of living (2) : formal dignity : POMP --
usually used with in
4 a : a body of persons constituting
a special class in a society : ESTATE 3 b plural : the
members or representatives of the governing
classes assembled in a legislative body c obsolete : a
person of high rank (as a noble)
5 a : a
politically organized body of people usually occupying a definite
territory; especially : one
that is sovereign b : the political
organization of such a body of people c : a
government or politically organized society
having a particular character <a police state> <the
welfare state>
6 : the operations or
concerns of the government of a country
7 a : one of the constituent
units of a nation having a federal government <the
fifty states> b plural, capitalized : The
United States of America
8 : the territory of a
state
Webster's Collegiate
Dictionary
Sorry, california was not found in the headwords
of the 1913 Webster Dictionary!! Remember, this is a 1913
edition, so it is missing many modern English words and definitions.
Cross-references are identified automatically and
may not correspond to valid headwords identified in the source
data.
Vir*gin"i*a (?), n. One of the States of the United
States of America. -- a. Of or pertaining to the State of
Virginia.
Tex"as (?), n. A structure on the hurricane deck of
a steamer, containing the pilot house, officers' cabins,
etc. [Western U.S.] Knight.
Colorado beetle (Page: 280)
Col`o*ra"do bee"tle (?). (Zoöl.) A yellowish beetle
(Doryphora decemlineata), with ten longitudinal, black, dorsal
stripes. It has migrated eastwards from its original habitat
in Colorado, and is very destructive to the potato plant;
-- called also potato beetle and potato bug. See Potato beetle.
Colorado group (Page: 280)
Col`o*ra"do group (?). (Geol.) A subdivision of the
cretaceous formation of western North America, especially
developed in Colorado and the upper Missouri region.
Sorry, massachusetts was not found in the headwords
of the 1913 Webster Dictionary!! Remember, this is a 1913
edition, so it is missing many modern English words and definitions.
Cross-references are identified automatically and
may not correspond to valid headwords identified in the source
data.
Sorry, new+york was not found in the headwords of
the 1913 Webster Dictionary!! Remember, this is a 1913 edition,
so it is missing many modern English words and definitions.
Cross-references are identified automatically and
may not correspond to valid headwords identified in the source
data.
Cal.i.for.nia
1. a state in the W United States, on the Pacific coast.
31,878,234; 158,693 sq. mi. (411,015 sq. km). Cap.: Sacramento. Abbr.: CA, Cal., Calif.
2. Gulf of, an arm of the Pacific Ocean, extending
NW between the coast of W Mexico and the peninsula of Baja
California. ab. 750 mi. (1207 km) long; 62,600 sq. mi. (162,100
sq. km).
Cal i.for nian, adj., n.
Unit ed States , n. a republic
in the N Western Hemisphere comprising 48 conterminous states,
the District of Columbia, and Alaska in North America, and
Hawaii in the N Pacific. 267,954,767; conterminous United
States, 3,022,387 sq. mi. (7,827,982 sq. km); with Alaska
and Hawaii, 3,615,122 sq. mi. (9,363,165 sq. km). Cap.: Washington,
D.C. Abbr.: U.S., US Also
called United
States of America.
Republic -Oran's Dictionary of the Law
A country with a government by elected officials and, in
theory, with ultimate power in the hands of the citizens.
republic Webster's Law Dictionary
1: a government having a chief of state
who is not a monarch and who in modern times is usu. a president
also
: a political unit (as a nation) having
such a form of government
2: a government in which supreme power
resides in a body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised
by elected officers and representatives responsible to them
and governing according to law
also
: a political unit (as a nation) having
such a form of government
state
1 a: a politically organized body of people
usu. occupying a definite territory
esp
: one that is sovereign
b: the political organization that has
supreme civil authority and political power and serves as
the basis of government
(see also compelling state interest at interest § 3a separation
of church and state)
c: a government or politically organized
society having a particular character
Example: a police state
2: the operations or concerns of the government
of a country: the sphere of administration
and supreme political power of a country (as in international
relations)
Example: secrets of state
Example: affairs of state
3 a: one of the constituent units of a
nation having a federal government
specif
: one of the fifty such units comprising
the great part of the U.S.
(see also state
law)
b: the territory of a state (Not
the boundries, not all within the boundries, only public
real property,
publically owned land)
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