No I'm not delusional. You've accepted an opinion of common law. Not every scholar accepts your view, granted most in law school have. The Holmes approach is a modern view used to obfuscate true history. Of course it’s not surprising considering judges have been rewriting history to fit their opinions for almost a century now.Famspear wrote:Steve, you're in la-la land (to repeat a phrase used elsewhere in Quatloos recently). I haven't been indoctrinated by "the courts," at least not in the way I think you mean. As we have said over and over, our legal system comes to us from English common law. Case law is an integral part of the system, and has been since BEFORE the Founding Fathers. I did not make this up. This was the case long before you and I were born. Your belief that case law is somehow not really part of the law is delusional. You are trying to rationalize your beliefs about Federal income tax law.
Hogwash.....In class, instead of having the professor "lecture" to you as an "expert," as you would with a history teacher or professor in a high school or college history class, you are subjected to the Socratic method. This is a method of discourse where, instead of having the professor lecture or feed you "answers," you learn to reason for yourself. In law school, you actually teach yourself, to a far greater degree than in high school or college.
Try reading Stoner on common law….he backs every bit of his work up with historical fact unlike Holmes rationalizing how judges are really divinely inspired individuals appointed to find the hidden rules behind the proper development of civilization. Hidden rules and laws only a delusional egomaniac could find.
Sir Edward Coke wrote:
"[Common law] is composed of customs and usages, and maxims, deriving their authority from immemorial practice, and the recognition of the courts of justice....Much, indeed, of this unwritten law may now be found in books, in elementary treatises, and in judicial decisions. But it does not derive its force from these circumstances. On the contrary, even judicial decisions are deemed but the formal promulgation of rules antecedently existing, and obtain all their value from their supposed conformity to those rules."
So therefore a judicial decision based on personal desire, such as Holmes's crap, is garbage in garbage out. It is not law and never was. Common law only is law when it is based on something preexisting. Judges only base decisions off of it; they make nothing but an acknowledgement that it exists. Simply acknowledging something there that is not there does not make it there. They are not gods, they are servants to their masters, the people, the one's who actually create basis for common law.