As others have pointed out, a reasonable assumption based on this language is that if you are allowed to redeem something in lawful money, the "thing" you are giving up to obtain the lawful money might not, itself, be lawful money. That's an understandable, reasonable assumption.David Merrill wrote:Like I said above, the sentence that can be easily construed to mean in plain English that Federal Reserve notes are distinct from lawful money is:
They shall be redeemed in lawful money on demand...
If you can redeem one thing in something else, that means that there are fundamental differences between the two items.
But it is an incorrect assumption. If you submit a ten dollar Federal Reserve note to a commercial bank (or to a credit union, or to one of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks, or to the U.S. Treasury, or to anyone else for that matter) and you receive two five dollar Federal Reserve notes, you need to understand that the ten dollar note is "lawful money" and the two five dollar notes are also "lawful money." All Federal Reserve notes held by a member bank (such as Wells Fargo) in the Federal Reserve System qualify as "lawful money" for purposes of that member bank's reserve requirements. I believe wserra and perhaps others have already explained to you what the term "lawful money" means. The fact that you refuse to accept the truth is your problem.
Further, the term "lawful money" has little if anything to do with what is or is not taxable for Federal income tax purposes. The federal income tax is not a tax on "lawful money." It's a tax on INCOME from whatever source derived, and in whatever form realized.
David, how could I have missed the word "intentionally"? How many ways are there to explain it? Of course I meant to quote from a statute that includes that word. That was the whole point.I tried to understand why you make my point quoting a statute about murder. You quoted the word "intentionally". Did you mean to do that? I think you missed that word.
You stated that there is no way to prove "intent." I was demonstrating to you that you are wrong. "Intent" is a very common mens rea element in certain criminal statutes. The element of "intent" is proven in Texas courts all the time. The murder statute I cited is a Texas statute. Are you really not understanding this, David? Did you really miss the fundamental point? The point was that you were wrong. You can indeed prove "intent" in a court of law. It happens all the time.
I'm not sure what you're talking about here. The "other echo chamber"? What "echo chamber"? To what are you referring? If you're talking about the "saving to suitors" web site or whatever it's called, no, I don't have much interest in reading that.You keep imploring that I put effort into it and I have indeed done so over the last seven years. More posts are rejected for "proof or silence" than you get to read here so this post is duplicated with links to examples on the other echo chamber. I am sure you have learned to read there too if you are really interested, which I doubt that you are Famspear.
By the way, David, because I have moderator privileges, I do sometimes read your proposed posts before they're accepted (or rejected) by other moderators.