Judges don't need "evidence" to prove they have "jurisdiction."travis wrote:Since Lysander Spooner was a lawyer, so an authority in the field of law, can we proceed to looking at the evidence used by the judges to prove they have jurisdiction?
In American law, Travis, there are questions of law and questions of fact and mixed questions of law and fact. In law, Travis, you use "evidence" to prove facts.
Whether a judge has subject matter jurisdiction in a particular case is not a question of "fact" involving "evidence." It is not a question of "proving" something. It is a question of law.
Example: If an individual is indicted for a federal tax crime, the Federal district judge assigned the case does not have to "prove" to someone else that he has "jurisdiction." Subject matter jurisdiction is a matter of law, not a matter of looking at "evidence" to prove a "fact."
Judges do not provide "arguments for jurisdiction" -- at least not in the sense that you're thinking. They don't need to. That's not part of the legal process. Again, you don't seem to understand basic legal concepts. Why are we not surprised?Show me a judge that does that when providing arguments for jurisdiction (if it's not ASSumed from the get go).
In the text of a court opinion, a judge will provide an explanation as to why he has subject matter jurisdiction. He is not trying to "prove" that he has jurisdiction.
Don't bulls**t me, kiddo. In addition to learning about the concept of transference, you need to review the concept of projection.Famspear, are you trolling in the forum in which you're a moderator?
And don't lecture wserra on what the law is. He is an expert on the law. You are not.
Nobody cares what you trust or what you don't trust. What the law "is," Travis, is not dependent on what you "trust," what you know, what you believe, what you think, or how you feel. And your feelings about "basis in reality" are irrelevant.I don't trust opinions supported (if that) by baseless assertions.
The rest of the world is not here to make you happy, Travis. The rest of the world is not here to persuade you that things are what they are.
We're here to instruct you, not to persuade you.
Grow up, little Travis.