IANAH° but this was kinda glaring.some idiot wrote: · This global financial structure was originally introduced by the Chinese Elders and agreed to during the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference in New Hampshire, post WW2.
°Historian
Moderator: Deep Knight
IANAH° but this was kinda glaring.some idiot wrote: · This global financial structure was originally introduced by the Chinese Elders and agreed to during the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference in New Hampshire, post WW2.
That's why the entire world became communist in 1944.This global financial structure was originally introduced by the Chinese Elders and agreed to during the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference in New Hampshire, post WW2.
I would be the last person to defend DK and his loose-cannon antics (even the Illuminati has a code that should be followed) but I think your attack is unfair. This is nothing more than just you focusing on improving the Western Cabal's bottom line at the expense of our organization here. To be blunt, you Canadian Cabalists are the new kids on the block, relatively speaking, so it stands to reason you need to stand in line and wait until your elders get served first. Given the astronomical projections of the RV, there will be plenty to go around for everyone, so no need to fret and moan at having to wait to get your figurative third dessert in the buffet line.Burnaby49 wrote:Ok DK, shut the hell up
No, I think you're confusing Chili Dog (the picture above is Chili Dog's Great Great Aunt) with this one, the second most famous canine from Cincinnati. By the way, I think Marge Schott was a reprehensible excuse for a human being, and in my misspent youth I was a few times on the wrong end of the master-serf equation with her...lets just say landscaping kind of sucked when the clients weren't fans of Hitler, and she was a cheap tipper, too. Still, I can't hold the dog to task for the master.notorial dissent wrote:Wasn't she called Schotsie?
Amidst everything else involved, this plaintive undertone of "Why we can't have nice things?" just charms me to no end.In a separate cardboard box in the cargo area of the SUV, contained a professional style money counting machine. The machine worked much better than any machine the CBSA could obtain at any of the regional locations to count the money. The average international traveler does not have a professional style money counting machine as part of their goods when entering Canada. Banks and Casinos have professional style counting machines, and the fact that a private investigator, tow truck driver and construction worker would have one points to illicit activity.
When would this be allowed? Never. There is no border pre-clearance for individuals. Everyone has to stop and face Canada customs at the border. The only partial relief from this is NEXUS;NYGman wrote:How was their entrance "pre-cleared" by Taulkfhnvudhsdlgsvnufvslvfs (May have spelled that a bit wrong) when it was a spur of the moment pop over to see the falls. If you had been pre-cleared would you not have mentioned that at some point very early on, perhaps providing some documentation, or contact to verify with. These guys were cops, or at least one of them was, I would have expected more, or at least a better story. As for the preclearance, is that even a thing with bringing in money and guns? I would think allowing a US Citizen to tote a handgun would be problematic, for most people. When would, if ever, this be allowed, just curious, and that doesn't mean I am looking for a way to bring my own Billions in Dinar up to Winnipeg, armed with guns to protect my new found wealth, when I cash it in after the RV.
It just allows you a quicker entry but does not pre-clear you in any way for whatever is in your vehicle. Border Services can still stop you, ask questions, and rummage through your car. I enjoyed the story of a nitwit woman here in Vancouver who thought great, I don't have to pay duty anymore! So she was going down to Bellingham and buying clothes, whatever, and coming back through NEXUS without declaring her purchases. She got checked, caught, and had her NEXUS privileges revoked. So she went to the newspapers and whined bitterly how she really needed her NEXUS card because now she was wasting so much time at the border and it wasn't fair to take it away from her just because she was using it to break the law.NEXUS cardholders are generally screened more quickly at the border, however they are still subject to standard immigration and customs checks, and may be selected for secondary screening. Participating border crossing points typically have one lane solely reserved for NEXUS use and some will also designate a second lane for NEXUS use on an as needed basis. A vehicle can only use the NEXUS lane if all passengers (including children) hold a valid NEXUS card, and nothing requiring a special customs declaration or payment of duty is being brought into the country (see below).
Items permitted in a NEXUS lane
Alcohol within a traveler's personal entitlement (must be out of country of residence for 48 hours)
Tobacco products that are marked "Canada-Duty Paid"
Gifts up to $60 each (into Canada) or up to $100 total (into the United States)
Any reasonable amounts of personal effects
Items prohibited in a NEXUS lane
Certain restricted and sensitive items cannot be brought through a NEXUS lane. Examples include:
Cigarettes, cigars, cigarillos or loose tobacco that is not marked "Canada-Duty Paid"
Commercial or durable goods
Firearms (legal to import, but specific paperwork must be filled out and a secondary inspection is usually required)
Agricultural products (with limited exceptions for processed and locally grown foods in season)
$10,000 or more in cash or bearer instruments
Wow, even us Illuminati gotta toe the line? That kinda hurts, Burnaby.Burnaby49 wrote:When would this be allowed? Never.
Hate to say it but even Burnaby49 gets put through the wringer like everybody else.The Observer wrote:Wow, even us Illuminati gotta toe the line? That kinda hurts, Burnaby.Burnaby49 wrote:When would this be allowed? Never.
According to the National Post story linked to by Burnaby49 (if he's really Canadian, what is he doing being a 49ers fan?)notorial dissent wrote:I'm still working on why they were trying to smuggle them in to Canada. I can't imagine their currency regulations are any less stringent than ours, it's not like they are ever going to be really RV'd, and so cashing them out probably isn't an option either, so I'm still trying to figure out the why. The rest of it, I don't believe a word of. Peachey is a crook like his mentor Jimmy Tim, just a different kind of crook running an even nastier kind of scam if what I think is going on is going on. I still has a serious confuzzled though.
He was to drive to Buffalo, N.Y., and call a fixer who would tell him where to take the money, but on his way, Berrios decided to drive into Canada to see Niagara Falls, he told police.
Strange that there would be such a mix-up, given the value of the cargo. But of course that assumes that Berrios and Peachey weren't trying to conceal anything (typed with heavy sarcasm).The money, Peachey said, was to be deposited in the Bank of Nova Scotia in Canada or at an institution in New York, all above board. He blames the border trouble on a conspiracy.
Gregg wrote:The "official" story of why they went into Canada is they were in the neighborhood and decided to pop over and see Niagara Falls. The problem with the "official" story is they were not much closer to Niagara Falls than they were to Winnipeg.