(bolding added).SteveSy wrote:I have an emotional problem because I won't accept or adopt someone's opinion, proven to be wrong on occasion, as my own? lol How many times in the past has authority been proven wrong concerning their own laws? Here's a fine example, Galileo. The authority in that period held unanimously that he was wrong and even punished him for publicly disagreeing with them. We know he was right and they were wrong even though they all agreed along with their scholars he was wrong. I'm not saying I'm a modern day Galileo, I'm simply demonstrating that your reasoning is flawed. See "Appeal to authority" fallacy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_authority
Sounds like you're frustrated that the wall of infallibility you've constructed for the courts has come tumbling down upon your head.
Here's the irony Famspear, this fine nation was predicated upon people ignoring and not accepting the law as directed and dictated by their government and the courts, they were assuming they were right and the government and the courts were wrong. You now want me to accept that the very thing that the colonists did was unacceptable and untenable. If that is true then we shouldn't have U.S. courts to begin with.
Again, can you say "transference"?
I didn't construct a "wall of infallibility" regarding court decisions, Steve.
The rule is that the law is what the courts rule the law to be. There is a subtle distinction, a nuance, that you are not getting, here. Your use of terms like "infallibility" and "fallibility" in this context incorrectly implies that there is some "real, SteveSy law" floating around out there (see the tax protester FAQ by Daniel B. Evans) that the courts can somehow "fail" to "correctly" interpret. In your mind, SteveSy has discovered the "real" law, and the courts who have ruled against you are somehow "wrong."
It doesn't work that way.
And nothing is "tumbling down around my head." I haven't "constructed" anything that can "tumble down." I didn't set up the legal system. And the legal system works the way I have described. And there's nothing really that you can do about it, Steve.
And no, you're not "demonstrating" that my "reasoning" is "flawed." We're not talking about my "reasoning." We're talking about the rules of law. I didn't make up the rules. I and other Quatloos regulars are telling you what the rules are.
Steve, your knowledge of the legal history of this country is faulty. Your knowledge of the rules of logic is faulty. (For example, the rule that the law is what the courts rule the law to be is not the fallacy of "appeal to authority.")
Your knowledge of law is faulty.
Your understanding of yourself is faulty, Steve. Can you say "transference"?