Legal Definition of a Dollar
-
- Judge for the District of Quatloosia
- Posts: 3704
- Joined: Tue May 17, 2005 6:04 pm
- Location: West of the Pecos
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
The "someone" who has gone on ad nauseum will soon respond ad nauseum.
The Honorable Judge Roy Bean
The world is a car and you're a crash-test dummy.
The Devil Makes Three
The world is a car and you're a crash-test dummy.
The Devil Makes Three
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
Both "money" and the "dollar" are both defined, see Constitution. Congress can't redefine anything in the Constitution. That has been well settled.
Congress has the authority to set the value of with weights and measures, that is it... they can't make a pumpkin a dollar anymore than I can make a pumpkin turn into a carriage for Cinderella to ride around in. I guess Congress can in the mean time by statute create real live skittle farting unicorns that can fly.
The dollar has been defined for well over 200 years. What is pointless is thinking someone has the authority to redefine.
Congress has the authority to set the value of with weights and measures, that is it... they can't make a pumpkin a dollar anymore than I can make a pumpkin turn into a carriage for Cinderella to ride around in. I guess Congress can in the mean time by statute create real live skittle farting unicorns that can fly.
Code: Select all
While someone may want a law defining what a dollar is, it is pointless and nonsensical, apart from its construction. Why?
-
- Pirate Judge of Which Things Work
- Posts: 321
- Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2004 6:13 pm
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
It appears I lost my copy of the Constitution, Legal Eagle. Could you quote from it the definitions of dollar and money?
Remember that CtC is about the rule of law.
John J. Bulten
John J. Bulten
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
I believe the confusion is that other things can in fact be worth something. Just because there is forms of credit that can be exchanged for goods and services does not and never could make them dollars or money. Although they can trade and be exchanges as money is, "money" is still the standard as regulated by Congress.
At the end of the day, Congress has the authority:
"To borrow money on the credit of the United States;"
Credit is not money, see above.
"To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;"
Regulate standards of "money" by fixed weights and measures.
They certainly have the right to borrow money on credit and regulate money. And they can certainly hope people use this form of "credit" as one would "money" but at the end of the day it's not "money". If you have any questions I am sure your Congressman will forward the appropriate information, most probably the information will come from the Congressional Research Service.
If they tell you a "money" can me non-bearing promissory note or the "dollar" means non-bearing promissory note, please post it because that is not what they are telling everyone else. Most of this is moot anyway, to me most of what is in the Constitution is null and void for breach of contract, than fall back to the Declaration of Independence for guidance.
At the end of the day, Congress has the authority:
"To borrow money on the credit of the United States;"
Credit is not money, see above.
"To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;"
Regulate standards of "money" by fixed weights and measures.
They certainly have the right to borrow money on credit and regulate money. And they can certainly hope people use this form of "credit" as one would "money" but at the end of the day it's not "money". If you have any questions I am sure your Congressman will forward the appropriate information, most probably the information will come from the Congressional Research Service.
If they tell you a "money" can me non-bearing promissory note or the "dollar" means non-bearing promissory note, please post it because that is not what they are telling everyone else. Most of this is moot anyway, to me most of what is in the Constitution is null and void for breach of contract, than fall back to the Declaration of Independence for guidance.
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
You don't need it, their words are set in stone by the Constitution. The words are set by their intent, the words can not be redefined.jkeeb wrote:It appears I lost my copy of the Constitution, Legal Eagle. Could you quote from it the definitions of dollar and money?
"Money" was never defined as "credit" or "paper" or anything else back then. You can go read all about if you like, you can contact your Congressman as well.
-
- Supreme Prophet (Junior Division)
- Posts: 6138
- Joined: Thu Apr 23, 2009 8:26 pm
- Location: In the woods, with a Hudson Bay axe in my hands.
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
So what? That was then, and this is now. The 1787 definition of money is of historical importance only, because Congress has the power to coin money and to regulate its value. This means that they can, if they wish (and they have wished) change the value of a dollar. Had they wished to define a dollar as, say, so many grains of gold or silver, they could have done so; but they were trying to create a living document that could serve generations yet unborn, and in this they succeeded. Had they not done so, we would be continuously face dwith the need to amend the Constitution to make an 18th century document work in the 21st century.LegalEagleMan wrote:You don't need it, their words are set in stone by the Constitution. The words are set by their intent, the words can not be redefined.jkeeb wrote:It appears I lost my copy of the Constitution, Legal Eagle. Could you quote from it the definitions of dollar and money?
"Money" was never defined as "credit" or "paper" or anything else back then. You can go read all about if you like, you can contact your Congressman as well.
Even when our coins contained gold and silver, the specifications were changed on more than one occasion, as a reading of the "Whitman Red Book" will disclose. That, in and of itself, is proof that Congress, over the years, has not stuck to a 1787 definition of a dollar, but has changed it to meet the needs of the society of the time.
"We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture." -- Pastor Ray Mummert, Dover, PA, during an attempt to introduce creationism -- er, "intelligent design", into the Dover Public Schools
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
Well, I guess you can say that for the whole document. Null and void as far as I am concerned.So what? That was then, and this is now. The 1787 definition of money is of historical importance only, because Congress has the power to coin money and to regulate its value. This means that they can, if they wish (and they have wished) change the value of a dollar.
At the end of the day, they (Congress) can set the value of "money" with weights and measures as standards. They have no authority to make something money that was not "money" at the time of the Constitution.
They do not set the value of the dollar they regulate the value of "money". They cannot redefine the "dollar" or "money", although they are authorized to regulate the value of "money". I really don't know what else there is talk about on this subject. You can wish pieces of paper were "money", you can even trade them like they are "money", at the end of the day they are not "money".value of a dollar
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
LegalEagleMan wrote:Both "money" and the "dollar" are both defined, see Constitution.
Wow.LegalEagleMan wrote:You don't need it, their words are set in stone by the Constitution. The words are set by their intent, the words can not be redefined.
"Money" was never defined as "credit" or "paper" or anything else back then. You can go read all about if you like, you can contact your Congressman as well.
-
- Warder of the Quatloosian Gibbet
- Posts: 1206
- Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2004 8:43 pm
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
OK then I guess it's game over for you. Good luck getting anyone who matters to agree with your interpretation. Since it's not going your way, what next for you? As I see it you can either give up or escalate, either way being a losing proposition.LegalEagleMan wrote:Well, I guess you can say that for the whole document. Null and void as far as I am concerned.So what? That was then, and this is now. The 1787 definition of money is of historical importance only, because Congress has the power to coin money and to regulate its value. This means that they can, if they wish (and they have wished) change the value of a dollar.
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
Wow what? Afraid to put your toe in the cold water?MSA wrote: Wow.
You are hinting at that someone can redefine that which has already been defined and settled. I truly would love to know.
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
So, I guess the opposite is Congress does not have the authority to regulate the value of "money" and does not have the authority to set standards with weights and measures.Lambkin wrote: OK then I guess it's game over for you. Good luck getting anyone who matters to agree with your interpretation. Since it's not going your way, what next for you? As I see it you can either give up or escalate, either way being a losing proposition.
That the words in the Constitution can be redefined by the whim of who know what and are not settled.
This is truly beating a dead horse when all you can say is "interpretation". There is no "interpretation" going on at all.. they either have authority or they don't. If you want to say they don't fine by me, I think there might be some people in DC that might disagree.
-
- Warder of the Quatloosian Gibbet
- Posts: 1206
- Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2004 8:43 pm
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
The people with the authority (ie, 3 branches of government sitting today) don't see it your way. I'm sure you're not surprised by this. I don't see how you can win your little war against our judicial system that disagrees with you about the law. If they ignore you completely, there's basically nothing you can do about it. Please explain the scenario under which you win this one.LegalEagleMan wrote:This is truly beating a dead horse when all you can say is "interpretation". There is no "interpretation" going on at all.. they either have authority or they don't. If you want to say they don't fine by me, I think there might be some people in DC that might disagree.
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
I am not trying to win anything. All you crazy people will be hacking each other up by the time this is all over with. There is nothing for me to win but there is certainly a ton you will lose.Lambkin wrote: The people with the authority (ie, 3 branches of government sitting today) don't see it your way. I'm sure you're not surprised by this. I don't see how you can win your little war against our judicial system that disagrees with you about the law. If they ignore you completely, there's basically nothing you can do about it. Please explain the scenario under which you win this one.
Contract your Congressman, you will get back from him nearly exactly what I have told you. If you get something completely different that says Congress can do whatever the hell they want... please post it. Of course they can do whatever the hell they want... that is how all contracts are broken. No contract stands the test of time, they all fail.
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
There's inflation for you. Used to be just a pound of flesh that you'd lose.LegalEagleMan wrote:I am not trying to win anything. All you crazy people will be hacking each other up by the time this is all over with. There is nothing for me to win but there is certainly a ton you will lose.
-
- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
- Posts: 7668
- Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
- Location: Texas
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
I'm not really following this closely, but I keep seeing this kind of language.LegalEagleMan wrote:All you crazy people will be hacking each other up by the time this is all over with.
This is empty rhetoric.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
No, rhetoric was when he said "I" would lose.Famspear wrote:I'm not really following this closely, but I keep seeing this kind of language.LegalEagleMan wrote:All you crazy people will be hacking each other up by the time this is all over with.
This is empty rhetoric.
When the credit system collapses completely only than will you see until then believe what you want to believe.
-
- Trusted Keeper of the All True FAQ
- Posts: 5233
- Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2003 3:38 am
- Location: Earth
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
We're being deluged by morons.
Dan Evans
Foreman of the Unified Citizens' Grand Jury for Pennsylvania
(And author of the Tax Protester FAQ: evans-legal.com/dan/tpfaq.html)
"Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Foreman of the Unified Citizens' Grand Jury for Pennsylvania
(And author of the Tax Protester FAQ: evans-legal.com/dan/tpfaq.html)
"Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
-
- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
- Posts: 7668
- Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
- Location: Texas
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
No, pal. What I am saying is that what you're saying is empty rhetoric.LegalEagleMan wrote:No, rhetoric was when he said "I" would lose.Famspear wrote:I'm not really following this closely, but I keep seeing this kind of language.LegalEagleMan wrote:All you crazy people will be hacking each other up by the time this is all over with.
This is empty rhetoric.
When the credit system collapses completely only than will you see until then believe what you want to believe.
You may have an idea in your head about something that you believe is going to happen in the future. You might be right about your idea about what you believe going to happen in the future. So what?
Being right is not enough.
Your words -- the words I quoted -- are empty rhetoric.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
You didn't seem to have a problem with what might happen in the future when the other guy was "believing" it. I would say your words are empty rhetoric, it's clear you really don't mean what you say. The guy clearly asked, "Please explain the scenario under which you win this one." You don't like the answer, it really is too bad for you. You didn't seem to mind one bit when the other guy was saying "he couldn't see how I would win".Famspear wrote: No, pal. What I am saying is that what you're saying is empty rhetoric.
You may have an idea in your head about something that you believe is going to happen in the future. You might be right about your idea about what you believe going to happen in the future. So what?
Your words -- the words I quoted -- are empty rhetoric.
I guess when all else fails we can have word battles, not my kind of thing, I would rather see all you guys hacking away at each other, much more entertaining that is for sure.
Have a good nite, time for this One to go to bed.
-
- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
- Posts: 7668
- Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
- Location: Texas
Re: Legal Definition of a Dollar
No, you have me confused with another participant here. I haven't been following this.LegalEagleMan wrote:You didn't seem to have a problem with what might happen in the future when the other guy was "believing" it.Famspear wrote: No, pal. What I am saying is that what you're saying is empty rhetoric.
You may have an idea in your head about something that you believe is going to happen in the future. You might be right about your idea about what you believe going to happen in the future. So what?
Your words -- the words I quoted -- are empty rhetoric.
No, it's not "clear." See my prior comment.I would say your words are empty rhetoric, it's clear you really don't mean what you say.
No, see my prior comment.The guy clearly asked, "Please explain the scenario under which you win this one." You don't like the answer, it really is too bad for you. You didn't seem to mind one bit when the other guy was saying "he couldn't see how I would win".
Ah, yes. Word battles. Now you're saying that you would rather see other people hacking away at each other. In a sense, this is your hope for the future.I guess when all else fails we can have word battles, not my kind of thing, I would rather see all you guys hacking away at each other, much more entertaining that is for sure.
Have a good nite, time for this One to go to bed.
--Walter C. Langer, The Mind of Adolf Hitler: The Secret Wartime Report, p. 147 (Basic Books Inc. 1972)In every utterance a speaker or writer unknowingly tells us a great deal about himself of which he is entirely unaware.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet