notorial dissent wrote:Contrary to the fantasy world Merrill has cobbled together for himself none of his delusions hold water or stand the light of reality.
12 USC 411 was written, as Wsera so correctly points out, in a different age and the FEDERAL RESERVE NOTES referred to in this section were actual notes issued on the authority of the Reserve Governors to advance credit to another Federal Reserve bank as an advance of credit, and were never intended for general circulation. This law was also written at a time when FEDERAL RESERVE NOTES were not in general circulation. This was in a day and age when money transfers between banks had to be done literally in collections of cash, it was the hayday of the armored car company, well before the routine wiring or transfer of funds between banks. Since the notes were not intended for general circulation and only for in house use within the banking system the only redemption faculty was at either a Federal Reserve Branch Bank or the Treasury, otherwise had they been currency, they would have been redeemable at any bank.
31 USC § 5103. Very plainly states that Federal Reserve Notes ARE legal tender, and therefore lawful currency(money), according to the law.
Various state courts have stated that FRN’s are lawful money, despite how he wants to see them, ROCKFORD LIFE INS. CO. v. ILL. DEPT. OF REV., 482 U.S. 182 (1987)
The Federal Courts concur, in US v. Sanders, there are repeated references to “lawful currency” having been stolen from the bank.
The Treasury Act (31 USC 742) he keeps trying to apply to FRN’s does not refer to FRN’s but to gov’t securities which is proven both by the text of the law, and by case law. FRN’s, while they may be obligations of the US Govt are not classed as securities(under 472), but as currency(5103). And, since they are legally currency, endorsing them has no effect legal or otherwise on them, they are what they are, legal tender, lawful money, Federal Reserve Notes.
The Treasury ceased production and issuance, withdrew from circulation, and in fact has since destroyed all outstanding Treasury Notes since January 21, 1971. The only ones still extant are in the hands of collectors as they are worth more as collectibles than they are as currency. So there is no way Merrill can get such an item from the bank, despite what ever voodoo or nonsense he insists he can perform. And his endorsing them or not does not affect his tax liabilities since that occurs at issuance, not encashment. Just one more silly delusion.
And a big Thank You to you too Notorial Dissent;
That was eloquent. And in return and gratitude I will keep this plain and simple for the Readers. Prof is quite sound in saying that Congress will legislate and the courts will make rulings, not Quatlosers and Suijuris-Heads:
http://friends-n-family-research.info/F ... case_1.jpg
http://friends-n-family-research.info/F ... case_2.jpg
...holder of $50 Federal Reserve Bank Note, although entitled to redeem his note...
But we already knew that the courts say you are wrong about your post. What I am amused about is your confirmation that all of you endorsing the fractional lending through endorsing the chattel bond of yourselves about Heidi's "thin air" increase/inflation are all acting in the capacity of private bankers through private credit with the Fed. What "." exposes as disingenuous about his laughter is that sane people will quit laughing by the third time the comedian tells the same joke. Federal Reserve Notes are indeed stock certificates.
Bottom line here is that the law written while FRNs were not in general circulation is still in full force and effect.
31 USC § 5103. Very plainly states that Federal Reserve Notes ARE legal tender, and therefore lawful currency(money), according to the law.
Wasn't that Wesley Marc's simple substitution? I have already addressed that. The Code does not say that FRNs are lawful money - in fact being able to redeem them in lawful money says the opposite. At least until you are willing to accept that the FRNs in §411 are stock certificates and the fellow in the linked case is just the average private banker. His admission that he
walked into the Federal Reserve Bank with $50 in FRNs was his admission so...
The Treasury Act (31 USC 742) he keeps trying to apply to FRN’s does not refer to FRN’s but to gov’t securities which is proven both by the text of the law, and by case law.
Thank you again for confirming I was clear about that.
United States Notes are obviously obligations of the US. Not FRNs. Note the definition we have been loosely adopting (and thank you again Webhick):
http://www.investorwords.com/2733/lawful_money.html
lawful money
Definition
Any money (coin or paper) that is issued directly by the United States Treasury and not the Federal Reserve System - this includes gold and silver coin, [US] Notes, Bonds, etc.
The Treasury ceased production and issuance, withdrew from circulation, and in fact has since destroyed all outstanding Treasury Notes since January 21, 1971.
Only due to wear and tear - expiration as paper currency along with destroying gobs of FRNs for the same reason. I can still go buy $2 worth of merchandise with my $2 US Note - especially from a knowledgable dealer who realizes:
1) that he just earned an easy $10
2) that he could not refuse the $2 US note for face value
Additionally the laws requiring US Notes be kept in circulation are still in place and easily found in the Code.
The most effective testimony is that you wrote the post at all Notorial Dissent. That proves to me I am explaining myself well, fantasy world or not. I imagine if my model about lawful money were truly fantasy it would be nebulous and would only agree partially with the United States Code. Your obfuscation and attempt to steer Readers back to the traditional Death and Taxes Party Line is very revealing.
Regards,
David Merrill.