Message from @Reaps
Discord ID: 496342708390985741
did you see this? @Reaps
the guy is trying to get shit and get out, lol
time to watch.. whatever you've linked me to..
I remember seeing something similar not too long ago
Dude is filming people fighting in the parking lot while ordering at the drive-through, or something like that
I guess this is why Paywave was invented <:think_woke:378717098681171988>
haha
OUTSTANDING
Yah Ima just gunna pay for my shit now and not sure if I'll come back to this store
it almost seems like this happens to him every other day
he run out of stores to not go to
this is the good one
lol
`h e r e w e g o`
YOUR STATUATORY LAWS DO NOT APPLY TO ME
Then my free of charge roads don't apply to you
BUT MUH RIGHT TO TRAVEL
i hate to admit it, but i used to think some this stuff was legit
Everyone likes to think they know something someone else doesn't
Especially when it comes to law
insert some variation on the "One does not simply walk into Modor" meme
I'm still waiting for him to cite US v Wheeler
the ones who tell you that you don't need to pay your taxes are even worse, lol
I remember coming across stuff like that in Australia in, like, 1998
Because, you see, Australia doesn't make a constitution when the UK said we could back in the 1920s and because we didn't therefore the Australian government isn't real or some shit
man
Wish I could find all that stuff again
How can someone be deep into SovCit territory and not understand basic property rights
Reading it again would be a trip
I wonder why SovCits even cite US v Wheeler
Since, re-reading it now, it pretty much says the fed can't prosecute kidnappers or some shit, and that the States had to do it themselves
And reading the case now, it's a far fuckin' cry from being pulled over to take a breathalyser
Federal law is a strange beast. murder wasn't even a federal crime until the late 1800s
```Sheriff Wheeler established armed guards at all entrances to Bisbee and Douglas. Any citizen seeking to exit or enter the town over the next several months had to have a "passport" issued by Wheeler. Any adult male in town who was not known to the sheriff's men was brought before a secret sheriff's kangaroo court. Hundreds of citizens were tried, and most of them deported and threatened with lynching if they returned.
The deported citizens of Bisbee pleaded with President Wilson for law enforcement assistance in returning to their homes. In October 1917, Wilson appointed a commission of five individuals, led by Secretary of Labor William B. Wilson (with assistance from Assistant Secretary of Labor Felix Frankfurter), to investigate labor disputes in Arizona. The commission heard testimony during the first five days of November 1917. In its final report, issued on November 6, 1917, the commission declared the deportations "wholly illegal and without authority in law, either State or Federal."```
EXACTLY the same as being asked to provide a driver's license <:think_woke:378717098681171988>
I see the connection however
That was right before Arizona had statehood. It was still a territory
The concept of defined borders and federal authority in the southwest was still fairly new, and there were people who were not citizens of Mexico or the US, but just frontiersmen.