Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Code as Law: How Bitcoin Could Decentralize the Courtroom
by
BADecker
on 07/07/2014, 20:13:27 UTC
Common law, the real common law, has its basis in private property.

No it isn't, its based on law tradition defined in courts as a matter of tradition or interpretation of statute law.  You don't even understand the basics and have already contradicted yourself in previous posts.  You need to refresh your free-man-on-the-land scripts Grin Come back when you have so I can taunt you some more.

oh, and back to thread subject, daft idea agree with the poster that Bitcoin should keep to currency, its not a fix for all issues in the world.

Is it a law of nature that people need air to breathe? How about water to drink? Or food to eat? Look at the Declaration of Independence for the United States: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

Are the above laws of nature for only a few people here and there? Or are they COMMON among all people?

No government or body invented the common law at its basic foundation. Governments and people may claim that they did, but at best, they adopted the TRUE AND REAL common law. When they add other laws to it, they are making civil law.

As long as people will not base their living and life on the REAL AND TRUE common law, they will continue to be slaves of governments. Bitcoin won't be able to help them much.

If, however, people go back to the TRUE AND REAL common law, governments and banks will fall before them, and Bitcoin will help it happen that way.

Smiley