Horatius
NWO Kitty Wrangler
- Joined
- May 9, 2006
- Messages
- 29,691
Hired directly by the public, to provide a public (not private) service.
I didn't hire you.
Hired directly by the public, to provide a public (not private) service.
I didn't hire you.
We look forward to one of four reactions:
Menard will ignore it
Menard will deny it
Menard will try to wordsmith it into something else by using sematics
Menard will make up some silly philosophical question to try and change it.....
Hi. Very interesting, and useful.
So you know it is not applicable (IMHO) with what we are doing, as we are not hired by companies nor operating privately. Hired directly by the public, to provide a public (not private) service.
Thanks eh?
Public Services said:Public services is a term usually used to mean services provided by government to its citizens, either directly (through the public sector) or by financing private provision of services. The term is associated with a social consensus (usually expressed through democratic elections) that certain services should be available to all, regardless of income. Even where public services are neither publicly provided nor publicly financed, for social and political reasons they are usually subject to regulation going beyond that applying to most economic sectors. Public service is also a course that can be studied at a college and/or university.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_services
Nor did you hire the RCMP. You are not the only member of the public. And we were in fact hired by members of the public, to keep the public peace. Remember according to you lot, your individual consent is not required.![]()
Yes, but according to you lot, it is.
So, please explain the reasoning by which one part of the public can act to hire peace officers over the objections of other parts of the public. And then explain why this reasoning doesn't apply to the enforcement of laws by regular police officers.
Hired directly by the public...
Still not distinguishing between statutes and laws are you?
We will not be enforcing provincial statutes, we will be keeping the peace. That is not a statutory power is it, nor does it require the consent of the one who is breaching the peace.
Tell me, why would any member of the public not want his neighbours to promise to be peaceful themselves, and to preserve and maintain the pubic peace?
Still not distinguishing between statutes and laws are you?
3. Regarding your plan to enforce the Criminal Code of Canada against police officers. Do you intend to enforce this statute against people regardless of whether they have consented to it? Because it seems to me that this contradicts your previously stated theory of individual consent.
Freeman Menard:
1. Regarding your theory that the de facto court cannot enforce statutes against someone unless they have consented to the statute. Given that there is no case law supporting this position, wouldn't it be more accurate to refer to your theory as a speculative argument that might be accepted by the court rather than portray it as something that is already accepted by the de facto court?
2. You have posed the question "How does a document physically force two people to do what neither of them wishes to do?" Surely you are well aware that certain documents (such as the Criminal Code of Canada, Income Tax Act, etc.) carry a credible threat of force that is often carried out against those who do not follow the rules contained in the document, effectively forcing them to do what they may not want to do. It therefore seems disingenuous to question how something can happen when it is common knowledge that it happens all the time. Do you have any further clarification to your position?
3. Regarding your plan to enforce the Criminal Code of Canada against police officers. Do you intend to enforce this statute against people regardless of whether they have consented to it? Because it seems to me that this contradicts your previously stated theory of individual consent.
I'm wondering whether they're going to enforce it against themselves:
1. Get sworn in
2. ?
3. Turn self in for offence against Criminal Code S. 130
Seems to just be a shortcut to the usual FOTL result.
Of course not; that's the sort of stupidity you engage in.
Except you're basing your alleged ability to hire peace officers on a statute.
But that's not what your "peace officers" are doing. They're promising to go out and ensure others are peaceful. That's an assumption of authority by people of unproven ability that I'm not at all comfortable with.
No I am not. I am pointing out that even that statute recognizes our ability to do so, and that would exist even if it didn't. See how simple it is? The ability is not a function of it's inclusion, but it's inclusion does recognize the previously existing right. Just because "All 'A's are also 'B's" does not mean "All 'B's are also 'A's". Too bad you can't see that. You would suffer under far less confusion.
I will say that I agree with you for the sake of discussion. I guess that then I would say that you contribute to the confusion by referencing statute to support your understanding of "law" or proposed actions. In fairness if the codification of "law" has no value inherently then please when you try to prove your position don't use statute as evidence.
It would be far more effective if you just stated your "law" and where you have come to believe it is the one true "law". Now I have confused myself because the only sources we have for "law" are from writing which is just codifying someones thoughts and therefore has no special merit. ie bible, blacks law dictionary.
Has Rob addressed the point that only a "person" can be a Peace Officer![]()
No, he seemed to brush on past that.