Topic: Home Ransacked by Police for Paying Cash | |
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Man Has Home Ransacked by Police for Paying Cash Of the many crimes that have been committed by governments against their citizens in their global war on cash, perhaps this is the most bizarre. Here is the story.... http://bastiat.mises.org/2013/07/man-has-home-ransacked-by-police-for-paying-cash/ |
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This is a perfect example of the banking tyranny!...In any country daring to call itself free, the Rule of Law is paramount, and a central tenet of the Rule of law is DUE PROCESS, which DEMANDS a PRESUMPTION OF INNOCENCE!
Please note that the police said they had "reasonable grounds to suspect" and NOT reasonable cause to believe he had committed a crime. The warrant was unlawful; the search was unlawful; IMO the country's government is unlawful and must be investigated! If this was Norway, a country I once respected and thought might even be a great place to live, I can only say now that it is an unlawful tyranny no different than Canada and the US, and like those, Norway too must be brought to its knees by the people of Norway! The Second American Revolution is now GLOBAL! |
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i hop it was made public in norway then i hope the people of norway refuse to do business with this store but people prob. will be jealous they had that kind of cash thus say they deserved it |
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Edited by
Sojourning_Soul
on
Sat 07/20/13 05:30 PM
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I think we need to do what Iceland did.....they prosecuted the global bankers, ran them out....well, actually, most of them fled, but the ones they caught are still in jail!
They had a rough couple years, but now they are one of the stablest economies on the planet! |
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I'm sure the U.N. approves of this. |
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Edited by
Jeanniebean
on
Sun 07/21/13 03:32 PM
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I worked for a bar owner who once bought a car and paid with a check for the entire amount rather than borrow money and make payments and he was scrutinized very closely by the I.R.S.
The next time he bought a car, he got a loan just to keep the government from thinking something unusual was going on. Drug dealers have large stashes of cash that are difficult to spend because of this being suspicious. He was not a drug dealer, but he just had more money than they thought he should have. I can understand why they would be suspicious, but getting a warrant to search his house right away was extremely violating his rights. |
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I worked for a bar owner who once bought a car and paid with a check for the entire amount rather than borrow money and make payments and he was scrutinized very closely by the I.R.S. The next time he bought a car, he got a loan just to keep the government from thinking something unusual was going on. Drug dealers have large stashes of cash that are difficult to spend because of this being suspicious. He was not a drug dealer, but he just had more money than they thought he should have. I can understand why they would be suspicious, but getting a warrant to search his house right away was extremely violating his rights. |
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This is a perfect example of the banking tyranny!...In any country daring to call itself free, the Rule of Law is paramount, and a central tenet of the Rule of law is DUE PROCESS, which DEMANDS a PRESUMPTION OF INNOCENCE! Please note that the police said they had "reasonable grounds to suspect" and NOT reasonable cause to believe he had committed a crime. The warrant was unlawful; the search was unlawful; IMO the country's government is unlawful and must be investigated! If this was Norway, a country I once respected and thought might even be a great place to live, I can only say now that it is an unlawful tyranny no different than Canada and the US, and like those, Norway too must be brought to its knees by the people of Norway! The Second American Revolution is now GLOBAL! |
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This is a perfect example of the banking tyranny!...In any country daring to call itself free, the Rule of Law is paramount, and a central tenet of the Rule of law is DUE PROCESS, which DEMANDS a PRESUMPTION OF INNOCENCE! Please note that the police said they had "reasonable grounds to suspect" and NOT reasonable cause to believe he had committed a crime. The warrant was unlawful; the search was unlawful; IMO the country's government is unlawful and must be investigated! If this was Norway, a country I once respected and thought might even be a great place to live, I can only say now that it is an unlawful tyranny no different than Canada and the US, and like those, Norway too must be brought to its knees by the people of Norway! The Second American Revolution is now GLOBAL! Damn right. They just want their piece of the pie. YOUR pie. Bastards. |
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the govt multi dips all the time...... why should there be sales tax on n e thing sold after the first time they already got thier unfair share 25ooo car tax = 1697.50 car resold later 18ooo car tax = 1215 car resold later 11ooo car tax = 742.50 car resold later 5ooo car tax = 337 car resold later 35oo sales tax= 236.25 car resold later 1500 tax = 101.25 car resold later 750 tax = 50.65 total sales tax on this car 4380.15 ..which = a sales tax of over 17.5 percent based on 6.75 percent sales tax....talk about multidipping this does not count the income tax paid on income made to pay for car to begin with |
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the govt multi dips all the time...... why should there be sales tax on n e thing sold after the first time they already got thier unfair share 25ooo car tax = 1697.50 car resold later 18ooo car tax = 1215 car resold later 11ooo car tax = 742.50 car resold later 5ooo car tax = 337 car resold later 35oo sales tax= 236.25 car resold later 1500 tax = 101.25 car resold later 750 tax = 50.65 total sales tax on this car 4380.15 ..which = a sales tax of over 17.5 percent based on 6.75 percent sales tax....talk about multidipping this does not count the income tax paid on income made to pay for car to begin with http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidco Kidco is a 1984 comedy film directed by Ronald F. Maxwell and starring Scott Schwartz, Marty Van Hoe, Mahlon Richmond, Clifton James, and Vincent Schiavelli. Plot summary[edit] A boy who lives at a country club where his father works decides to make some extra money by selling composted horse manure as fertilizer, and has his three sisters (two of which are older) join him in the enterprise. As their sales increase, they draw increased scrutiny from the IRS and state tax board, as well as the large scale competitor who seeks to put them out of business at any cost. The children eventually fight a court case brought against them by the IRS. They are able to prove that the fertilizer is not taxable as tax had already been paid on the horse feed before the horses processed it into manure, removing one of the counts brought upon them. They eventually plead guilty to the others, which allows them to stay in business, to the consternation of the adult competitor. |
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if only it would work in real life |
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That's just an odd story.
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