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View Full Version : If cap and trade passes, you will need a license for your house



midnight rambler
22nd September 2010, 11:56 PM
Before you can sell it.

http://www.nachi.org/forum/f14/cap-and-trade-license-required-your-home-44750/

woodman
23rd September 2010, 12:19 AM
Land of the Free.

ximmy
23rd September 2010, 01:04 AM
banks will own more home, more will rent and the rents will go to the banksters... who are these few and mighty banksters

midnight rambler
23rd September 2010, 01:41 AM
They are your gods.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FA-_SSO_hhI

iOWNme
23rd September 2010, 06:16 AM
You already need a license to buy/sell a home.

Its called US Citizenship, and requires consent.

Twisted Titan
23rd September 2010, 07:24 AM
And we were talking smack about the Brits because they are trying to pay a law that all paychecks should be sent the taxing authority first then released to the employee.


bad on both sides

7th trump
23rd September 2010, 07:32 AM
You already need a license to buy/sell a home.

Its called US Citizenship, and requires consent.
\Actually this is some what wrong. You can sell and buy anything you want, but if you need mortgage financing your going to need a ssn and that is consenting into federal serfdom "US citizenship".


“That there is a citizenship of the United States and citizenship of a state,...”
Tashiro v. Jordan, 201 Cal. 236 (1927)

"A citizen of the United States is a citizen of the federal government ..."
Kitchens v. Steele, 112 F.Supp 383


“The governments of the United States and of each state of the several states are distinct from one another. The rights of a citizen under one may be quite different from those which he has under the other”.
Colgate v. Harvey, 296 U.S. 404; 56 S.Ct. 252 (1935)

“There is a difference between privileges and immunities belonging to the citizens of the United States as such, and those belonging to the citizens of each state as such”.
Ruhstrat v. People, 57 N.E. 41 (1900)

palani
23rd September 2010, 08:03 AM
Homes evidently are bought and sold. All men need shelter from the elements. I'm not so sure they need homes.


home
O.E. ham "dwelling, house, estate, village," from P.Gmc. *khaim- (cf. O.Fris. hem "home, village," O.N. heimr "residence, world," heima "home," Ger. heim "home," Goth. haims "village"), from PIE base *kei- "to lie, settle down" (cf. Gk. kome, Lith. kaimas "village;" O.C.S. semija "domestic servants").
" 'Home' in the full range and feeling of [Modern English] home is a conception that belongs distinctively to the word home and some of its Gmc. cognates and is not covered by any single word in most of the IE languages." [Buck]
The verb meaning "to be guided to a destination by radio signals, etc. (of missiles, aircraft, etc.) is from 1920; it had been used earlier in ref. to homing pigeons (1875). Home stretch (1841) is originally a reference from horse racing. Home economics first attested 1899. Slang phrase make (oneself) at home "become comfortable in a place one does not live" dates from 1892. To keep the home fires burning is from a song title from 1914.


shelter
1585, "structure affording protection," possibly an alteration of M.E. sheltron, sheldtrume "roof or wall formed by locked shields," from O.E. scyldtruma, from scield "shield" (see shield) + truma "troop," related to O.E. trum "firm, strong" (see trim). The notion is of a compact body of men protected by interlocking shields. Fig. sense is recorded from 1588; meaning "temporary lodging for homeless poor" is first recorded 1890 in Salvation Army jargon; sense of "temporary home for animals" is from 1971. The verb is first attested 1590; in the income investment sense, from 1955. Sheltered "protected from the usual hardships of life" is from 1888.

The concept of a roof or wall formed by locked shields is interesting.