Quote Originally Posted by dys View Post
This is a nonanswer. When I enroll my kid in school, for instance, they do not hand me a document listing the specific requirements associated with the so called 'priviledge'. The requirements may be vaguely insinuated by the American Jurisprudence, and in other places, but that is totally irrelevant as the American Jurisprudence is not contracting with parents enrolling their kids in schools. If the school does not hand me a contract listing the specific terms of said contract, then I have not contracted with the school outside of what is specifically and clearly disclosed in said contract. This is ridiculously obvious and you know that. If you and I make a contract for you to redo my septic system, for example, I cannot write an obscure internet document that says that you also have to do my electrical work, not tell you about it, and then claim that you should have known better and threaten to kill you. Fundamental common sense- the only things contracted for in contracts are those things that are specifically disclosed in contracts.
What else you got?

dys
Go in and ask to see the student rule book or school administration policies,ask if you kid can attend without filling out the forms see what they tell you. Home school if you want. Write up your own contract for a private school if you like.

There is more than one type of contract, some are called adhesion contracts, citizenship has elements of a contract the offer (citizenship) your parents accepted a birth cert , and you used it to enroll in school and most likely haven changed you status as a US citizen,consideration is the duties and privileges a citizen is required to perform such as registering with selective service or right to hold public office, time, you remain a citizen until you expatriate.

The terms for SS are laid out in title 42 of the UScode sec.301-305