Page 142 - Fruits from a Poisonous Tree
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126 Fruit from a Poisonous Tree
he considers and admits to be due, in satisfaction of such claim or demand,
without any stipulation or condition. As used in determining whether one
party may place the other in breach of contract for failure to perform.
The actual proffer of money as distinguished from mere proposal
or proposition to proffer it. Hence, mere written proposal to pay money,
without offer of cash is not tender. (Black’s Law Dictionary, 6 Ed.)
The Law Ignored
Was the Constitution amended?
Have the laws been changed?
What happened to all the money?
Government would argue that no person has the right to financial
transactions that are private in nature – only criminals; like drug dealers,
care about privacy. The argument goes “if you don’t have anything to
hide, why would you care about privacy?” However, YOUR right to
privacy supersedes government’s right to know!
Privacy is a Constitutionally-protected right, not so that real criminals
will go unpunished, but because governments have historically demonstrated
a propensity for using information gained against its citizens as a means of
control and intimidation. The real objective of implementing an electronic
cash devoid of real money is not at all about the elimination of real and
legitimate crime in society. It is about seizing control of every imaginable area
of our lives!
Smart cards and neural implants (microchip implants) are a technologic
and practical reality today. All that is really necessary to break down the
widespread reluctance to implementing them is an economic collapse. It’s
the old game of government creating the problem, like Waco, Texas, and
then providing the solution. Did you realize that we are already living in a
cash-void society? Cash is money, isn’t it? How could we possibly have a free
market, cashless society, without any real money?
“The legal tender acts do not attempt to make paper a standard of value.
We do not rest their validity upon the assertion that their emission is coinage,
or any regulation of the value of money; nor do we assert that Congress may
make anything which has no value money.” – Bates v. United States, 108 F2d
407 408 (1939)
“Are silver dollars really made of silver? Not anymore. Silver is too
expensive, so today’s silver dollars are really made of silver-looking metal
outside that is 75 % Copper and 25% nickel. The inside is 100% copper.”
– First Bank exhibit, Denver Children’s Museum, Denver