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Previous comments... You are currently on page 16.
I am glad that you do not feel unsafe. I've lived in the same west valley neighborhood for 22-23 years and have seen and experienced much. And yes, illegals have entered my property, one was on my roof and another left a nice 8in carving knife on my rock front lawn about 6 feet from my bedroom window (cops did nothing, wouldn't even print it). Comforting.
In 1956 Eisenhower ordered his administration to conduct an inventory of federal jurisdictions. A huge tome was then declassified in 1963. What it shows is flabbergasting. Federal jurisdictions stemming from land ownership is very limited. In my home county of Elko (northern Nevada) the feds have exclusive jurisdiction of ----- a third of a square mile. That is the parcel that the Post Office is on. This stems from Article I, Clause 8, Section 17, known as the Enclave Clause of the US Constitution.
Elko County, like the rest of the State of Nevada is dominantly public land. Ostensibly the feds owns these public lands, but as a proprietor only, like everyone else, and is subject to the laws of the State of Nevada. This is in the Eisenhower report.
But it is still not even that simple. With Nevada's enabling act for Statehood in 1864, the State agreed to relinquish claim to the unadjudicated public lands to the feds. Hence the feds claim to ownership as a proprietor. The intent was that the feds would provide mechanisms to privatize to individuals via Homestead Acts, Desert Land Entry Acts, Stone and Timber Acts, Mining Acts, etc. The intent was entirely based upon the original US philosophy that resources are best managed through private ownership by individuals. This more or less proceeded fairly orderly for the next 100 or so years. But then, in response to the ever escalating progressive calls for collectivization - that the public lands "belong to all us" -- the onslaught rise of the federal leviathan culminated in the passage of FLPMA in 1976. This Act for the first time purported to say that the feds will retain these lands in perpetuity. A reversal and betrayal of what was essentially a trust fund ultimately intended for the people as individuals.
This started the first Sagebrush Rebellion that in Nevada culminated in the Nevada Revised Statutes series 321 passed in 1979 and 1980 by the State legislature and signed into law. This statute laid State claim to all the public lands in the State of Nevada in the interest of individual US citizens. Privatization mechanisms would continue with similar means of disposing resources by proofs of beneficial use. This is actually based upon the US Constitutions Equal Footing Doctrine. This is very simple. Any new States admitted to the Union are admitted on an equal footing with the original 13 States. The original 13 did not have federal public lands. The States have merely to exercise their sovereignty.
The principal is simple. The history of obfuscation leading us to our current predicament in Nevada and other public lands states is horrendous and is the subject of a book I have been writing.
is already the law. Unlawful re-entry after removal of an alien is indeed already a felony punishable by imprisonment of up to five years and a substantial fine. Many people so charged are also charged with a misdemeanor, unlawful entry, for the same act. The misdemeanor alone carries a penalty of up to 6 months (although that sentence is very rare for a first offense) and a potential fine (equally rare). I should also note that the vast majority of these defendants have gone nowhere near any private property. They are apprehended on government "owned" property in the desert. I hope this helps you.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/06/18/...
its this commonplace, and this bad http://media.economist.com/sites/defa...
I'm truly happy that LV is less saturated by illegals (sincerely, no sarcasm), but that in no way diminishes the severe problem we have here AND the complicit federal governments active attempts to stop us from resisting. Literally American citizens are dying on a daily basis at the hands of those who shouldn't be here.
"Your rights in say land are limited by the activity you undertook to obtain those rights."
Your rights to property are defined by what you lay claim to and the control you exercise over it, I agree. This is also usually extended to recognition by legal authority due to filed claims, etc. for external enforcement purposes (executive and judicial actions).
"It also does not mean you can put a huge pigsty on the edge your land next to your neighbor’s house."
This is the same logic the EPA uses to tell people they can control the waterways. It is a collectivist argument. You sure you want to go there?
"your property rights in land cannot be used to make someone a prisoner"
The first implied argument (sorely flawed) is that freedom of movement trumps property rights. This is nonsense. Property rights by definition mean control over and access to a physical entity delineated by boundaries. If you argue that one has the freedom to go wherever one desires regardless of anything else, you are arguing that there is in fact no private property because you are arguing the invalidation of jurisdictional boundaries of geography.
The second blatantly false assertion is that I am emprisoning or coercing someone else by refusing them permission to cross my land. This whole notion is patently absurd.
"self-ownership means that you can travel freely."
Not so. It means that one has actuation/control over one's own thoughts and to extension one's own body. However, the universe beyond that is not part of your inherent ownership, as it lies outside and distinct from you. That you have the ability to move is one thing. That you are permitted to move in a particular place is another matter entirely. Your argument is that the ability to move predicates the right to move anywhere one wishes. This is false. When one travels, one is asserting control over that territory - even if only briefly. But what happens when that claim of control is disputed? Who's use takes precedence? The owner's of course.
By your argument, I should be permitted to travel freely through Groom's Lake and Area 51 in Nevada - being public lands - and open a shop there for business. Yeah. Good luck with that.
"Property rights cannot be used to imprison someone or to keep two free people who want to meet or trade from doing so."
Again, you presume the right to passage through another's domain regardless of permission. In so doing, you completely eschew their property rights. You may have permission (such as in the case of general use or "public" property), but this is far from being a given. I would note that the Constitution specifically identified and prohibited the US government from placing restrictions on travel between the individual States, but made no such prohibition on travel outside the States.
"Public thoroughfares are controlled by the government. The government does not own these public thoroughfares, but it does police them."
Police can certainly haul away a broken-down car from the side of the road as a travel nuisance. They can put up traffic signals on roads to control and manage the flow of traffic. And are not all of these restrictions on use of "public" thoroughfares? Absolutely. Use is conditional - never absolute as your argument holds.
I maintain that Islandia can deny access to anyone they want, and noone can set foot on their land without the permission of the land owner.
People, therefore, are not free to travel: they may not travel in Islandia for free.
But noone is being imprisoned by Islandia. And Islandia is not keeping two people from meeting - they can meet by simply traveling via water, or they can pay the toll and use the roads.
Now how does this differ if the size of a nation is increased, or the number of its property owners, or the number of roads?
The hope is that Mexico and other nations abusing our southern border would use their resources to provide legitimate documentation to help facilitate legal migration to the US to either work or eventually live. The hope is that dead bodies would stop being found in the Arizona desert. The hope is that crime would be reduced in Phoenix and other border States to the extent that the people of the US (Arizona) can move freely, with less concern of abuse, within their own land.
I am in a middle class neighborhood, I am scarcely safe in my home or the local park 1/4 mile from my home. My children, particularly my daughter, have never gone to the park alone, without adult supervision.
however...just because someone buys land next to mine...that happens to be landlocked...it does not impose on me a duty to provide to him an access. He may well have been defrauded by the seller...but that has nothing to do with me and does not impose a duty upon me or make me a slave to the purchaser.
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