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That literally confirms what I just said. Is a Sheriff, who has DUTIES, a living human being?
69 sats \ 3 replies \ @Lux 6 Apr
a man has freedom and responsability, a person has rights and duties
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lux 6 Apr
I know you don't like this guy, but it goes over it https://rumble.com/v4imjfl-define-person-rights-and-duties.html
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Bud. You're still saying the same thing as me:
"Persons" are of two kinds, natural and artificial. A natural person is a human being. Artificial persons include a collection or succession of natural persons forming a corporation; a collection of property to which the law attributes the capacity of having rights and duties. The latter class of artificial persons is recognized only to a limited extent in our law. Examples are the estate of a bankrupt or deceased person.
Hogan v. Greenfield, 58 Wyo. 13, 122 P.2d 850, 853.
A person is such, not because he is human, but because rights and duties are ascribed to him. The person is the legal subject or substance of which the rights and duties are attributes. An individual human being considered as having such attributes is what lawyers call a natural person.
Pollock, First Book of Jurispr. 110. Gray, Nature and Sources of Law, ch. IL
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lux 6 Apr
a man is not a subject, it's sovereign
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