I guess you never heard of this Chap.
Seems like he has dealt with this sort of thing before. More than once, in fact.
.
.
You'll be wanting this back now, I think. :)
Okay, I’ll grant that England had faced a couple of SOMEWHAT situations before.
It’s very a minor point anyway, and it really doesn’t change your shipload of FAIL.
My point was that there was nothing wrong with the Calvin’s Case decision.
Fact is, there is a boatload - never mind that, there is a CRUISELINER-load of legal authorities, REAL legal authorities throughout history, that say you’re full of it.
And you, some guy on the internet, are supposedly smarter than all the assembled judges of England, all of the Supreme Court, and virtually every REAL legal authority in history.
If you’re so damn smart, why aren’t you on the Supreme Court?
1. New England Confederation of 1643.
2. Commission of Council for Foreign Plantations, 1660.
3. William Penn’s Plan of Union, 1696.
4. Report of Board of Trade on union of New York with other
colonies, 1696.
5. D’Avenant Plan, 1698.
6. A Virginian’s Plan, in “An Essay on the Government of the
English Plantations on the Continent of America,” 1701.
7. Livingston Plan, 1701.
8. Earl of Stair’s Proposals, 1721.
9. Plan of the Lords of Trade, 1721.
10. Daniel Coxe’s Plan, in “A Description of the English province
of Carolina,” 1722.
11.Kennedy Plan, 1751.
12. Franklin Plan, 1754.
13. Richard Peter’s Plan, 1754.
14. Hutchinson Plan, 1754.
15. Plan of the Lords of Trade, 1754.
16. Dr. Samuel Johnson’s Plan, 1760.
17. Galloway Plan, 1774.
18. Franklin’s Articles of Confederation, 1775.
19. The Articles of Confederation, 1778.
20. Drayton’s Articles of Confederation, 1778.
21. Webster’s Sketches of American Policy, 1785.
22. Randolph’s Plan, 1787.
23. Pinckney’s Plan, 1787.
24. The U.S. Constitution, 1787.