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To: NonValueAdded

How so? I have the power as an individual to do everything necessary and convenient, except that I haven't won the Lotto yet.


120 posted on 07/23/2004 8:50:30 PM PDT by Dog Gone
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To: Dog Gone
Well, I don't know where the line would be drawn but I suppose if a case could be made that the corporation was doing something that could be proved to be outside the necessity of conducting its business and affairs, it could be deemed to be outside their powers. (Phew! Vanna, can I buy a comma?) All I meant to show by posting the statute is a corporation and an individual are not equal in all respects.

Here is another gem that shoudl give us pause and solace at the same time [emphasis added]:

447.01 Regulating labor unions; state policy.--

(1) Because of the activities of labor unions affecting the economic conditions of the country and the state, entering as they do into practically every business and industrial enterprise, it is the sense of the Legislature that such organizations affect the public interest and are charged with a public use. The working person, unionist or nonunionist, must be protected. The right to work is the right to live.

(2) It is here now declared to be the policy of the state, in the exercise of its sovereign constitutional police power, to regulate the activities and affairs of labor unions, their officers, agents, organizers and other representatives, in the manner, and to the extent hereafter set forth.


130 posted on 07/23/2004 9:00:39 PM PDT by NonValueAdded ("We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good" HRC 6/28/2004)
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