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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 12:48:38 GMT -5
Unless you can cite it, you're answering the question. Is it, or is it not, your artwork?
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 12:54:55 GMT -5
Section 13 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms states that, if the defense is threatened with contempt or any other legal punishment if he doesn't admit to self-incriminating evidence, the evidence can't be used against him. "A witness who testifies in any proceedings has the right not to have any incriminating evidence so given used to incriminate that witness in any other proceedings, except in a prosecution for perjury or for the giving of contradictory evidence." As well, statements taken by the police via subpoena can't be used against the accused. So NYAH.
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 12:55:34 GMT -5
I'm not Canadian. Your laws don't apply to me.
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 12:58:42 GMT -5
Look up your own stuff, I'm not sifting through the tangled mess that is the European legal system.
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 12:59:39 GMT -5
We don't quite follow the mainland's laws. We're Eurosceptic.
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:05:27 GMT -5
...so it's an even bigger mess. See? I'm not searching through that nightmare.
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:06:16 GMT -5
How? We're the foundation of your entire civilization. Your laws are descended from ours.
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:17:24 GMT -5
But we don't have that bundled mess of nations. Imagine trying to find out whose jurisdiction a crime falls under! "This is a Ger man crime!" "No, a Polish one!" "How do we know, there's no discernible border!" "The divide is right there, at Hank's Bratwurst Shop!" "But is that the final edge of Ger many, or Poland?" "I think it's right down the middle." "What nationality is the store then?" "It's like a nationless limbo." "So the crime was committed... in international waters?" "...legally, yes. Hank's Bratwurst Shop is in international waters."
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:20:13 GMT -5
There's a reason it's such a densely packed continent... it's one of the beds of civilization. Besides which, the same could be said of any border. Also, it doesn't really apply to the UK, whose only land border is with the morons to the south of me.
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:24:14 GMT -5
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:27:23 GMT -5
You don't have booths over the entire border. And I think most countries would have them, anyway. And stop doing that, Irishy!
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:35:24 GMT -5
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:37:22 GMT -5
I'm certain that some of our territories do. And even then, the EU is about openness between countries. And I will not, Irishy!
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:48:45 GMT -5
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:50:06 GMT -5
Your border with America is open. *Throws it at her*
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:51:30 GMT -5
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:53:13 GMT -5
European borders are still discernible! And not interested!
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:54:27 GMT -5
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Post by LS on Jun 29, 2009 13:55:26 GMT -5
I'm sure there are ways of telling. Like when you cross a yankee state border.
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Post by Tsaalyo Phoenix on Jun 29, 2009 13:59:33 GMT -5
That's easy. There's about 250 miles of empty, wasted land between each state that you have to take a highway through. Practical design for a country, eh? And they wonder why it costs them so much in gas to get anywhere.
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