chudrockz wrote:I reject your radical assumption, I've never hunted. I just don't support victimless laws or the thievery done by the State. If I came to your house and stole your TV and sold it I'd be guilty as would the person I sold it to...unless I was wearing a badge.
If you have never hunted, I would say your knowlege of the subject is limited at best. Breaking rules have consequences out here in the real world. It is hard to conceive in any scenario other than an atempt to Troll Internetically, that you don't understand that concept. Another unbridaled "liberatarian" loose on the world.
BTW - I have also heard that the DNR auctions are difficult to get a deal - the firearms and bow auctions anyway. I have had some friends of mine purchase surplus and confiscated Canoes, Paddles and such from DNR and Forestry sales and did OK with that stuff. Like anything else, you have to go in knowing the prices.[/quote]
Damn those "unbridaled 'libertarians'," they're everywhere, I tell you!!
As another one, I think his point was that all too often, whether or not any law is actually broken, confiscated property is entirely impossible to get back. And that is wrong.[/quote]
Or that just because a bureaucrat puts words on paper that it does not constitute a JUST law. No victim, no crime.
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Treat me bad I'll treat you worse.
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