Transaction

3423ded70da2ed36977a6e23dd132b5d12a3b4bc854493c8a664edf07e8ff3ae
2024-03-24 01:03:44
0.00000016 BSV
(
0.02095155 BSV
-
0.02095139 BSV
)
10.13 sat/KB
1
74,365
1,578 B

2 Outputs

Total Output:
0.02095139 BSV
  • j"1LAnZuoQdcKCkpDBKQMCgziGMoPC4VQUckM-<div class="post">None of that matters. PayPal's corporate policies are not law. Under the slightest inquiry they will give you up. I guarantee that fact.<br/><br/>See 'jurisdiction' again. Is PayPal a registered corporation? I'd imagine so. Obtaining a corporate charter is a PRIVILEGE (means "private law"), not a right. (Rights are inherent, you don't apply for them.) It makes PayPal subject to the jurisdiction of the REGISTRAR. (The state or federal government.) So when they are asked for your information and are stuffed with a pile of statutes, they have to comply or face civil (See: Roman Civil Law) penalties or the revocation of the charter. (Revocation of charters is rare, but it does happen.)<br/><br/>After PayPal gives up your information; they (IRS/boogieman/whoever) will look at the real world items you have in your 'keep' and determine that they were paid for with these so-called donations online.<br/><br/>You'll enter your plea with the courts (a plea is a verbal contract that also establishes civil jurisdiction with your consent), they'll find you guilty, and you'll get a nice piece of paper called a court order to pay fines (or possibly jail time).<br/><br/>Call me jaded if you wish. They are very 'tricky monkeys'. <img alt="Wink" border="0" src="/static/img/emoticons/wink.gif"/><br/></div> text/html
    https://whatsonchain.com/tx/3423ded70da2ed36977a6e23dd132b5d12a3b4bc854493c8a664edf07e8ff3ae