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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 8th, 2023

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  • “Outlawry” was applied to people who refused to submit to the legal process in the US.

    The concept of an “outlaw” goes at least as far back as ancient Rome and was used in England until something like 1869. It held on in Scotland as part of Civil Law until somewhere in the 1940s. It was also present in France, Germany, and several Nordic countries.

    This isn’t just a US thing.

    there is no legal process to submit to because they aren’t subject to US law to begin with.

    Yes…because they are “Outside the Law”. An Outlaw is neither subject to nor protected by the law.

    It’s that last part that so many people in here are missing. If the Elongated Muskrat were declared an “outlaw” you could kick in his front door, drag him out of bed, load him onto a catapult and fire him into the sun and the legal apparatus would not, nay could not, do anything about it.

    People need to understand how deeply that “no legal process to submit to” goes. The “outlaw” isn’t subject to the law but neither is anyone else as it relates to them.








  • That’s the answer commonly given but I don’t understand how automation can handle the ad hoc nature of life. Here’s some examples, maybe you could explain how this works for you?

    • Watching TV and I’d like the lights dimmed or turned off.
    • Finished putting laundry away and laid down to go to bed.
    • Someone left the kitchen and the light is still on. I want it turned off without having to get up from the couch and I don’t want to wait for the motion timer to expire.
    • Someone is coming over, say Pizza delivery, and I want the exterior lights to go back to full bright before they arrive.