RE: –“Aquinas told the Duchess of Brabant that the sovereign had the right to confiscate all usurious gains. The same right applies today. Usurers have no right to keep money they have gained through immoral means.”– E. Michael Jones @EMichaelJones1
Yes, Sovereigns, as insurers of last resort (the king, the monarch, the state, the court) have the obligation and therefore the right in law, to confiscate all usurious gains.
Usury consists of baiting into hazard. That which is obtained by baiting into hazard violates the demand for sovereignty in demonstrated interests and reciprocity in display word and deed. No aggression and non retaliation require the duty of reciprocal insurance of sovereignty and reciprocity .
Reciprocity requires productive (non-parasitic), fully informed, warrantied, voluntary transfer of demonstrated interests (free of coercion including free of baiting in to hazard), and of imposition of costs upon demonstrated interests of others, within the limits of warranty and liability.
Ergo, Sovereigns, as insurers of last resort, have the OBLIGATION and therefore the RIGHT to confiscate all usurious gains, and provide restitution where possible or contribution to the commons where not.
Curt Doolittle
The Natural law Institute
Reply addressees: @orion_pulse
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-26 17:17:52 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1861459369650794496
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1861456203768795610