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I love Patrick Stewart. He's one of the few people in the Exilednight Jun 2016 #1
I have such a man crush on him... Glassunion Jun 2016 #49
Fab! n/t TubbersUK Jun 2016 #51
Our bill of rights was based on the Magna Carta. merrily Jun 2016 #2
That's the stark irony...the reviled "European Convention on Human Rights", Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #4
The Magna Carta was not common law. merrily Jun 2016 #6
It is the early founding reference for Common Law. Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #8
Not really. merrily Jun 2016 #10
Yes, really. I don't know that I'd keep arguing against the historical origins of due process, but msanthrope Jun 2016 #11
Common law predates the Magna Carta. (No clue who is arguing against due process.) merrily Jun 2016 #12
Yes. But that wasn't the poster's point. I think you clearly missed that. nt msanthrope Jun 2016 #17
See Replies 6 and 8. merrily Jun 2016 #18
Ah...there is your problem. You didn't understand the context. "Founding reference." msanthrope Jun 2016 #22
Since you claim to understand it and you also claim I didn't, your "request" seems bizarre. Pass. merrily Jun 2016 #24
Well....you claim the poster is using a word she is not using. msanthrope Jun 2016 #29
I quoted her words, and please see Reply 30. Thanks. merrily Jun 2016 #31
Thank you for proving my point with that quotation. nt msanthrope Jun 2016 #33
As an iconic symbol, yes Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #13
It's iconic, but that does not mean common law was founded on it. None of your links merrily Jun 2016 #14
What original claim would that be? Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #15
The one you made in your Reply 8. You've been posting here long enough to follow a subthread. merrily Jun 2016 #16
Sura never said common law was founded on the MC. You seem to be conflating the concepts msanthrope Jun 2016 #19
Her post 8, in its entirety: "It {the Magna Carta} is the early founding reference for Common Law." merrily Jun 2016 #20
You seem confused by the difference between "foundation" msanthrope Jun 2016 #25
Still not interested in playing your game. merrily Jun 2016 #30
Not always easy following sub-threads. Not always easy responding to Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #21
I think the poster is confused as to what "Founding reference " means in this context..... msanthrope Jun 2016 #23
It would seem that there is some confusion, yes. Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #26
Well.....when I pointed out you never used the word she is claiming you did, she passed. nt msanthrope Jun 2016 #27
No surprise, I'm afraid. Much quick-drawing from that direction. Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #35
Leaving the sandbox seems the current tactic. nt msanthrope Jun 2016 #37
Boom! Mic drop! LOL! Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #40
It was a point of info relating to one of the first lines of your OP merrily Jun 2016 #28
That was a quote from the sketch, spoken by Patrick Stewart, Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #34
Did British Common Law ever apply to the 'colonies'? malaise Jun 2016 #41
Sorry? What does the egregious flouting of British Common Law Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #43
They all failed to live up to those ideals malaise Jun 2016 #46
Couldn't agree more, absolutely spot on...BUT, that does not Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #47
That can be said about pretty much any society mythology Jun 2016 #52
Very funny but it reminds me of .Monty Python's "Life of Brian" underpants Jun 2016 #3
It reminded me of a different one... JHB Jun 2016 #9
If you watch the credits Shankapotomus Jun 2016 #32
Ah underpants Jun 2016 #39
I love this sketch. DeadLetterOffice Jun 2016 #5
Nobody could've done it so well. I'll bet he wrote the script, too. Quintessentially British. Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #7
K & R n/t TubbersUK Jun 2016 #36
I saw this a few months ago. geardaddy Jun 2016 #38
Someone care to explain... Indydem Jun 2016 #42
That's the whole point. The Brits lent their principles of law to the EU Convention. Surya Gayatri Jun 2016 #45
Brexit touted the ECHR as an example TubbersUK Jun 2016 #48
K&R Solly Mack Jun 2016 #44
K&R Native Jun 2016 #50
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