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>> No.1344296 [View]
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1344296

Anyone invest in North Korean stocks?

>> No.1261674 [View]
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1261674

>> No.1205340 [View]
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1205340

Guess it's crashing because news leaked they didn't get the $18M.

Time for the breadline.

>> No.1196463 [View]
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1196463

"Escort this man out."

What power does a wealthy man generally have over his own property?
I'm not talking about the average Texan farmer so much as the average global rich dude.

You ask your security to escort a man out. They appear at the sides of someone who barged in, and gesture.
Being human and inconversant in the law, most people would just move along and not think about the rights of burglars enshrined by vegetarian leftists.
But what if the barger-in makes some move to resist the "escorting"? Maybe they're a journalist, or a similar smart-aleck, who knows the limits of property rights.

What's the legal situation there?

I ask here because legal fees are a crucial part of lawsuits, and also because you are far more power hungry than the shouting spectators that populate /pol/. Can you crush a trivial complaint (such as the above, where a man resists being escorted out and is forcibly ejected) with enough money?

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