Taygibay
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2010
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Well, the Senkaku can serve as a good starting point since you brought it up.
Although I empathize easily with the repulsion towards a mercantile based
acquisition as constituting a National prerogative later, this is a case known
to land and maritime dispute. More recent than say the Louisiana purchase,
one can find the Labrador split from Québec province to Newfoundland.
In dispute since 1809, it was settled in 1927 and enforced after 1949. The
deciding opinion was cast in the Queen's Privy Council in London! Québec
still doesn't recognize it as valid and would refute fight it upon independence.
By such precedents ( Labrador was originally transferred through the 1763
Treaty of Paris but a lot of it was acquired by a corporation based in NL ( sic ))
passing of land through State inheritance from individuals does constitute a
sovereign ownership.
I'm sorry to burst your bubble, because as said I don't really agree with this,
but it is legal if not right.
Still good day though, Tay.
Although I empathize easily with the repulsion towards a mercantile based
acquisition as constituting a National prerogative later, this is a case known
to land and maritime dispute. More recent than say the Louisiana purchase,
one can find the Labrador split from Québec province to Newfoundland.
In dispute since 1809, it was settled in 1927 and enforced after 1949. The
deciding opinion was cast in the Queen's Privy Council in London! Québec
still doesn't recognize it as valid and would refute fight it upon independence.
By such precedents ( Labrador was originally transferred through the 1763
Treaty of Paris but a lot of it was acquired by a corporation based in NL ( sic ))
passing of land through State inheritance from individuals does constitute a
sovereign ownership.
I'm sorry to burst your bubble, because as said I don't really agree with this,
but it is legal if not right.
Still good day though, Tay.