Oh there's WAY too many to count but they are rarely enforced. But... I'd say currently never being able to bankrupt out of student loans. You go to school, do a good job, then what you specialized tanks and you're in debt for the rest of your life. There's got to be some sort of limit. Unless you committed a crime there needs to be some sort of limit. You can bankrupt out of pretty much every other form of loan but student loans is one of the few outliers. Note: Also most of Texas's laws around anything doing with anything sexual is usually pretty dumb. Like how they only allow "condom demonstrators" or "neck massagers" and you have to sign a waiver when buying it.
As an accountant, I can tell you that the “it depends” rule is equally true in accounting. One of my college professors drilled this into our heads. One day he asked us a question and as a joke I answered “it depends.”
A friend of mine was getting into D&D and was getting mad because every time he asked a question my answer was "It depends on your DM." I told him I can tell you what the handbook says but it's up to your DM on how much or jhow little they want to enforce things and make house rules.
The “of a certain age” when it comes to marrying 1st cousins is the opposite of what you are thinking. You were speaking when he said ‘as long as one of the couple is UNABLE to reproduce”. So like past menopause, vasectomy, or total hysterectomy is what I believe is the twist about “of a certain age”
Idaho high school teacher here. The lottery is a very inefficient way to get school funding. In 2023, the lottery raked in almost $420 million in ticket sales. After winner payouts and overhead, schools received $82 million. If you crunch the numbers, the ticket sales numbers equates to a little more than $213 per Idaho resident. But the schools receive less than 20% of the overall total because their share comes from the dividends. If instead every resident gave the schools $41.74 every year instead of the $213 they give to the lottery, the schools would still get the 82 million and residents would have more take home pay.
11:15 They can “trespass” a person, which is a legal way to make it an arrest-able offense, if that previously trespassed person is on the property at a later date. Professional card counters go to great lengths to change their appearance, so they can work casinos they’ve been black listed from. It’s becoming impossible for them because of AI facial technology. So, card counters get arrested for trespassing, if they enter the casino, even if they don’t gamble.
I volunteer in the Norwegian Red Cross Search and Rescue Corps. The only times we're not called out by the police within 30 minutes of a missing person's report being issued, are when the police has some intelligence on where the person is and want to check that out first
They use lottery proceeds to fund education. I think it's pretty known they cut general funding towards education after that. So really educational funding doesn't really increase
@@jeffslote9671 my point was that raising education funding through selling lottery tickets can and has been off setted by moving other funding away from education. Nowhere did I say that it is or isn't high enough. It's just how the states have sold the idea of introducing a lottery system. That's where my comment was directed at. Whether or not there's enough money going to education I guess can be debated. Poor teacher salaries, lack of supplies as the poster above me mentioned, and sure many other things I can't think of after working all night, points to probably not
3:30 it kinda is. Until you start having multiple generations of first cousins marrying each other and having progeny, who are marrying their first cousins who are the result of first cousin marriage. Generally speaking, two cousins marrying in a family of otherwise "random" genetic stock is as likely to lead to birth defects as a a geriatric pregnancy i.e. mother over >35years old. They both lead to an approximate doubling of genetic abnormality, with regular rates at 2%.
I don't live in a country that uses Jurys, but any DA worth its salt would not take me for a trial with a possible death sentence. I don't necessarily am against killing the monsters out there, but I don't trust the legal system to make sure they always have the right people and to a degree I see being locked up for life as the harder punishment. In regards to lying, there's a University lecture on here somewhere, where first the lecturer and then an actual cop hammer home the fact that police can and will lie to you and you should under no circumstances talk to a cop without a lawyer and that includes you making a statement about witnessing a crime. If you saw something, that allows the Police to place you at the scene of the crime, aka it can turn you into a suspect.
Imagine you took the hairbrush of your spouse to comb your hair, and later, the spouse is travelling and fells victim to a crime. Your DNA is still present with the spouse if the hairbrush was taken for travel, but you've never been to the scene of the crome.
The problem with using gambling profits for education, is that states may then cut the original funding going towards education since the lottery will pay for it, thus getting schools less money than the public thought.
For the first one, Eagle was saying that because poor people were known to marry their cousins, it went out of style. People do not want to copy what the Poors are doing.
15:50 - or worse. People, especially young women, have been kidnapped for worse things than death. Also anyone reported missing at any age, even over 21, SHOULD be investigated immediately. People don't just stop being important after 21.
If you learn Bridge, then first thing you are taught is how to count cards. Bridge requires you know what cards have been played. If you don't count cards, you will lose a lot.
Yeah with the Casino thing its funny because you can get kicked out for winning too much money because if you keep winning money the Casino isn't making money so they have the right to kick you out of the Casino.
That lottery "education" money sadly does not actually go towards improving education. The money gets moved around and tends to find its way in other places, especially in a red state like Idaho. Hell would freeze over before they let that money go towards improving public education.
Also it gets complex because different countries have different laws and completely different legal systems, so what is legal in one country can be illegal in others. Also there are some significant different legal practices between the us and the uk.
Proven innocent is a thing. It’s a much higher standard than being proven not guilty. Proven not guilty does mean proven innocent. I’ve only heard of proven innocent really discussed in cases where a person was found guilty, used all their appeals, and then evidence proving them innocent was found but couldn’t be used to appeal anymore. Being proven innocent is the only option left but it is apparently a very high standard.
In most places casinos can legally kick you out for counting cards. There are only a couple states that do not allow casinos to discriminate against players based on skill.
I've read in the past that while marrying a cousin carries risks, it's generally no more dangerous than a couple having a child in their later years. The issue is that you must heavily scrutinize your ancestry to ensure that intermarriage hasn't happened recently and somehow make sure that it doesn't happen again among your descendants any time soon. This is why it's impractical and regarded as unnecessarily dangerous.
And "cross cousins" (cousins whose parents are different sex siblings) have better genetic results than non-cross cousins (cousins whose parents sre same sex siblings).
@@wordforger My cousin and I have parents who were different sex siblings, but we'd have to be lesbians to want to get married, so it wouldn't matter anyway. Besides, everything about this would probably give her husband a heart attack, and we mustn't have that. lol
Don't know if this is true, but I heard a story once that Illinois used the same sales pitch to legalize the lottery back in the day: We'll use the proceeds for education! And they did. They just didn't mention that they forecast the amount of revenue they would get from the lottery that year and reduced education funding accordingly. In other words, they hit whatever number they wanted to hit just the same if they had a lottery as if they didn't. Since they can plausibly claim every lottery dollar went to education, they didn't lie, but education funding never actually went up by the amount the lottery brought in.
States 8using lottery money for education (or any other specific thing) actually removes funding from education. Because if they didn't have the lottery money then it would be funded some other way; but because they have the lottery money coming in they take an equivalent amount out of the state budget and move it somewhere else. And then if they don't sell as many lottery tickets as expected? They don't re-fund education.
Florida Man here, child marriage is technically legal here, but the law was amended years ago. The new law has it at 17, but you need permission from the parents and a judge. Also, the older spouse can be only 1 year older. At that point, why not just make the age limit a solid 18?
In Tennessee there is no age of consent for a female in a straight Christian marriage. The state goes crazy on legal issues if the marriage is a gay marriage or non Christian. Tennessee is the second state where it is common for an underage child to be convicted of a crime against their old husband in self defense. Females in the state of Tennessee are not allowed to carry or use a firearm until they are 18 unless they are married. There has been too many 8 to 12 years old girls shooting their 50 to 60 year old husbands because they don’t want to be raped anymore. In 2023 alone over 100 men ages from 55 to 65 were shot by their pre teen wives. Instead of sentencing the case to a rape defense the state tries to get these girls executed. Tennessee is the number 1 state of pre-teen abortions and female suicide.
In Michigan it is 1st Cousin once removed is okay. You can't sleep with a 1st Cousin if he/she had Epilepsy, or Autism. ½ Cousin, and Adopted Cousin Marriage laws are unknown in Michigan.
No, he’s saying that people beyond menopause can marry their first cousins. That’s what he means by “beyond a certain age”. Either that or you prove there are no illnesses in your family that are likely to be passed on your offspring.
23:30 In my mind, A ruling of innocence is one of the most un-American things I’ve ever heard. It just sounds wrong to me; like saying one doesn’t have the right to pursue happiness; ridiculousness. Is there any situation where an American can get a ruling of innocence?
The age thing with the cousin marrying - what he means by 'above a certain age, it's legal' in those states, he's talking about that the people have to be old enough that they are no longer fertile, and can't have children (the woman having gone through menopause). Not talking about child cousin marriage in the blue states.
I watched the closing arguments of the Casey Anthony case, and while I don't remember it well, I do remember feeling like the prosecution was practically forfeiting the case by how reliant they were on emotions instead of evidence. Meanwhile the defense was happy to finish them off.
Part of the reason the prosecution lost is that the police didn't even bother to investigate Caylee's grandfather (Casey's father), who had Sexually molested Casey. Which pretty much the deftion of reasonable doubt, another plausible perpetrator even worse one the police didn't even try to rule out.
I love when you react to Legal Eagle videos. Two of my favorite channels in one episode! I actually knew all of these were false, despite not actually having watched that video of his.
I don’t know about card counting, but I know that the refusal of service is the basis of refusing a gay wedding cake to a gay couple. They can cite religious objection, whether it is true, or not, but it constitutes segregation. As customers who have done nothing wrong, they should not be forced to get their cake elsewhere.
Also, cars werent a thing a couple of decades ago. The only women you knew were cousins and sisters since you grew up far away from groups of people so it wasn't weird
I think most lotteries around the world are justified with it going to a good cause. In Norway, for example, there is a state monopoly on gambling, although some humanitarian organisations such as the Red Cross and Save the Children also run lotteries in a very limited amount - and children's sports clubs and culture clubs are allowed to run prize raffles. As for the state monopoly, all of the money goes to the funding of culture and sports for children, as well as non-profits
On topic of wills: Will of king Bolesław III was one of more important wills in history. Basically to avoid brother killing war between his children he decided to divide the country, but after his sons dies their children don't inherit the land but it returns to land of the eldest son. Of course it failed and started a century of feudal desintegration of Poland
american justice system be like mother who didn't report her own young child missing after ONE MONTH and has a car filled with spicy air wins in court two teenagers (hated groube of people) robbed a private property (now that's a crime if i have ever heard of one) and got shot by a homemade mousetrap intended to kill homeinvaders goes to court and wins
I saw your video on the rap battles, just to note that you agreed with George Washington’s wig in that video but in reality he normally never wore a wig and had ginger hair.
@@TupacemHe does show his political bias sometimes for jokes and stuff, but for the most part he stays apolitical when it comes to the informational parts.
Huggbees made a similar one pertaining to Weird, Wacky laws of every state & that could be in your ally Professor, but the video is close to 1.5 to 2 hours long, so I don’t think you’ll be able to do it; unless time permits.
Weird he starts on about missing persons then goes to kidnapping which are two different things. What police officer would say to wait 24 hours to report a kidnapping? Missing persons can be different for each person. My sister goes missing and I would be the last to know but my mother.....well they well be doing a silver alert and if I go missing, my mother would being calling and they would not have little room to say anything other than to take it seriously as we have the same residents and take care of her (that's how I get paid).
Legal protections against discrimination only apply for a protected class. People able to count cards are not considered a protected class. If a member of a protected class id counting cards it is still no protection as they are being refused service for counting cards and not for being a member of the protected class. All that is required is an affidavit for why the person was refused service.
Most people in the United States can read English. It's a much smaller percentage that can read legalese which is pretty much not English. Anyone know what preclusive means?
Being a hobby-genealogist, I can tell you that most people (at least those I've spoken to) don't know their third cousins (sharing 2x great grandparents). Frequently not even their 2nd cousins (sharing great grandparents). Especially in this day and age, where families are so spread out. I know the names of my 2nd cousins out on the coasts (I'm in the midwest), but I have never met them.
@@kisili7319 exactly XD not saying everyone should go find their 3rd cousin to marry, but its not as weird as it sounds, 2nd cousin? yeah a bit weird, just to close, but a 3rd cousin? thats farther away then you realize :o
When it comes to gambling, it's often less "legislating morality" and more a question of protecting the public. Gambling produces the same sort of neurochemistry as other forms of addiction and the gambling industry has become VERY skilled at manipulating that to exploit people. They're also very prolific at pushing the line that it's "legislating morality" while contributing heavily to political campaigns.
@@Merennulli there’s an argument for legalizing drug use & other addictive activities. Libertarians that value maximizing freedom say there’s a freedom to self harm, because it’s a personal issue not a public interest. Just because some members of the public & government don’t think one should do something shouldn’t be sufficient to prevent one from doing it.
@@chemquests Except when those people become a drain on society because they are taking harmful actions to sustain their habit. I used to believe in libertarianism when I was young, but it simply doesn't work. There is value in restraining the growth of government and preferring individual freedoms, but letting people harm themselves in any way they please up until it harms others costs society a lot more than just helping others. But libertarianism is utterly irrelevant here. Libertarianism doesn't promote exploiting people even if many self-claimed "Libertarians" do. And as I mentioned, the gambling industry exploits people. Even under Holmes' rather extreme phrasing, that's letting the fist swing well past the end of our noses.
@@Merennulli I don’t fully subscribe to liberatarianism, in the sense that I don’t value unfettered freedom for its own sake, but I’ll side with it on issues where folks are trying to impose their own beliefs of what I should or shouldn’t do to myself. The harmful things an addict, a business, or anyone else may do should be regulated; that’s a separate issue. I actually part ways with libertarians on small government; there’s all kinds of services it serves that I am willing to pay taxes for.
@@RLKmedic0315undercover is world of difference from a cop laying to you in antergation room, false saying you friend has confused to crime saying you is a co-conspirator
@@RLKmedic0315 I’m specifically talking about inside of interrogation rooms. If they have to lie, fabricate or deceive to get you on the crime, then they almost certainly didn’t have enough evidence in the first place.
It is ridiculously easy to manipulate people into saying things they know are untrue, even when it's harmful to them, just by lying to them about their situation. Frankly, testimony of the accused should never be accepted unless the accused had legal representation present.
Mr Terry Your input regarding the Legal Eagle video was completely unnecessary to the value and educational benefit derived by the viewer. If you are unable to add to the subject matter, then please refrain from speaking. - sj
Mr slickjack Your comment regarding the Mr. Terry History video was completely unnecessary to the value and educational benefit derived by the viewer. If you are unable to add to the subject matter, then please refrain from commenting. - tfl
What's the dumbest law EVER?
Island making it illegal to name children in foreign names
@@balticpagan1495
Aren't most of the every names of foreign origins anyway
The law of Gravity, it always keeps everyone down😩😩
Oh there's WAY too many to count but they are rarely enforced. But... I'd say currently never being able to bankrupt out of student loans. You go to school, do a good job, then what you specialized tanks and you're in debt for the rest of your life. There's got to be some sort of limit. Unless you committed a crime there needs to be some sort of limit. You can bankrupt out of pretty much every other form of loan but student loans is one of the few outliers.
Note: Also most of Texas's laws around anything doing with anything sexual is usually pretty dumb. Like how they only allow "condom demonstrators" or "neck massagers" and you have to sign a waiver when buying it.
3rd laws of Dynamics. Why do I have to get hurt while punching the wall?
As an accountant, I can tell you that the “it depends” rule is equally true in accounting. One of my college professors drilled this into our heads. One day he asked us a question and as a joke I answered “it depends.”
Biological anthropologist here…my students are very sick of my “it depends”
*college
Most experts say "it depends" because the world is complex. Almost nothing is as simple as people would like it to be.
A friend of mine was getting into D&D and was getting mad because every time he asked a question my answer was "It depends on your DM." I told him I can tell you what the handbook says but it's up to your DM on how much or jhow little they want to enforce things and make house rules.
The “of a certain age” when it comes to marrying 1st cousins is the opposite of what you are thinking. You were speaking when he said ‘as long as one of the couple is UNABLE to reproduce”.
So like past menopause, vasectomy, or total hysterectomy is what I believe is the twist about “of a certain age”
... which throws a real big wrench into the argument that gay marriage should not be allowed, because "marriage is for reproducing".
@@SiqueScarface Yeah, but let's be honest, they were never arguing in good faith...
"Have you ever been present at a will reading?
"No."
"It's like a community theater production of a tax return." - Knives Out
Idaho high school teacher here. The lottery is a very inefficient way to get school funding. In 2023, the lottery raked in almost $420 million in ticket sales. After winner payouts and overhead, schools received $82 million. If you crunch the numbers, the ticket sales numbers equates to a little more than $213 per Idaho resident. But the schools receive less than 20% of the overall total because their share comes from the dividends. If instead every resident gave the schools $41.74 every year instead of the $213 they give to the lottery, the schools would still get the 82 million and residents would have more take home pay.
One guy explained court cases the best (not word for word): “You’re not trying to find out the truth, you’re just trying to be more believable”
11:15
They can “trespass” a person, which is a legal way to make it an arrest-able offense, if that previously trespassed person is on the property at a later date.
Professional card counters go to great lengths to change their appearance, so they can work casinos they’ve been black listed from. It’s becoming impossible for them because of AI facial technology.
So, card counters get arrested for trespassing, if they enter the casino, even if they don’t gamble.
I volunteer in the Norwegian Red Cross Search and Rescue Corps. The only times we're not called out by the police within 30 minutes of a missing person's report being issued, are when the police has some intelligence on where the person is and want to check that out first
They use lottery proceeds to fund education. I think it's pretty known they cut general funding towards education after that. So really educational funding doesn't really increase
Education funding is already high enough
@@jeffslote9671 yeah so high teachers need to buy their own supplies for their students...
@@jeffslote9671 my point was that raising education funding through selling lottery tickets can and has been off setted by moving other funding away from education. Nowhere did I say that it is or isn't high enough. It's just how the states have sold the idea of introducing a lottery system. That's where my comment was directed at. Whether or not there's enough money going to education I guess can be debated. Poor teacher salaries, lack of supplies as the poster above me mentioned, and sure many other things I can't think of after working all night, points to probably not
3:30 it kinda is. Until you start having multiple generations of first cousins marrying each other and having progeny, who are marrying their first cousins who are the result of first cousin marriage.
Generally speaking, two cousins marrying in a family of otherwise "random" genetic stock is as likely to lead to birth defects as a a geriatric pregnancy i.e. mother over >35years old. They both lead to an approximate doubling of genetic abnormality, with regular rates at 2%.
I don't live in a country that uses Jurys, but any DA worth its salt would not take me for a trial with a possible death sentence. I don't necessarily am against killing the monsters out there, but I don't trust the legal system to make sure they always have the right people and to a degree I see being locked up for life as the harder punishment.
In regards to lying, there's a University lecture on here somewhere, where first the lecturer and then an actual cop hammer home the fact that police can and will lie to you and you should under no circumstances talk to a cop without a lawyer and that includes you making a statement about witnessing a crime. If you saw something, that allows the Police to place you at the scene of the crime, aka it can turn you into a suspect.
Imagine you took the hairbrush of your spouse to comb your hair, and later, the spouse is travelling and fells victim to a crime. Your DNA is still present with the spouse if the hairbrush was taken for travel, but you've never been to the scene of the crome.
The problem with using gambling profits for education, is that states may then cut the original funding going towards education since the lottery will pay for it, thus getting schools less money than the public thought.
For the first one, Eagle was saying that because poor people were known to marry their cousins, it went out of style. People do not want to copy what the Poors are doing.
15:50 - or worse. People, especially young women, have been kidnapped for worse things than death. Also anyone reported missing at any age, even over 21, SHOULD be investigated immediately. People don't just stop being important after 21.
If you learn Bridge, then first thing you are taught is how to count cards. Bridge requires you know what cards have been played. If you don't count cards, you will lose a lot.
Yeah with the Casino thing its funny because you can get kicked out for winning too much money because if you keep winning money the Casino isn't making money so they have the right to kick you out of the Casino.
That lottery "education" money sadly does not actually go towards improving education. The money gets moved around and tends to find its way in other places, especially in a red state like Idaho. Hell would freeze over before they let that money go towards improving public education.
Also it gets complex because different countries have different laws and completely different legal systems, so what is legal in one country can be illegal in others.
Also there are some significant different legal practices between the us and the uk.
Dont forget state laws.
Yeah casinos are definitely the lifeline of certain places, like Casino de Monte-Carlo and the whole country of Monaco.
Proven innocent is a thing. It’s a much higher standard than being proven not guilty. Proven not guilty does mean proven innocent.
I’ve only heard of proven innocent really discussed in cases where a person was found guilty, used all their appeals, and then evidence proving them innocent was found but couldn’t be used to appeal anymore. Being proven innocent is the only option left but it is apparently a very high standard.
In most places casinos can legally kick you out for counting cards.
There are only a couple states that do not allow casinos to discriminate against players based on skill.
I've read in the past that while marrying a cousin carries risks, it's generally no more dangerous than a couple having a child in their later years. The issue is that you must heavily scrutinize your ancestry to ensure that intermarriage hasn't happened recently and somehow make sure that it doesn't happen again among your descendants any time soon.
This is why it's impractical and regarded as unnecessarily dangerous.
And "cross cousins" (cousins whose parents are different sex siblings) have better genetic results than non-cross cousins (cousins whose parents sre same sex siblings).
@@wordforger My cousin and I have parents who were different sex siblings, but we'd have to be lesbians to want to get married, so it wouldn't matter anyway. Besides, everything about this would probably give her husband a heart attack, and we mustn't have that. lol
I made a playlist of my Legal Eagle reactions for you! th-cam.com/play/PLzKpRgRsZk7MpsIFnoxi4MAMcplxRl6wX.html
Don't know if this is true, but I heard a story once that Illinois used the same sales pitch to legalize the lottery back in the day: We'll use the proceeds for education!
And they did. They just didn't mention that they forecast the amount of revenue they would get from the lottery that year and reduced education funding accordingly. In other words, they hit whatever number they wanted to hit just the same if they had a lottery as if they didn't. Since they can plausibly claim every lottery dollar went to education, they didn't lie, but education funding never actually went up by the amount the lottery brought in.
States 8using lottery money for education (or any other specific thing) actually removes funding from education. Because if they didn't have the lottery money then it would be funded some other way; but because they have the lottery money coming in they take an equivalent amount out of the state budget and move it somewhere else. And then if they don't sell as many lottery tickets as expected? They don't re-fund education.
Florida Man here, child marriage is technically legal here, but the law was amended years ago. The new law has it at 17, but you need permission from the parents and a judge. Also, the older spouse can be only 1 year older.
At that point, why not just make the age limit a solid 18?
@phillipclearman859 ok, that makes more sense.
In reality people probably shouldn't get married until 25 or 30 lol but I don't see it becoming law. 18 or 21 is pretty solid
In Tennessee there is no age of consent for a female in a straight Christian marriage. The state goes crazy on legal issues if the marriage is a gay marriage or non Christian. Tennessee is the second state where it is common for an underage child to be convicted of a crime against their old husband in self defense. Females in the state of Tennessee are not allowed to carry or use a firearm until they are 18 unless they are married. There has been too many 8 to 12 years old girls shooting their 50 to 60 year old husbands because they don’t want to be raped anymore. In 2023 alone over 100 men ages from 55 to 65 were shot by their pre teen wives. Instead of sentencing the case to a rape defense the state tries to get these girls executed.
Tennessee is the number 1 state of pre-teen abortions and female suicide.
Because it’s Florida what else would you expect
Leagle Eagle + Mr Terry History + Dr Mike Would Be The Best Trio
You should watch “two days in Moore, Oklahoma’ it’s about the Moore tornadoes of 1999 and 2013 and it also talks about the history of Oklahoma.
In Michigan it is 1st Cousin once removed is okay.
You can't sleep with a 1st Cousin if he/she had Epilepsy, or Autism.
½ Cousin, and Adopted Cousin Marriage laws are unknown in Michigan.
No, he’s saying that people beyond menopause can marry their first cousins. That’s what he means by “beyond a certain age”. Either that or you prove there are no illnesses in your family that are likely to be passed on your offspring.
Casinos will only kick you out of the blackjack area and ban you permanently from aforementioned area
You should watch part 2 of the balkan steteotypes from Living Ironically in Europe
23:30
In my mind, A ruling of innocence is one of the most un-American things I’ve ever heard. It just sounds wrong to me; like saying one doesn’t have the right to pursue happiness; ridiculousness.
Is there any situation where an American can get a ruling of innocence?
Yes, but only by a judge. It's not done often, but it can especially happen in cases where someone has been imprisoned wrongly.
I feel like eyewitnesses are circumstantial too
The age thing with the cousin marrying - what he means by 'above a certain age, it's legal' in those states, he's talking about that the people have to be old enough that they are no longer fertile, and can't have children (the woman having gone through menopause). Not talking about child cousin marriage in the blue states.
I watched the closing arguments of the Casey Anthony case, and while I don't remember it well, I do remember feeling like the prosecution was practically forfeiting the case by how reliant they were on emotions instead of evidence. Meanwhile the defense was happy to finish them off.
Part of the reason the prosecution lost is that the police didn't even bother to investigate Caylee's grandfather (Casey's father), who had Sexually molested Casey. Which pretty much the deftion of reasonable doubt, another plausible perpetrator even worse one the police didn't even try to rule out.
I love when you react to Legal Eagle videos. Two of my favorite channels in one episode! I actually knew all of these were false, despite not actually having watched that video of his.
You don't have to go too far back in your family tree to find kissing cousins, and that goes for any human being on the planet.
I don’t know about card counting, but I know that the refusal of service is the basis of refusing a gay wedding cake to a gay couple. They can cite religious objection, whether it is true, or not, but it constitutes segregation. As customers who have done nothing wrong, they should not be forced to get their cake elsewhere.
Also, cars werent a thing a couple of decades ago. The only women you knew were cousins and sisters since you grew up far away from groups of people so it wasn't weird
I think most lotteries around the world are justified with it going to a good cause. In Norway, for example, there is a state monopoly on gambling, although some humanitarian organisations such as the Red Cross and Save the Children also run lotteries in a very limited amount - and children's sports clubs and culture clubs are allowed to run prize raffles. As for the state monopoly, all of the money goes to the funding of culture and sports for children, as well as non-profits
I have to laugh everytime an American infers or outright insists that you don't have a legal system built around class. The statistics say otherwise.
I'm only watching this for mr terry
On topic of wills: Will of king Bolesław III was one of more important wills in history. Basically to avoid brother killing war between his children he decided to divide the country, but after his sons dies their children don't inherit the land but it returns to land of the eldest son. Of course it failed and started a century of feudal desintegration of Poland
Julius Caesar's will sparked a civil war.
@@rcrawford42 True. That's why I said "one of more important", and not "the most important". Just sharing historical fun fact on historical channel
american justice system be like
mother who didn't report her own young child missing after ONE MONTH and has a car filled with spicy air wins in court
two teenagers (hated groube of people) robbed a private property (now that's a crime if i have ever heard of one) and got shot by a homemade mousetrap intended to kill homeinvaders goes to court and wins
Cousin marriage? The Ptolemys: "Hold our beer..."
Heck they even went for brother sister marriages. Crazy bunch.
I saw your video on the rap battles, just to note that you agreed with George Washington’s wig in that video but in reality he normally never wore a wig and had ginger hair.
In a couple of those states I wonder if the Amish are exempt from cousin marriage laws
I wonder if they care. Like how much do the Amish worry about the law of the surrounding areas?
Fun video. Legal Eagle is a good go to for reactions.
I used to like him but he went really political. Sad.
@@plmPissekatt Meh. I only hear him give Trump the business which is fair.
@@plmPissekatt it's impossible not to get "political" when discussing Constitutional and legal issues.
@@TupacemHe does show his political bias sometimes for jokes and stuff, but for the most part he stays apolitical when it comes to the informational parts.
@@plmPissekattthat mean that u are political too and most likely right winger if u weren't u wouldn't care
Gambling should not be illegal because technically owning a business and unprotected sex is gambling
I guess it depends on the country. Not everybody lives in the USA country and fortunately, I don't.
Huggbees made a similar one pertaining to Weird, Wacky laws of every state & that could be in your ally Professor, but the video is close to 1.5 to 2 hours long, so I don’t think you’ll be able to do it; unless time permits.
Weird he starts on about missing persons then goes to kidnapping which are two different things. What police officer would say to wait 24 hours to report a kidnapping? Missing persons can be different for each person. My sister goes missing and I would be the last to know but my mother.....well they well be doing a silver alert and if I go missing, my mother would being calling and they would not have little room to say anything other than to take it seriously as we have the same residents and take care of her (that's how I get paid).
I feel like you would enjoy the animation "This land is mine" by Nina Paley.
Just noticed that most of the named states are generally.... blue. Not saying coincidence.... but uuh you tell me if this is correlation or causation.
Missing person in the 📰 .
I mean, the Roosevelts were 6th cousins I think. That’s pretty far off the branch
5th cousins 🤫.
HEY! My state of Arkansas surprised me for once!
No Cousin lovin in Arkansas...
At least not legally...
Hey I had a great video idea on a alternate history on the Napoleonic wars but the zombie apocalypse video pretty cool right?
Legal protections against discrimination only apply for a protected class. People able to count cards are not considered a protected class. If a member of a protected class id counting cards it is still no protection as they are being refused service for counting cards and not for being a member of the protected class. All that is required is an affidavit for why the person was refused service.
Most people in the United States can read English. It's a much smaller percentage that can read legalese which is pretty much not English. Anyone know what preclusive means?
Can cops lie to you? I am not sure they can tell the truth.
great video!
Hey Mr. Terry! Would you mind checking out the new Ronald movie biopic with Dennis Quaid called “Reagan”? I’d love to see your reaction to it!
apparently it is genetically advantagious to marry a 3rd-5th cousin, now it sounds creepy but when was the last time you spoke to your 3rd cousin? xD
Being a hobby-genealogist, I can tell you that most people (at least those I've spoken to) don't know their third cousins (sharing 2x great grandparents). Frequently not even their 2nd cousins (sharing great grandparents). Especially in this day and age, where families are so spread out. I know the names of my 2nd cousins out on the coasts (I'm in the midwest), but I have never met them.
@@kisili7319 exactly XD not saying everyone should go find their 3rd cousin to marry, but its not as weird as it sounds, 2nd cousin? yeah a bit weird, just to close, but a 3rd cousin? thats farther away then you realize :o
I don't know took at lazerpigs new video "how to kill a god"
Might not get a reply from me, some days my brain doesn't relax so I don't respond as of that
While I like funding education, I strenuously object to legislating morality.
When it comes to gambling, it's often less "legislating morality" and more a question of protecting the public. Gambling produces the same sort of neurochemistry as other forms of addiction and the gambling industry has become VERY skilled at manipulating that to exploit people. They're also very prolific at pushing the line that it's "legislating morality" while contributing heavily to political campaigns.
@@Merennulli there’s an argument for legalizing drug use & other addictive activities. Libertarians that value maximizing freedom say there’s a freedom to self harm, because it’s a personal issue not a public interest. Just because some members of the public & government don’t think one should do something shouldn’t be sufficient to prevent one from doing it.
@@chemquests Except when those people become a drain on society because they are taking harmful actions to sustain their habit. I used to believe in libertarianism when I was young, but it simply doesn't work. There is value in restraining the growth of government and preferring individual freedoms, but letting people harm themselves in any way they please up until it harms others costs society a lot more than just helping others.
But libertarianism is utterly irrelevant here. Libertarianism doesn't promote exploiting people even if many self-claimed "Libertarians" do. And as I mentioned, the gambling industry exploits people. Even under Holmes' rather extreme phrasing, that's letting the fist swing well past the end of our noses.
@@Merennulli I don’t fully subscribe to liberatarianism, in the sense that I don’t value unfettered freedom for its own sake, but I’ll side with it on issues where folks are trying to impose their own beliefs of what I should or shouldn’t do to myself. The harmful things an addict, a business, or anyone else may do should be regulated; that’s a separate issue. I actually part ways with libertarians on small government; there’s all kinds of services it serves that I am willing to pay taxes for.
Well we now know for sure you're not an English teacher.
Would be a good idea to finish talking about a topic before resuming the video.
I can't believe people still react to this fraud that pretends to be a competent lawyer.
This is such a short bus channel
police should not be allowed to lie or deceive in any way during interrogations. no excuses.
So they could never use an undercover officer? What about an unmarked police car?
@@RLKmedic0315undercover is world of difference from a cop laying to you in antergation room, false saying you friend has confused to crime saying you is a co-conspirator
@@RLKmedic0315 I’m specifically talking about inside of interrogation rooms. If they have to lie, fabricate or deceive to get you on the crime, then they almost certainly didn’t have enough evidence in the first place.
It is ridiculously easy to manipulate people into saying things they know are untrue, even when it's harmful to them, just by lying to them about their situation. Frankly, testimony of the accused should never be accepted unless the accused had legal representation present.
Don't commit crime, you won't have to worry about the police lying to you.
Mr Terry
Your input regarding the Legal Eagle video was completely unnecessary to the value and educational benefit derived by the viewer. If you are unable to add to the subject matter, then please refrain from speaking.
- sj
Mr slickjack
Your comment regarding the Mr. Terry History video was completely unnecessary to the value and educational benefit derived by the viewer. If you are unable to add to the subject matter, then please refrain from commenting.
- tfl
Legal Eagle had horrible takes on the law. He lets his political biases show in everything.
Everyone has haters.
Just because someone has an opinion, even with politics, in no way makes their takes on the law horrible or wrong.