What about if they don't?
If a code is a law, why the caveat?
You didn't want to fess up to the truth.
What about if they don't?
If a code is a law, why the caveat?
No actual response, eh? Cool cool
No you didn't respond to the questions I asked.
Some religious code is just moral code not worth adopting as law. There are different types of code.
DMSemantics first brings up dictionary definition on law, s himself, now brings up justicia link to change discussion to what is a law or code
Yeah, because they weren't relevant to your chinese-padlocking yourself.
The US Code obviously proves that codes and laws are totally different things. Jesus man, did you even go to law school?
You never understand context Philo because you only do driveby posting like many others here. You pop in, make a cute comment and wait for some +1s. That's about it for you.
No true code understanderer.
You're offering a digressing distraction, refusing to address the issue. Duly noted.
The phobe switches accounts, tries to re-enter the fray.
Meh, you never denied posting sexual slur on this board.
And you just repeat fallacy after fallacy.
I haven't had a reason to deny anything. I don't answer to phobes.
You're a phobe who used sexual slurs hundreds of times here.
lol DenialMC
No, I was repeating your example that just so happened to make the exact opposite point you were attempting to make.
You said a code is a set of laws.
so to summarize then:
Code = (set of laws)
and
Code = law
therefore
Law = code
Law = (set of laws)
Law = (set of codes)
Correct or not?
the inevitable result of any discussion with DMSemantics
You're a confessed phobe.
Care to take a stab at it or is sniping your only game?
define sniping
I missed one
Code = (set of codes)
All sniping or how I was using it in that sentence?
snip·ing
/ˈsnīpiNG/
noun
1.
the action of shooting at someone from a hiding place, especially accurately and at long range.
"sniping assumed great importance during WWI, especially where trench warfare was prevalent"
2.
the action of verbally attacking someone in a sly or petty way.
"there has been some sniping about inept leadership"
The 2nd version is what I was referring to.
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