I did read that definition and nowhere did I see the words "choose to be a slave".
In a definition of religion, nowhere does it say 'chose to be a certain religion', does that mean you can't chose to be part of a religion? Piss poor argument from you.
most people reading the GR understand that wasn't what Jesus was talking about. He wasn't suggesting it's okay to murder people if you don't mind being murdered (you'd know that given the context of his message).
If you read the Golden Rule, that's literally what results. What are the limits? Obvious it isn't do unto others what you would have others do unto you, because you've just said that some things are out of bounds. Therefore your governance ISN'T based on the Golden Rule, but one something else, which binds the Golden Rule to certain specific instances.
The common practice to get around that law is to merely regulate land use without physically taking it.
Actually the common practice to get around it is designate the land for public use when taking it.
The general definition of war doesn't require a state or organisation.
Yes it does.
Does the phrase "crimes against humanity" ring a bell? Murder is a crime, so how can a state commit crimes?
Are they charged with 'murder' or 'crimes against humanity'? You are making my point for me. The state CAN commit crimes if it violates international law which is above state law. And the US doesn't have to sign onto international law (in fact in most cases you don't SIGN anything... a lot of times its custom), the other states will designate what the international law is from their actions over the period of years of history and it will be judged binding on any state.
To use your favorite Nazi example, the Nuremburg trials were the assertion of a new international law on a country which had rejected it. Though it kind of helped in the implimentation that the Germans had been utterly destroyed in the war.
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