Search This Blog

Showing posts with label civil death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil death. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Do you have privacy if you are dead

 According to the constitution, we have the right to life, liberty and security of person.  If a person is dead or declared a non-person, that person has no right to privacy.   Once you are dead, you no longer need security of person. 

Thus, if a person is physically dead or is a non-person (civil death) then there would be no reason for agencies like the public guardian and trustee not to share contact information.  I want to know if my neighbour is vulnerable.

And, once a person is said to be incapable under an enduring power of attorney and/or a section 9 representation agreement, the person is civilly dead and he has no right to privacy. 

The banks monitor their clients for abuse and so should neighbours.  

I would like to know if my neighbour has agency.  A non-person cannot make a contract.  

My definition of "neighbour" means globally.  

With privacy comes the death of historians:  how can history be written without access to information.






Saturday, July 1, 2023

No privacy when you are a non-person (incapable)

 When the state decides that a person is incapable, thus making the person a non-person, I want to know who that person is. That person has to be protected by the community at large.

 A non-person is a person that has no rights. Alluding that a non-person has rights is a fiction. It is a civil death. 

And according to common law, a non-person has no right to privacy, so there is no reason not to publish their names.  

-----


Blog Archive