Subject: Re: [BoundaryPoint] Austria vs. the rest of the world in the Bodensee?
Date: Jan 10, 2005 @ 21:00
Author: aletheia kallos (aletheia kallos <aletheiak@...>)
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Wolfgang Schaub <Wolfgang.Schaub@...> wrote:

I can see now why Austria favors the condominium philosophy - it would
provide them a greater share of the lake.

But we still don't know which "philosophy" prevailed during the Anschluss
period.

 

true but again why would we even want to know that

surely you dont imagine it is relevant to finding the true atchde tripoint position or legal status today or ever

 

& in your ensuing train of thought i am still looking for the locomotive too 

or any motive at all for that matter

like what is your pleasure in this odd excursion anyway 

just strangeness for its own sake perhaps

well ok i guess i can vaguely appreciate that

 

but one cant necessarily agree with your conclusion or rather your terminal non sequitur about wet & dry real estate valuations

at least not in cases where exploitable resources are involved

 

nor can one necessarily see how any of this sheds any light on your chosen title or vice versa

 

but maybe we should just adopt an uncritical free pass or laissez faire approach to all nonsense now that you have embraced it so emphatically

after all bp does remain everyones land even if it is no longer just the multipointing society that discovered everyones land

so you undoubtedly have a right to be here & express yourself

& there is nothing that says you ever have to make sense

so please dont worry about any of this

but i guess what it boils down to is

do you actually want your thinking to be entertained or not

 

Has the late "Fuehrer" missed a point here? Had he adopted the
condominium philosophy in time he would have caused trouble to the Swiss,
which he was always looking for.

And what a pity that Liechtenstein does not make it to the shores of Lake
Constance! We would have a fourth party to gamble with.


It appears that regulating borders is more difficult when it faces fluid
materia. On solid ground we seem to have an easier play. An inverse
proportionality to the higher value that land has over water.

Wolfgang


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