Below The Beltway

I believe in the free speech that liberals used to believe in, the economic freedom that conservatives used to believe in, and the personal freedom that America used to believe in.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · 2010 Elections, 2012 Election, Elections, Political Parties, Politics, Republicans

Below The Beltway · A Memo To Republicans From Your Suspicious Libertarian Friends RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I posted over at United Liberty:

Here we stand in 2010 and the Republicans are asking fiscal conservatives and libertarians to trust them again.

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me three times ? No, you’re going to have to prove it this time before I trust you.

Read the whole thing.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Ayn Rand, Individual Liberty, Movies

Below The Beltway · Atlas Shrugged Movie Update RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Reason took a trip to the set of the Atlas Shrugged movie and I must say it left me feeling more positive about the project than I was initially:

Let’s see what they come up with.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · 2010 Elections, Humor, Politics

Below The Beltway · I’m Basil Marceaux Dot Com Your Republican Candidate For Governor RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

He’s the new Internet sensation, he’s Basil Marceaux Dot Com:

The whole thing looks vaguely familiar:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Immigration, Individual Liberty, Politics

Below The Beltway · Reason’s Nick Gillespie Debates Author Of Arizona Immigration Law RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

An excellent debate from last week’s Stossel:

Watch the latest video at video.foxbusiness.com

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Freedom of Religion, Individual Liberty, Libertarians, Political Parties, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Wayne Allyn Root

Below The Beltway · Wayne Allyn Root: Religious Freedom And Property Rights ? Not For Them Muslims ! RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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I’ve written before about the questionable libertarian allegiances of Wayne Allyn Root, the LP’s 2008 Vice-President nominee and currently an At-Large member of the Libertarian National Committee. Now, Root is out with a blog post about the so-called “Ground Zero” Mosque that is anything but libertarian in it’s sentiments and it’s conclusions, and it should be of concern to anyone who thinks that Root represents the direction the Libertarian Party should take in the future.

Root starts out with the same sort of milquetoast paeans toward religious liberty and property rights that we saw in his book, but he quickly goes off in a direction that makes it clear that, on this issue, he is more in line with Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich than any Libertarian (or libertarian):

This proposed building of a mosque on hallowed ground is an ATROSITY towards America. To build a celebration of Islam within steps of 9/11 does nothing to increase religious freedom…it inspires hatred, divides our cultures, and increases the odds of violence and hate crimes. Common sense suggests this mosque, being built in this specific location, is NOT being built as a sign of friendship between Muslims and Americans…but rather as a sign of the lack of respect…a belief in our weakness…and an attempt to embarrass and belittle us. The financial district of Manhattan is not a residential area with a large number of Muslim residents for the mosque to serve. Therefore common sense suggests that the only possible reason to build it there (rather than in Brooklyn or Queens where there are large Muslim populations) is to show Muslim contempt for Americans by building a monument to Islam in the shadow of the site of their greatest triumph over America.

It is an offense to build a mosque in that location- an offense to all Americans (including Muslim Americans), all Christians and Jews, all relatives of 3000 dead heroes at the World Trade Center.

First of all, Root is just completely wrong on the facts here. The Cordoba House isn’t at all what he and the project’s critics have represented it to be:

The building’s planners, the American Society for Muslim Advancement and the Cordoba Initiative, have said it’s modeled on religious and community centers such as the YMCA, and that the 13-story, $100 million building would also include an arts center, gym and a swimming pool, as well as a mosque. It would be two blocks away from Ground Zero.

Two blocks away and nowhere within line of sight of the area where the attacks actually occurred.

The attempt by Root, Palin, Gingrich, and other opponents of this project to call this a “Ground Zero” mosque are therefore a complete misrepresentation of the location of the project. A misrepresentation obviously intended to lead people to think that a mosque is being built on the location of the World Trade Center rather than being constructed inside an already-existing decades old building as part of a larger project that would be open to the public as a whole. For that reason alone, Root’s appeals to emotionalism and the supposed “atrocity” that this project represents should be rejected as silly and, quite frankly, dishonest.

Root goes on:

Yes, private individuals and organizations have the right to build houses of worship with their own funds. But one has to wonder where the money is coming from to build a 15-story building on some of the most expensive real estate in the country. We Americans believe in the separation of Church and State. If it turns out that this project is sponsored by a foreign government — either directly or through a state-sponsored organization that engages in terrorism — than the idea of this being an issue of religious freedom is a sham and an argument can be made that our Constitution would actually prohibit this mosque from being built.

Except, of course, for the fact that there is no evidence that this is the case. More importantly, there is no connection between the organization that wants to establish the center and anyone associated with the September 11th attacks.

In the end, Root falls into the same anti-Muslim hole that Palin, Gingrich, and others have. All he’s really saying is that we can’t let them scary Muslims build what they want to in a building they own. While he doesn’t go as far as Gingrich and Palin in calling for government action to stop the project, he adopts the same attitude of religious intolerance and, for any libertarian, that’s just unacceptable.

Let’s contrast Root’s paean to fear-of-Muslims with something published this past weekend by Libertarian National Committee Interns Marissa Giannotta and Josh Roll:

The attacks on 9/11 and its victims should not be ignored, however, we cannot lay blame on the entire Islamic community for the terrible acts that occurred on that day.  The Islamic cultural center would be a great way for others to learn about Islam and ultimately build bridges between the United States and the Muslim World.  Islam by principle is not an extremist religion and not all Muslims should be portrayed in such way.

More importantly, those who have ownership of the site should have the freedom and the right to build what they wish.  Property rights should be respected as a right for all citizens, not just a few. Our platform clearly states, “The owners of property have the full right to control, use, dispose of, or in any manner enjoy, their property without interference, until and unless the exercise of their control infringes the valid rights of others.”  The Islamic cultural center does not infringe on the rights of others.

As Steven Chapman describes in his article at Reason, “Palin is not a slave to intellectual consistency. Change the church to a mosque, and put it a couple of blocks from the site of the World Trade Center, and she suddenly loses all patience with the rights of religious believers.”

Libertarian Party candidate for New York State Governor, Warren Redlich, also weighed in on the issue stating, “…I have asked some people if they would object if it was a synagogue, church, Jewish community center, or YMCA. All of them say that wouldn’t bother them. So the reason for opposing this facility is because it’s associated with the Muslim religion. That violates freedom of religion under the First Amendment.”

As Thomas Knapp notes, this is a litmus test for all libertarians (Big-L, or small-l):

If you don’t support private property rights and freedom of religion, you aren’t a libertarian.

Period.

Cordoba House, the project being fraudulently referred to as a “mosque” by those attempting to prevent its construction, is planned for construction on private property and with private funds.

The opponents of Cordoba House are attempting to stop its construction by persuading a government board to declare the building currenly standing at the project’s prospective location “historic” so that the owners can be forced to “preserve” it and forbidden to demolish it and build a structure more to their liking there.

The opponents of Cordoba House oppose private property rights. Their opposition to private property rights stems from their opposition to freedom of religion. They are, therefore, not libertarians.

That, Mr. Root, is libertarianism. Perhaps you’re in the wrong party.

Update: Jason Pye has weighed in with his own take:

Property rights and religious freedom are among the principles of a free society, basic liberties are supposed to be protected from the mob. To hear of anyone casting them aside is concerning. For a libertarian to do it is a betrayal of these core values that we are supposed to believe in.

Indeed.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Dumbasses, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Rush Limbaugh

Below The Beltway · Rush Limbaugh, Classless As Always RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

When I heard this on the road yesterday, I thought my ears decieved me, but they didn’t:

RUSH: We’re sitting here and since everybody is buzzing in Vietnam about Chelsea Clinton’s wedding, we are, too. We’re buzzing about Chelsea Clinton’s wedding. We’re wondering if there is a Lewinsky in Chelsea’s husband’s future. Greetings, and welcome back. Heh-heh-heh-heh-heh-heh. Open Line Friday, Rush Limbaugh. Let’s grab a phone call, since it’s Open Line Friday.

Rush, you’re an asshole.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul: We Have No Idea How We Got Here RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

H/T: United Liberty

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Blogging, Outside The Beltway

Below The Beltway · Meanwhile, Over At OTB RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I’ve had quite a few pieces that might be interesting over at Outside the Beltway this week, in case you’ve missed them:

  1. On Tuesday, I noted that Andrew Sullivan is continuing his bizarre obsession with Trig Palin’s birth;
  2. Yesterday, I dove into the Shirley Sherrod story;
  3. And today, I’ve got pieces up about JournoList, which seems to be much ado about nothing, and Newt Gingrich’s recent anti-Muslim rant.
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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · 2010 Elections, Elections, Politics, Virginia, Virginia Politics

Below The Beltway · Survey USA: Hurt Leads Pereillo By 23 Points In VA-05 RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Given how close the result was two years ago, most people expected the race in Virginia’s Fifth Congressional District to be close again this year. If this SurveyUSA poll is right, though, the race may already be over:

In an election for US House of Representatives in Virginia’s 5th Congressional District today, 07/20/10, Republican State Senator Robert Hurt defeats incumbent Democrat Tom Perriello 58% to 35%, according to this latest exclusive WDBJ-TV poll conducted by SurveyUSA.

The seat is one of many Republicans hope to capture in November 2010. 39 “take-aways” are needed for Republicans to capture control of the US House of Representatives.

Perriello, who defeated 6-term Republican Virgil Goode by 727 votes in 2008, today trails among most demographic groups. Among men, Hurt leads by 19 points. Among women, Hurt leads by 26. White voters back Hurt 2:1; black voters back Perriello 2:1. Twice as many Democrats cross over to vote Republican as Republicans who cross over to vote Democrat. Independents break Republican. Perriello runs most strongly among Democrats, African Americans, liberals, moderates, those who have unfavorable opinions of the Tea Party movement, among pro-choice voters, and among those who do not own guns … each of which is today a minority among likely voters in VA’s 5th district.

The composition of likely voters for this survey is 42% Republican, 27% Democratic. This composition reflects an energized Republican base and an enthusiasm gap for Democrats, evident in SurveyUSA polling from around the country. If the electorate is more Democratic than shown in SurveyUSA’s model here, the Republican still wins, though his margin of victory is less. For example, if hypothetically there were an even number of Democrats and Republicans in the likely voter model, Republican challenger Hurt wins today by 11 points, not 23.

The one flaw in this poll may be the composition of the sample, but considering that  Bob McDonnell defeated Creigh Deeds by 41,614 votes in this district in 2009, it may not be that far off.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Dumbasses

Below The Beltway · Today’s Most Hated Person RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I introduce you to Cathryn Cordyack Washington:

Animal cruelty charges have been obtained against a woman whose dog died from being left in a car in 104-degree heat July 6, according to charging documents filed in Frederick County District Court.

A summons has been issued charging Cathryn Cordyack Washington, 67, of Fairmont, W.Va., with two cruelty charges for failing to provide adequate food, water and shelter and infliction of unnecessary suffering and pain, documents state.

Harold Domer, director of Frederick County Animal Control, said the investigation by Sgt. David Luckenbaugh found that Washington arrived at the Frederick Costco parking lot about 9:30 a.m. and found that the store did not open until 10 a.m.

Once the store opened, she left her 14-year-old yellow Labrador retriever, Delta, in the car and shopped until about 11:15 a.m.

When Washington returned to her car, she found Delta in distress and the dog died, Domer said.

Washington then went back into the store and returned dog products she had purchased, he said

Ma’am, your dog was more of a human being than you’ll ever be.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Baseball, New York Yankees, Sports

Below The Beltway · Yankees Win One For Shep And The Boss RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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Last night was the first game at Yankee Stadium since the deaths of Bob Shepard and George Steinbrenner and, it was, understandably, an emotional night:

As Yankee Stadium fell silent early Friday evening, Frank Sinatra’s voice wafted over the loudspeakers. Sinatra was singing “My Way,” a tune that George Steinbrenner no doubt knew well and with which he surely identified.

No one did it quite the way Steinbrenner did in his 37 years as the principal owner of the Yankees, and Sinatra’s song provided a fitting introduction for a 20-minute pregame ceremony that honored both Steinbrenner, who died Tuesday, and the team’s longtime public-address announcer Bob Sheppard, who died two days before Steinbrenner.

By the end of the night, the somber mood had dissipated, giving way to the rhythms of a stirring game between the best teams in the American League. Because he lived in Tampa, Fla., Steinbrenner took special joy in beating the Rays, and the Yankees honored him with a 5-4 comeback victory.

“Another one of those special moments at Yankee Stadium,” said Derek Jeter, the Yankees’ captain.

The Yankees, who trailed by 3-1 heading into the sixth and by 4-3 entering the eighth, won when Nick Swisher, whose homer an inning earlier tied the score, ripped a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth off Lance Cormier. Swisher’s hit scored Curtis Granderson, who led off with a single and moved to second on a sacrifice. After Granderson slid home, the Yankees mobbed Swisher, chasing him into right field. Perhaps the only thing Steinbrenner adored more than his Yankees was Ohio State. Swisher, a proud Buckeye, felt the same way.

“I think pretty much the agenda today was to win,” Swisher said. “That was what Mr. Steinbrenner would have wanted us to do.”

Today is Old Timer’s Day, so I’m sure the tributes will continue as will, hopefully, the winning.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul: Lies, Damn Lies, And Government Statistics RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Bob McDonnell, Virginia, Virginia Politics

Below The Beltway · Bob McDonnell Turns A $ 1.8 Billion Deficit Into A $ 220 Million Surplus RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Finally some good news in the Old Dominion:

RICHMOND- Governor Bob McDonnell announced today that the Commonwealth of Virginia has posted a preliminary revenue surplus at the conclusion of the 2010 fiscal year on June 30th. The Governor estimated the surplus, after miscellaneous interest payments are distributed, will be at least $220 million. The primary source of the surplus comes from individual withholding and non-withholding and corporate income tax receipts. As of January, the Commonwealth faced a $1.8 billion budget shortfall for the remainder of FY 2010. Working together, Governor McDonnell and the General Assembly closed this shortfall during the 2010 legislative session.

The final figure for the surplus will be made official in August when all year-end adjustments are made and the Governor appears before the joint money committees of the General Assembly. Today’s announcement comes just months after the Commonwealth’s budget shortfall of $4.2 billion in the FY 2011/2012 budget was also closed through spending reductions, without a tax increase.

Speaking about the financial turnaround, the Governor noted, “Just six months ago we faced a $1.8 billion shortfall in Virginia’s budget for the remainder of Fiscal Year 2010. When the General Assembly convened I made it clear that we would not balance Virginia’s budget by making it harder for Virginians to balance their own. Through bipartisan cooperation we made tough realistic decisions and closed that shortfall without a tax increase. We continued this work by addressing the unprecedented $4.2 billion shortfall in the Fiscal Year 2011/2012 budget, the spending document that has just gone into effect, in the same manner. We have reduced state spending in this new biennium to 2006 levels. At the same time we put in place funding for a number of job-creating incentives and programs that are already helping us attract new employers to the Commonwealth.”

The Governor continued, “After some necessary adjustments and disbursements that still must take place, I believe the official surplus at the conclusion of FY 2010 will be at least $220 million. The majority of the surplus is already dedicated within the budget to a number of areas. One of those is to fund a one-time non-recurring 3% December bonus for Virginia’s state employees. Our state employees have worked without any increase in pay for nearly four years. This session of the General Assembly, I proposed a plan supported by Democrats and Republicans to incentivize state employees to save state dollars at the fiscal year-end, and receive an incremental bonus of up to 3% if a surplus was achieved. For too long the unfortunate standard procedure in state government has been for agencies to spend down all appropriated funds to zero prior to the ending of the fiscal year. We successfully changed that model by implementing private sector principles of rewarding fiscal discipline and sound management of scarce resources. State employees were successful in identifying more than $28 million in savings, and I thank them for their efforts and their dedication to our Commonwealth.”

“Another area benefiting from the revenue surplus will be our local school districts. They will gain an additional $18 million in funding from surplus dollars derived from an increase in sales tax collections. It has been a tough budget for public education, and this unanticipated funding increase should prove positive for our schoolchildren.”

“In addition to these obligations, 10% of the surplus dollars, or $22 million, will be set aside, in accordance with budgetary requirements, for Virginia’s Water Quality Fund, helping the Commonwealth in our continuing efforts to clean up the Chesapeake Bay. I’m pleased that this surplus puts us on track to make the first deposit into the Transportation Trust Fund of 67% of all undesignated fund balances as required by the 2007 statute.  The allocation of the remainder of the surplus will be determined in the weeks ahead in accordance with statutory requirements and final financial calculations.”

The Governor concluded, “This is a positive development for our state, but this continues to be a very tough economy. Virginia workers, families and business owners are all tightening their belts. So is Virginia state government. Through reducing spending and making tough choices we have closed historic budget shortfalls without tax increases, and run a surplus. This work has positioned Virginia to be a national leader in job creation and economic growth in the years ahead.”

Good work, Governor !

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Baseball, New York Yankees, Sports

Below The Beltway · Yankees Owner George Steinbrenner Dies RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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It’s been known for some time that George Steinbrenner was in bad health, but the news today of his death in Florida is nonetheless sad and shocking:

George Steinbrenner, who bought a declining Yankees team in 1973, promised to stay out of its daily affairs and then, in an often tumultuous reign, placed his formidable stamp on 7 World Series championship teams, 11 pennant winners and a sporting world powerhouse valued at perhaps $1.6 billion, died Tuesday morning. He was 80 and lived in Tampa, Fla.

“He was an incredible and charitable man,” the family said in a statement.

“He was a visionary and a giant in the world of sports. He took a great but struggling franchise and turned it into a champion again.”

Steinbrenner’s death came nine months after the Yankees won their first World Series title since 2000, clinching their six-game victory over the Philadelphia Phillies at his new Yankee Stadium.

Steinbrenner had been in failing health for the past several years and had rarely appeared in public. He attended the opening game at the new stadium in April 2009, sitting in his suite with his wife, Joan. When he was introduced and received an ovation, his shoulders shook and he cried.

He next appeared at the Yankees’ new home for the first two games of the World Series, then made his final appearance at the 2010 home opener, when Manager Joe Girardi and shortstop Derek Jeter, the team captain, came to his suite to present him with his 2009 World Series championship ring.

(…)

Steinbrenner was the central figure in a syndicate that bought the Yankees from CBS for $10 million. When he arrived in New York on Jan. 3, 1973, he said he would not “be active in the day-to-day operations of the club at all.” Having made his money as head of the Cleveland-based American Shipbuilding Company, he declared, “I’ll stick to building ships.”

But four months later, Michael Burke, who had been running the Yankees for CBS and had stayed on to help manage the franchise, departed after clashing with Steinbrenner. John McMullen, a minority owner in the syndicate, soon remarked that “nothing is as limited as being a limited partner of George’s.”

Steinbrenner emerged as one of the most powerful, influential and, in the eyes of many, notorious executives in sports. He was the senior club owner in baseball at his death, the man known as the Boss.

A pioneer of modern sports ownership, Steinbrenner started the wave of high spending for playing talent when free agency arrived in the mid-1970s, and he continued to spend freely through the Yankees’ revival in the late ’70s and early ’80s, the long stretch without a pennant and then renewed triumphs under Torre and General Manager Brian Cashman.

The Yankees’ approximately $210 million payroll in 2009 dwarfed all others in baseball, and the team paid out millions in baseball’s luxury tax and revenue-sharing with small-market teams.

In the frenetic ’70s and ’80s, when general managers, field managers and pitching coaches were sent spinning through Steinbrenner’s revolving personnel door (Billy Martin had five stints as manager), the franchise became known as the Bronx Zoo. In December 2002, Steinbrenner’s enterprise had grown so rich that the president of the Boston Red Sox, Larry Lucchino, frustrated over losing the pitcher Jose Contreras to the Yankees, called them the “evil empire.”

But Steinbrenner and the Yankees thrived through all the arguments, all the turmoil, all the bombast. Having been without a pennant since 1964 when Steinbrenner bought them, enduring sagging attendance while the upstart Mets thrived, the Yankees once again became America’s marquee sporting franchise.

And brought seven World Series titles to the Bronx in the process.

There’s a lot to say about a guy like Steinbrenner. As a young baseball fan in the 70s and 80s, I remember being alternatively thrilled with him and pissed at him depending on the impact of his sometimes micro-managing of the team. Back to back World Series wins in 1977 and 1978, followed by a disappointing loss to the Dodgers in 1981, were the good days. But there was also a part of Steinbrenner’s tenure that was less than successful, and the drought from 1982 to 1995 is one that every Yankee fan remembers well.

And then there were the feuds. Billy Martin. Reggie Jackson. Dave Winfield. Joe Torre.

At one point or another, they all feuded with The Boss and, usually, Steinbrenner was the bad guy in the public narrative. But, flaws and all, he was a guy who loved the Yankees and wanted to win, and that much we could appreciate.

As was once said under very different circumstances, he may have been a son of a bitch sometimes, but he was our son of a bitch.

Rest in peace, George.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · George W Bush, Individual Liberty, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, War On Terror

Below The Beltway · Judge Napolitano: Bush & Cheney Should Have Been Indicted RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Well, you sure don’t hear this from your typical Fox News contributor:

NADER: What’s the sanction for President Bush and Vice President Cheney? [...]

NAPOLITANO: They should have been indicted. They absolutely should have been indicted for torturing, for spying, for arresting without warrants. I’d like to say they should be indicted for lying but believe it or not, unless you’re under oath, lying is not a crime. At least not an indictable crime. It’s a moral crime.

NADER: So you think George W. Bush and Dick Cheney should even though they’ve left office, they haven’t escaped the criminal laws, they should be indicted and prosecuted?

NAPOLITANO: The evidence in this book and in others, our colleague the great Vincent Bugliosi has amassed an incredible amount of evidence. The purpose of this book was not to amass that evidence but I do discuss it, is overwhelming when you compare it to the level of evidence required for a normal indictment that George W. Bush as President and Dick Cheney as Vice President participated in criminal conspiracies to violate the federal law and the guaranteed civil liberties of hundreds, maybe thousands of human beings.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Immigration, Individual Liberty

Below The Beltway · Lou Dobbs Doesn’t Believe Illegal Immigrants Have Natural Rights RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I always knew Lou Dobbs was an ass, this just proves it:

Watch the latest video at video.foxbusiness.com

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Sarah Palin

Below The Beltway · If She Can’t Handle Bill O’Reilly……. RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Sarah Palin’s appearance on The O’Reilly Factor was, well, interesting:

Also, over at OTB I wrote this morning about what really looks like the beginnings of Sarah Palin’s campaign for the White House.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Baseball, New York Yankees, Sports

Below The Beltway · Voice Of The Yankees Dies At 99 RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Bob Sheppard, who was the public address announcer at Yankee Stadium for nearly sixty years died today just a few weeks short of his 100th birthday:

Bob Sheppard, whose elegant intonation as the public-address announcer at Yankee Stadium for more than half a century personified the image of Yankee grandeur, died Sunday at his home in Baldwin, on Long Island. He was 99.

His death was confirmed by his son, Paul.

From the last days of DiMaggio through the primes of Mantle, Berra, Jackson and Jeter, Sheppard’s precise, resonant, even Olympian elocution — he was sometimes called the Voice of God — greeted Yankee fans with the words, “Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Yankee Stadium.”

“The Yankees and Bob Sheppard were a marriage made in heaven,” said his son Paul Sheppard, a 71-year-old financial adviser. “I know St. Peter will now recruit him. If you’re lucky enough to go to heaven, you’ll be greeted by a voice, saying, ‘Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to heaven!’ ”

In an era of blaring stadium music, of public-address announcers styling themselves as entertainers and cheerleaders, Sheppard, a man with a passion for poetry and Shakespeare, shunned hyperbole.

“A public-address announcer should be clear, concise, correct,” he said. “He should not be colorful, cute or comic.”

Sheppard was also the public-address announcer for the football Giants from 1956 through 2005, first at Yankee Stadium and then at Giants Stadium in the Meadowlands.

He signed a new two-year contract with the Yankees in March 2008 but was not at the stadium that season, when he was recovering from illness that brought a severe weight loss. His longtime backup, Jim Hall, replaced him.

Sheppard did not feel strong enough to attend the ceremonies marking the final game at the old Yankee Stadium on Sept. 21, 2008, but he announced the Yankee starting lineup that night in a tape recording. During the season, his recorded voice had introduced Derek Jeter at the plate, a touch the Yankee captain requested to honor Sheppard

If you’ve been to Yankee Stadium, it’s hard to forget Sheppard’s voice echoing through the place, he’ll be missed.

Here’s a video of his announcement of that final lineup at the House That Ruth Built:

And here’s a tribute video the Yankees did in 2000 for Bob Sheppard Day:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · In The News, Sports

Below The Beltway · Reason TV: LeBron James Isn’t The Only One Getting The Hell Out Of Cleveland RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Political Parties, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Republicans, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul Talks About His Support Of Michael Steele RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Watch CBS News Videos Online

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul: Time To Cut Military Spending RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

From earlier this week on CNN:

Part One:

Part Two:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · History, Individual Liberty, U.S. Constitution

Below The Beltway · The Case Against Nullification RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

The once discredited idea of nullification, the idea that the individual states have the authority to nullify Federal laws inconsistent with the Constitution, is making a comeback thanks largely to a new book entitled Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century by Thomas Woods. Today, over at The Volokh Conspiracy, law professor Randy Barnett casts a very skeptical eye on Woods’ argument:

While there are some interesting structural arguments to be made on behalf of a power of nullification, of course it is not recognized by the text. And my doubts that it was thought by the founders to be a power reserved to the states is fueled by James Madison’s famed Report of 1800 in which he defended the Virginia Resolution objecting to the constitutionality of the Aliens and Sedition Act. I include a lengthy excerpt from Madison’s report in my casebook, including this telling passage near the end. (So readers have the full context, I include the paragraphs in full while putting in bold the more crucial language):

Nor can the declarations of either [the citizens or the legislature of Virginia], whether affirming or denying the constitutionality of measures of the Federal Government, or whether made before or after judicial decisions thereon, be deemed, in any point of view, an assumption of the office of the judge. The declarations, in such cases, are expressions of opinion, unaccompanied with any other effect than what they may produce on opinion, by exciting reflection. The expositions of the judiciary, on the other hand, are carried into immediate effect by force. The former may lead to a change in the legislative expression of the general will; possibly to a change in the opinion of the judiciary; the latter enforces the general will, whilst that will and that opinion continue unchanged.And if there be no impropriety in declaring the unconstitutionality of proceedings in the Federal Government, where can be the impropriety of communicating the declaration to other states, and inviting their concurrence in a like declaration? What is allowable for one, must be allowable for all; and a free communication among the states, where the Constitution imposes no restraint, is as allowable among the state governments as among other public bodies or private citizens. This consideration derives a weight, that cannot be denied to it, from the relation of the state legislatures to the federal legislature, as the immediate constituents of one of its branches. . . .

I realize this is only one statement by one founder. But if James Madison’s most famous defense of the earliest alleged act of state nullification expressly denies, or at minimum equivocates about whether, there is a literal power of nullification in states, then I would need to see pretty compelling evidence of original meaning to the contrary. And recall that no other state supported the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions. Indeed, Madison’s report was written to respond to criticisms lodged against the effort.

Indeed, if the man who pretty much wrote the Constitution and the Bill of Rights didn’t believe that there was a nullification power inherent in state authority, then that would seem to me to argue pretty succinctly that nullification is a bankrupt constitutional doctrine.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Dumbasses, Religion

Below The Beltway · Church Members Sue When Doomsday Fails To Arrive RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Somehow, I think that stupidity will be a complete defense to this claim of fraud:

One of two civil claims brought against religious group Agape Ministries may be settled out of court, a lawyer has told the Adelaide District Court.

One of the plaintiffs cannot be named because of a temporary suppression order.

That plaintiff and another former church member, Martin Penney, are suing pastor Rocco Leo and two of his associates, Joe Venziano and Mari-Antionette Veneziano.

They want their money back, claiming they handed over more than $400,000 and $1 million respectively to the church based on lies about a doomsday scenario.

How does that saying go ?

A fool and his money are soon parted.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Foreign Affairs, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul On Michael Steele And Afghanistan RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Ron Paul is one of the few Republicans supporting Michael Steele’s statements on Afghanistan:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · History, Individual Liberty

Below The Beltway · Thoughts On Independence Day RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

A re-post from last year, but still worth reading today:


Two Hundred Thirty Two Years Ago, Thomas Jefferson wrote the following:

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new guards for their future security. Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world.

And so the men of 1776 rebelled against King George III, citing as examples numerous examples of his usurpation of the rights of man. And, quite honestly, given the historical record and the example of dictators far worse than George III that history has produced, one might sometimes wonder if the colonials were overreacting. After all, it’s not as if King George had authorized usurped legal authority to conduct surveillance on his own citizens, or conducted a war based on false assumptions, pardoned a close aide, taken property from one citizen and given it to another, or restricted people’s ability to earn a living in their chosen profession. Heck, when you look at the taxes that led the colonialists to rebel and compare them to what gets taken out of your paycheck every week, its hard to understand what they were so upset about.

Seriously, the lesson of 1776 isn’t so much that George III was a good guy, but that we’ve forgotten the warning of Thomas Jefferson that

[T]he price of liberty is eternal vigilence.

We’ve let freedom be eroded, little by little, to the point where the idea of the state being allowed to put surveillance cameras on street corners to “watch” us seems natural. We’ve let privacy become a charade to the point where the Social Security Number has in fact become the National ID that it’s advocates promised it never would become. We’ve let government involvement in the economy expand to the point where a trillion dollars in tax collections seems like a trivial amount.

We’ve become the frog in the slowly boiling pot of water.

The question, then, is when does it become enough ? When will the American people finally wake up and realize that their liberties are being eroded on a daily basis ? And, where are the heirs of Jefferson ?

Further Reading:

James Joyner fisks The Declaration of Independence

And you should also check out something that Rick Moran did a few years ago, a three-day “liveblog” of the Continental Congress.

  1. The vote for independence
  2. Discussions on the text of the Declaration
  3. The approval of the Declaration

That one is worth reading in full.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Blogging, News About The Site

Below The Beltway · Five Years And Counting At Below The Beltway RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

It was five years ago today that I first dipped my toes into the blogosphere.

It’s been a fun four years, and despite a haitus here and there, I’m pretty pleased that I’ve been able to make this enough of a regular thing that over 1.8 million people have seen fit to stop by. Of course, I’m not doing most of my political blogging over at Outside The Beltway but that doesn’t mean I’ve forgotten about this place. Stay tuned, because I’ve got a few ideas to share……..

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Barack Obama, Blogging, Health Care Reform, Ken Cuccinelli, Outside The Beltway, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Virginia, Virginia Politics

Below The Beltway · Ken Cuccinelli’s ObamaCare Lawsuit Hits The Courtroom RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Yesterday actually, and I’ve got my write-up about it over at Outside The Beltway.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · England, Foreign Affairs, Individual Liberty

Below The Beltway · Nick Clegg: Restoring Freedom To Britain RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Great Britain’s new Deputy Prime Minister announces an interesting initiative:

Now this is a European idea I wouldn’t mind seeing brought to America.

We’re working to create a more open and less intrusive society through our Programme for Government. We want to restore Britain’s traditions of freedom and fairness, and free our society of unnecessary laws and regulations – both for individuals and businesses.

This site gives you the chance to submit, comment on, or vote for ideas about how we can do this. Your ideas will inform government policy and some of your proposals could end up making it into bills we bring before Parliament to change the law.

So if there are any laws or regulations you’d like us to do away with, then submit your idea. If you see ideas here already that you like the look of, then rate them and get them moved up the list. And if there’s more you’d like to say, then talk to others in the comments section for each proposal.

It’s time to have your say. After all – it’s your freedom.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul And Judge Napolitano Talk Financial “Reform” RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Foreign Affairs, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul: End The War In Afghanistan RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Sounds good to me:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Barack Obama, Obama Derangement Syndrome, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Quote Of The Day

Below The Beltway · Quote Of The Day: Closing Of The Political Mind Edition RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Rick Moran has a conversation with himself and diagnosis what is wrong with political discourse in this country:

It got to the point last week, after reading the usual nonsense from many conservatives about how Obama is deliberately trying to “destroy” the country, or is a Marxist, or wants to be a dictator, or is favoring Muslims in the Middle East because he actually is one, or is plotting to cancel the elections in November, or wasn’t born here/not a naturalized citizen/Hawaiian official says he was born in Kenya/yadayadayadayada…that I nearly screamed

STOP THE MADNESS!

Jesus lord God I get nauseated reading this crap. And in my two jobs, I have to read it all the time. Comments, articles, emails – it never stops. Conspiracies, falsehoods, batshit crazy observations, wildly off base dot connecting, Cloward-Piven, Rules for Radicals — a never ending flood of idiocy, illogic, unreasoning hatred, and just plain ignorance from people who tell me I am insufficiently passionate in my opposition to Obama and the liberals and am therefore on their side.

It’s like the previous 8 years of putting up with the exact same crap from liberals about George Bush never happened.

The. Exact. Same. Crap.

Bush the dictator. Bush trying to destroy the country. Bush policies formulated only to help cronies. Don’t these people remember how we laughed at that kind of stupidity? And now, it looks like I have to put up with the same damn ignorant tripe for another 8 years.

And you could go back further than that and say that what we’re seeing today isn’t just a repeat of the opposition during the Bush years, but also a repeat of the opposition during the Clinton years.

So far, I’ve lived through two Presidents who, according to their opponents, were going to “destroy America,” “sell us out to our enemies,” or “cancel elections and declare martial law.”

We made it through just fine for the most part, so I’m thinking we’ll be okay come 2013, or 2017.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Economics, Individual Liberty, Politics

Below The Beltway · Another Classic Rant From Rick Santelli: Stop Spending, Stop Spending, Stop Sending RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

The guy who set the fire that started the Tea Party Movement was in rare form again this morning:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Sarah Palin

Below The Beltway · Virginia Bloggers Kicked Out Of Freedom Fest When Sarah Palin Takes The Stage RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Bearing Drift’s J.R. Hoeft and Brian Kirwin were live blogging the Freedom Fest event in Hampton Roads yesterday, when this happened:

8:28: J.R. Hoeft: Sekulow introducing Palin – applauding her discipline and decisiveness.

8:29: Brian K: Sarah Palin hits the stage to a standing o

8:31: Brian K:  Sarah cheers the Lady Monarchs. Good choice

8:34:J.R. Hoeft: We’re being kicked out. So much for transparency.

Brian Kirwin responds in a comment:

It was pretty funny at the time to me. Sarah was giving boilerplate rhetoric from a written speech. Nothing wrong with that, but what is there to fear by having someone type online some reactions to what you’re saying?

They didn’t kick out the press. They made bloggers from the biggest conservative blog in the state shut down laptops.

We had been told “no video and no audio” – big deal. All I was doing was typing an occasional comment, mostly about what the crowd reaction was.

Palin’s rules, and make no mistake about it, they were her rules as a contracted speaker, made her look like Nixon in drag.

It’s one thing to slap the “lamestream media” and they deserve it. But this was a bit heavyhanded to tell two volunteers with keyboards to stop typing.

And pretty lame, too.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Afghanistan, Foreign Affairs

Below The Beltway · War Blogging RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

A few Afghanistan-related items from my today over at OTB:

Americans Growing Weary Of Endless War

and

Endless War Causing Trouble At The Top ?

Also, to complete the trifecta, something from last week:

The Real News From The McChrystal Interview: The Troops Aren’t Happy

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Individual Liberty, Political Parties, Politics, Republicans

Below The Beltway · Texas Republican Liberty Caucus Denounces Anti-Gay Planks In Party Platform RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Fortunately, not every Republican in Texas is an anti-gay bigot:

AUSTIN, TX – At the state Republican convention earlier this month, Texas Republicans opted to abandon the Republican tradition of respecting the Constitution and protecting individual liberty and privacy rights by adopting a platform which includes planks attacking the civil liberties of certain Texans.

The platform advocates policies which would make it a felony to perform a same-sex marriage in Texas, which would re-criminalize sodomy and which would take away the rights of gay parents in custody cases. These proposals are contrary to the values of most Texans and run counter to the Republican tradition of vigorously defending individual liberty.

The Republican Liberty Caucus strongly opposes the Texas GOP platform’s anti-gay and anti-liberty planks. We call for the state party to take action to address this problem. While it may not be possible to repeal or change the party platform, the state leadership should issue a clear statement that the platform is non-binding and does not represent the core, shared beliefs of Texas Republicans or of our candidates.

In a year in which we are looking forward to extraordinary opportunities for a great slate of Republican candidates in Texas, it would be a terrible mistake to shackle them to a platform which will alienate many potential supporters. This platform will weaken the party at a time when a strong coalition of Republicans and independents is needed to stop the radical agenda of Democrats in both Austin and Washington.

“We need to focus on keeping the government out of our pocketbooks; especially in Texas,” said Texas RLC Chairman, Joey Dauben of Ellis County. “There are far more pressing problems for the GOP in our state to worry about. While I personally disagree with same-sex marriage from a Biblical perspective, marriage is a contract between individuals and God, not with the government. If we want government out of our wallets and our boardrooms, we should also keep government out of our churches and our bedrooms.”

The Republican Liberty Caucus believes that cutting government spending is more important than wasting our limited resources on policies that open Texas to lawsuits and treat some citizens in a different manner than other citizens. Texas RLC members believe divisive social issues should be put on the back burner and instead the focus should be on solving real problems.

We call on the state party to send a clear message to voters that the this platform does not represent the highest ideals of our party and that as a party we support individual liberty and equal rights for all Texans.

Good for them.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Barack Obama, Politicos & Pundits, Politics, Ron Paul

Below The Beltway · Ron Paul On The Oil Spill Crisis And The Drilling Ban RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Barack Obama, Obama Derangement Syndrome, Politicos & Pundits, Politics

Below The Beltway · Congressman Steve King (R., Iowa): “There’s One Birth Certificate We Haven’t Seen” RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Congressman Steve King, who last made news when he said that Barack Obama favors black people, has now come out as a birther:

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Individual Liberty

Below The Beltway · Americans Love Their Country, Fear Their Government RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

At least that’s what the latest Rasmussen Poll seems to say:

Nearly half of American Adults see the government today as a threat to individual rights rather than a protector of those rights.

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 48% of Adults see the government today as a threat to rights. Thirty-seven percent (37%) hold the opposite view. Fifteen percent (15%) are undecided.

Most Republicans (74%) and unaffiliateds (51%) consider the government to be a threat to individual rights. Most Democrats (64%) regard the government as a protector of rights.

Additionally, most Americans (52%) say it is more important for the government to protect individual rights than to promote economic growth. Just 31% say promoting economic growth is more important. But again a sizable number (17%) of Adults aren’t sure which is more important.

Somewhere, the Founders are smiling.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Individual Liberty, Property Rights

Below The Beltway · Kelo, Five Years Later RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

It was five years ago today, that the Supreme Court issued it’s decision in Kelo v. City of New London

In 1998 the pharmaceutical company Pfizer announced plans to build a giant new research and development center in New London, Connecticut. As part of the deal, city officials agreed to clear out neighboring property owners via eminent domain, giving a private developer space to build a fancy new hotel, apartment buildings, and office towers to complement the corporate facility. Five years ago today, in Kelo v. City of New London, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld this seizure of private property because it was part of a “comprehensive redevelopment plan” that would provide “appreciable benefits to the community.”

Basically, the City of New London, Connecticut sought to redevelop an older  neighborhood in hopes of increasing the city’s tax base. The City didid this by entering into a development deal with the politically powerful Pfizer Corporation for the expansion of Pfizer’s property in the city and the creation of a business conference center. Several property owners refused to sell to the city, one of them being Susette Kelo. As a result, the  New London Development Corporation initiated condemnation proceedings against Kelo and the remaining property owners and the case made it’s way through the Court system and, of course, Susette Kelo ultimately lost her bid to protect her property. Then, the ultimate ironic injustice occurred this past November when Pfzier announced that they were abandoning the property that had been condemned, including the lot that had once contained Suzette Kelo’s house.

The reaction to the decision was swift and severe, with condemnations coming from both sides of the political aisle, and five years later the Kelo case has had the ironic benefit of spurring many states to limit the use of eminent domain:

•    43 states have passed either constitutional amendments or statutes that reformed their eminent domain laws to better protect private property rights.  Although the quality and type of reform varies, the bottom line is that virtually all of the reforms amount to net increases in protections for property owners faced with eminent domain abuse.  (For a state-by-state grading of all state eminent domain reforms, see:  http://castlecoalition.org/57.)

•    Nine state high courts restricted the use of eminent domain for private development while only one (New York) has so far refused to do so.

•    Kelo educated the public about eminent domain abuse, and polls consistently show that Americans are overwhelmingly opposed to Kelo and support efforts to change the law to better protect property rights.  Among the most-recent surveys was one conducted by the Associated Press, which found 87 percent of respondents said government shouldn’t have the power of eminent domain for redevelopment, 75 percent opposed government taking private property and handing it over to a developer, and 88 percent of respondents said property rights are just as important as freedom of speech and religion.

•    Citizen activists defeated at least 44 projects that sought to abuse eminent domain for private gain in the five-year period since Kelo.

As the Institute for Justice, a libertarian legal group that handled Susette Kelo’s defense, puts it:

“This significant public opposition to eminent domain abuse led to a complete change in the public’s view on this issue,” said Christina Walsh, IJ’s director of activism and coalitions.  “Although public officials, planners and developers in the past could keep condemnations for private gain under the public’s radar screen and thus usually get away with the seizure of homes and small businesses, that is no longer the case.”

“One of the other reasons for this fundamental shift in eminent domain policy has been the response of state courts to Kelo,” said Dana Berliner, an IJ senior attorney and co-counsel in the Kelo case.  “When the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to correctly interpret the U.S. Constitution, the state high courts began to fill that void.  For example, the courts in Hawaii, Ohio, New Jersey and Pennsylvania—all states that used to regularly abuse eminent domain—each decided that, unlike the U.S. Supreme Court, they would closely scrutinize municipal takings and prevent unconstitutional abuses.”

So, in that sense, Kelo was arguably a good thing because of the unprecedented backlash that it generated. Nonetheless, it does teach us something that Thomas Jefferson is attributed with saying many years ago:

Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.

Indeed.

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Libertarian, ODBA, Jeffersoniad · Outside The Beltway

Below The Beltway · Story Of The Day: Stanley McChrystal RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I’ve got two posts up at Outside The Beltway about the only story they’re talking about in Washington:

Question Of The Day: Will He Stay Or Will He Go ?

and

The Real News From The McChrystal Interview: The Troops Aren’t Happy

Go check em out.

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