30 June 2009

"The Sovereign"


Hobbes and the Sovereign

by Rishi Gupta

As originally posted on: good (gŏŏd) (adj.): This blog.
December 11, 2007


Why should so much power lie with the sovereign? Hobbes seems to assert that we would all be better off in an autocratic society where all the power lies somewhat singularly at the top, but is this really better? The practical results of such a theory have shown


little to no success. Hobbes contends that the sovereign should not only rule, but should have no limits on his authority. He seems to dislike the fact that there may be checks and balances for


the sovereign to rule. Without these checks and balances, however, how will society be ensured that the rules of society are being enforced correctly? It seems that in Hobbes’ moral theory, the sovereign lies above the moral plane of the average citizen. He/she would have to in order to have the ability to enforce


the contract. But what is it to say that once in such a position, the sovereign would not abuse this upper hand he’s been given to choose what he wants to enforce and not enforce? And also,


the sovereign seems to have an imbalance of power when compared to society. While in his position, the sovereign, like many dictators do, can use manipulation tactics like fear and


security to result in him having even more power. Hobbes does not account for this nearly as well as he should have, just merely saying that this state is better than the state of nature. Really? Says who?

29 June 2009

Suspended Manitoba Lawyer David Davis



THE LAW SOCIETY OF MANITOBA

DISCIPLINE CASE DIGEST

Case 09-03

Member: David Hirsch Davis

Jurisdiction: Winnipeg, Manitoba

Called to the Bar: June 29, 1989

Particulars of Charges: Professional Misconduct (4 counts):

- Breach of c. 1 and 11 of the Code [failure to act with integrity by charging fees that were not fully disclosed, fair and reasonable]
- Breach of c. 11 of the Code [paying a referral fee to a non-lawyer]
- Breach of c. 6, Rule (c), of the Code [conflict of interest] (x2)

Date of Hearing: March 4, 2009

Date of Sentencing Decision: March 13, 2009

Panel:

- James W. Hedley, Chair
- Garth H. Smorang, Q.C.
- Vivian E. Rachlis

Counsel:

- David M. Skwark for The Law Society of Manitoba
- David G. Hill for the Member

Plea: Guilty

Disposition:

- Suspended (6 mos., commencing June 1, 2009)
- Costs of $25,000.00
_______________________

Conflict of Interest/Breach of Integrity
_______________________

Facts

In December 2003 Mr. Davis was retained by FT and his niece LA with respect to LA’s application to immigrate to Canada under the live-in caregiver program. Mr. Davis provided advice to LA with respect to her application, and concurrently offered her a job as a nanny for his children, which offer LA accepted.

Mr. Davis instructed his legal assistant to place an advertisement for a full-time live-in caregiver for his children in the Winnipeg Free Press. He wrote to FT in January 2004 enclosing a Statement of Account for services rendered concerning LA’s live-in caregiver application, which included a disbursement for the personal advertisements published on Mr. Davis’ behalf. Mr. Davis admitted that he failed in his duty to conduct himself with integrity by charging FT disbursements that were not fully disclosed, fair and reasonable, contrary to Chapters 1 and 11 of the Code of Professional Conduct.

In May 2005 Mr. Davis rendered a Statement of Account to FT for services rendered to LA which included disbursements of $250.00 and $200.00 respectively for translation services. In fact, Mr. Davis had not incurred any disbursements for translation services but had instead paid $450.00 to RV, a non-lawyer, as a referral fee for referring FT or LA or both to him. Mr. Davis admitted that he paid a referral fee to a non-lawyer, contrary to Chapter 11 of the Code of Professional Conduct.

LA’s working visa provided that she was only entitled to work for Mr. Davis and cautioned that other work could result in the work permit being rescinded. Between April 26, 2005 and December 30, 2006, Mr. Davis’ wife made arrangements for LA to work for other individuals for whom she was not authorized to work, all with Mr. Davis’ knowledge and consent. During the term of LA’s employment with Mr. Davis, her monthly wages were reduced at Mr. Davis’ direction, she was not paid for over 200 hours of overtime work and she was charged more for room and board than was permitted by the live-in caregiver program guidelines. At all material times, Mr. Davis was both counsel for, and employer of LA. Mr. Davis admitted that he had acted for LA while his interests and those of an associate, namely his wife, were in conflict with those of LA, contrary to Chapter 6, Rule (c) of the Code of Professional Conduct.

In November 2006 Mr. Davis was retained by AP with respect to her application for a live-in caregiver work permit. AP had entered Canada in February 2006 on a visitor’s visa to care for her ill sister who had subsequently died in September 2006. AP’s visitor’s visa was valid until January 7, 2007, and prohibited her from engaging in any employment while in Canada. In November 2006 Mr. Davis suggested to AP that she contact another client RS, with respect to caring for RS’s elderly mother. On November 29, 2006, AP entered into an employment agreement with RS. To Mr. Davis’ knowledge, she did not have a work permit at that time.

After LA terminated her employment with Mr. Davis in December 2006, Mr. Davis approached AP and offered her employment as a live-in caregiver for his family. AP commenced employment with Mr. Davis on January 7, 2007. Between November 2006 and April 2007 Mr. Davis was both AP’s employer and her lawyer concerning immigration related applications. During the time that AP worked for Davis, he failed to advise her that she did not have a work permit that entitled her to do so. Mr. Davis admitted that while acting for AP, his interests, or those of an associate, namely his wife, were in conflict with those of AP, contrary to Chapter 6, Rule (c) of the Code of Professional Conduct.

Plea

Mr. Davis pled guilty to the charges of professional misconduct outlined above.

Decision and Comments

The Panel found Mr. Davis guilty of professional misconduct based on his admission to the charges.

Penalty

The panel noted that disbarment was within the range of possible dispositions available given the facts before them, Mr. Davis’ previous disciplinary record and the traditional sentencing principles in a disciplinary matter. The Panel expressed concern about whether Mr. Davis had sufficient insight to ensure that such incidents would not be repeated, however ultimately took into account mitigating circumstances and Mr. Davis’ subsequent conduct. The Panel concluded that in the absence of clear and cogent reasons for departing from the joint recommendation made by counsel for the Law Society and for Mr. Davis, there was no good cause to reject the joint recommendation. The panel therefore ordered that:

(a) Mr. Davis be suspended for a period of 6 months, commencing June 1, 2009; and

(b) Mr. Davis pay $25,000.00 to the Society as a contribution towards the cost of the investigation, prosecution and hearing of the matter.

"The Usurer"


Of the Sin of Usury

by St. Thomas Aquinas

The following is partially excerpted from Question 78 of the Second Part of the Second Part of Aquinas' Summa Theologica, 2nd rev. ed., trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province (N.p: N. pub., 1920), pp. 1 - 3. It has been edited in terms of both its content and formatting.


We must now consider the sin of usury, which is committed in loans[.]


Whether it is a sin to take usury for money lent?

Objection 1. It would seem that it is not a sin to take usury for money lent. For no man sins through following the example of Christ. But Our Lord said of Himself (Lk. 19:23): “At My coming I might have exacted it,” i.e. the money lent, “with usury.” Therefore it is not a sin to take usury for lending money.

Objection 2. Further, according to Ps. 18:8, “The law of the Lord is unspotted,” because, to wit, it forbids sin. Now usury of a kind is allowed in the Divine law, according to Dt. 23:19,20: “Thou shalt not fenerate to thy brother money, nor corn, nor any other thing, but to the stranger”: nay more, it is even promised as a reward for the observance of the Law, according to Dt. 28:12: “Thou shalt fenerate to many nations, and shalt not borrow of any one.” Therefore it is not a sin to take usury.

Objection 3. Further, in human affairs justice is determined by civil laws. Now civil law allows usury to be taken. Therefore it seems to be lawful.

Objection 4. Further, the counsels are not binding under sin. But, among other counsels we find (Lk. 6:35): “Lend, hoping for nothing thereby.” Therefore it is not a sin to take usury.

Objection 5. Further, it does not seem to be in itself sinful to accept a price for doing what one is not bound to do. But one who has money is not bound in every case to lend it to his neighbor. Therefore it is lawful for him sometimes to accept a price for lending it.

Objection 6. Further, silver made into coins does not differ specifically from silver made into a vessel. But it is lawful to accept a price for the loan of a silver vessel. Therefore it is also lawful to accept a price for the loan of a silver coin. Therefore usury is not in itself a sin.

Objection 7. Further, anyone may lawfully accept a thing which its owner freely gives him. Now he who accepts the loan, freely gives the usury. Therefore he who lends may lawfully take the usury.

On the contrary, It is written (Ex. 22:25): “If thou lend money to any of thy people that is poor, that dwelleth with thee, thou shalt not be hard upon them as an extortioner, nor oppress them with usuries.”

I answer that, To take usury for money lent is unjust in itself, because this is to sell what does not exist, and this evidently leads to inequality which is contrary to justice. In order to make this evident, we must observe that there are certain things the use of which consists in their consumption: thus we consume wine when we use it for drink and we consume wheat when we use it for food. Wherefore in such like things the use of the thing must not be reckoned apart from the thing itself, and whoever is granted the use of the thing, is granted the thing itself and for this reason, to lend things of this kin is to transfer the ownership. Accordingly if a man wanted to sell wine separately from the use of the wine, he would be selling the same thing twice, or he would be selling what does not exist, wherefore he would evidently commit a sin of injustice. In like manner he commits an injustice who lends wine or wheat, and asks for double payment, viz. one, the return of the thing in equal measure, the other, the price of the use, which is called usury.

On the other hand, there are things the use of which does not consist in their consumption: thus to use a house is to dwell in it, not to destroy it. Wherefore in such things both may be granted: for instance, one man may hand over to another the ownership of his house while reserving to himself the use of it for a time, or vice versa, he may grant the use of the house, while retaining the ownership. For this reason a man may lawfully make a charge for the use of his house, and, besides this, revendicate the house from the person to whom he has granted its use, as happens in renting and letting a house.

Now money, according to the Philosopher (Ethic. v, 5; Polit. i, 3) was invented chiefly for the purpose of exchange: and consequently the proper and principal use of money is its consumption or alienation whereby it is sunk in exchange. Hence it is by its very nature unlawful to take payment for the use of money lent, which payment is known as usury: and just as a man is bound to restore other ill-gotten goods, so is he bound to restore the money which he has taken in usury.

Reply to Objection 1. In this passage usury must be taken figuratively for the increase of spiritual goods which God exacts from us, for He wishes us ever to advance in the goods which we receive from Him: and this is for our own profit not for His.

Reply to Objection 2. The Jews were forbidden to take usury from their brethren, i.e. from other Jews. By this we are given to understand that to take usury from any man is evil simply, because we ought to treat every man as our neighbor and brother, especially in the state of the Gospel, whereto all are called. Hence it is said without any distinction in Ps. 14:5: “He that hath not put out his money to usury,” and (Ezech. 18:8): “Who hath not taken usury.” They were permitted, however, to take usury from foreigners, not as though it were lawful, but in order to avoid a greater evil, lest, to wit, through avarice to which they were prone according to Is. 56:11, they should take usury from the Jews who were worshippers of God.

Where we find it promised to them as a reward, “Thou shalt fenerate to many nations,” etc., fenerating is to be taken in a broad sense for lending, as in Ecclus. 29:10, where we read: “any have refused to fenerate, not out of wickedness,”i.e. they would not lend. Accordingly the Jews are promised in reward an abundance of wealth, so that they would be able to lend to others.

Reply to Objection 3. Human laws leave certain things unpunished, on account of the condition of those who are imperfect, and who would be deprived of many advantages, if all sins were strictly forbidden and punishments appointed for them. Wherefore human law has permitted usury, not that it looks upon usury as harmonizing with justice, but lest the advantage of many should be hindered. Hence it is that in civil law it is stated that “those things according to natural reason and civil law which are consumed by being used, do not admit of usufruct,” and that “the senate did not (nor could it) appoint a usufruct to such things, but established a quasi-usufruct,” namely by permitting usury. Moreover the Philosopher, led by natural reason, says (Polit. i, 3) that “to make money by usury is exceedingly unnatural.”

Reply to Objection 4. A man is not always bound to lend, and for this reason it is placed among the counsels. Yet it is a matter of precept not to seek profit by lending: although it may be called a matter of counsel in comparison with the maxims of the Pharisees, who deemed some kinds of usury to be lawful, just as love of one’s enemies is a matter of counsel. Or again, He speaks here not of the hope of usurious gain, but of the hope which is put in man. For we ought not to lend or do any good deed through hope in man, but only through hope in God.

Reply to Objection 5. He that is not bound to lend, may accept repayment for what he has done, but he must not exact more. Now he is repaid according to equality of justice if he is repaid as much as he lent. Wherefore if he exacts more for the usufruct of a thing which has no other use but the consumption of its substance, he exacts a price of something non-existent: and so his exaction is unjust.

Reply to Objection 6. The principal use of a silver vessel is not its consumption, and so one may lawfully sell its use while retaining one’s ownership of it. On the other hand the principal use of silver money is sinking it in exchange, so that it is not lawful to sell its use and at the same time expect the restitution of the amount lent. It must be observed, however, that the secondary use of silver vessels may be an exchange, and such use may not be lawfully sold. In like manner there may be some secondary use of silver money; for instance, a man might lend coins for show, or to be used as security.

Reply to Objection 7. He who gives usury does not give it voluntarily simply, but under a certain necessity, in so far as he needs to borrow money which the owner is unwilling to lend without usury.


Whether it is lawful to ask for any other kind of consideration for money lent?

Objection 1. It would seem that one may ask for some other kind of consideration for money lent. For everyone may lawfully seek to indemnify himself. Now sometimes a man suffers loss through lending money. Therefore he may lawfully ask for or even exact something else besides the money lent.

Objection 2. Further, as stated in Ethic. v, 5, one is in duty bound by a point of honor, to repay anyone who has done us a favor. Now to lend money to one who is in straits is to do him a favor for which he should be grateful. Therefore the recipient of a loan, is bound by a natural debt to repay something. Now it does not seem unlawful to bind oneself to an obligation of the natural law. Therefore it is not unlawful, in lending money to anyone, to demand some sort of compensation as condition of the loan.

Objection 3. Further, just as there is real remuneration, so is there verbal remuneration, and remuneration by service, as a gloss says on Is. 33:15, “Blessed is he that shaketh his hands from all bribes.” Now it is lawful to accept service or praise from one to whom one has lent money. Therefore in like manner it is lawful to accept any other kind of remuneration.

Objection 4. Further, seemingly the relation of gift to gift is the same as of loan to loan. But it is lawful to accept money for money given. Therefore it is lawful to accept repayment by loan in return for a loan granted.

Objection 5. Further, the lender, by transferring his ownership of a sum of money removes the money further from himself than he who entrusts it to a merchant or craftsman. Now it is lawful to receive interest for money entrusted to a merchant or craftsman. Therefore it is also lawful to receive interest for money lent.

Objection 6. Further, a man may accept a pledge for money lent, the use of which pledge he might sell for a price: as when a man mortgages his land or the house wherein he dwells. Therefore it is lawful to receive interest for money lent.

Objection 7. Further, it sometimes happens that a man raises the price of his goods under guise of loan, or buys another’s goods at a low figure; or raises his price through delay in being paid, and lowers his price that he may be paid the sooner. Now in all these cases there seems to be payment for a loan of money: nor does it appear to be manifestly illicit. Therefore it seems to be lawful to expect or exact some consideration for money lent.

On the contrary, Among other conditions requisite in a just man it is stated (Ezech. 18:17) that he “hath not taken usury and increase.”

I answer that, According to the Philosopher (Ethic. iv, 1), a thing is reckoned as money “if its value can be measured by money.” Consequently, just as it is a sin against justice, to take money, by tacit or express agreement, in return for lending money or anything else that is consumed by being used, so also is it a like sin, by tacit or express agreement to receive anything whose price can be measured by money. Yet there would be no sin in receiving something of the kind, not as exacting it, nor yet as though it were due on account of some agreement tacit or expressed, but as a gratuity: since, even before lending the money, one could accept a gratuity, nor is one in a worse condition through lending.

On the other hand it is lawful to exact compensation for a loan, in respect of such things as are not appreciated by a measure of money, for instance, benevolence, and love for the lender, and so forth.

Reply to Objection 1. A lender may without sin enter an agreement with the borrower for compensation for the loss he incurs of something he ought to have, for this is not to sell the use of money but to avoid a loss. It may also happen that the borrower avoids a greater loss than the lender incurs, wherefore the borrower may repay the lender with what he has gained. But the lender cannot enter an agreement for compensation, through the fact that he makes no profit out of his money: because he must not sell that which he has not yet and may be prevented in many ways from having.

Reply to Objection 2. Repayment for a favor may be made in two ways. In one way, as a debt of justice; and to such a debt a man may be bound by a fixed contract; and its amount is measured according to the favor received. Wherefore the borrower of money or any such thing the use of which is its consumption is not bound to repay more than he received in loan: and consequently it is against justice if he be obliged to pay back more. In another way a man’s obligation to repayment for favor received is based on a debt of friendship, and the nature of this debt depends more on the feeling with which the favor was conferred than on the greatness of the favor itself. This debt does not carry with it a civil obligation, involving a kind of necessity that would exclude the spontaneous nature of such a repayment.

Reply to Objection 3. If a man were, in return for money lent, as though there had been an agreement tacit or expressed, to expect or exact repayment in the shape of some remuneration of service or words, it would be the same as if he expected or exacted some real remuneration, because both can be priced at a money value, as may be seen in the case of those who offer for hire the labor which they exercise by work or by tongue. If on the other hand the remuneration by service or words be given not as an obligation, but as a favor, which is not to be appreciated at a money value, it is lawful to take, exact, and expect it.

Reply to Objection 4. Money cannot be sold for a greater sum than the amount lent, which has to be paid back: nor should the loan be made with a demand or expectation of aught else but of a feeling of benevolence which cannot be priced at a pecuniary value, and which can be the basis of a spontaneous loan. Now the obligation to lend in return at some future time is repugnant to such a feeling, because again an obligation of this kind has its pecuniary value. Consequently it is lawful for the lender to borrow something else at the same time, but it is unlawful for him to bind the borrower to grant him a loan at some future time.

Reply to Objection 5. He who lends money transfers the ownership of the money to the borrower. Hence the borrower holds the money at his own risk and is bound to pay it all back: wherefore the lender must not exact more. On the other hand he that entrusts his money to a merchant or craftsman so as to form a kind of society, does not transfer the ownership of his money to them, for it remains his, so that at his risk the merchant speculates with it, or the craftsman uses it for his craft, and consequently he may lawfully demand as something belonging to him, part of the profits derived from his money.

Reply to Objection 6. If a man in return for money lent to him pledges something that can be valued at a price, the lender must allow for the use of that thing towards the repayment of the loan. Else if he wishes the gratuitous use of that thing in addition to repayment, it is the same as if he took money for lending, and that is usury, unless perhaps it were such a thing as friends are wont to lend to one another gratis, as in the case of the loan of a book.

Reply to Objection 7. If a man wish to sell his goods at a higher price than that which is just, so that he may wait for the buyer to pay, it is manifestly a case of usury: because this waiting for the payment of the price has the character of a loan, so that whatever he demands beyond the just price in consideration of this delay, is like a price for a loan, which pertains to usury. In like manner if a buyer wishes to buy goods at a lower price than what is just, for the reason that he pays for the goods before they can be delivered, it is a sin of usury; because again this anticipated payment of money has the character of a loan, the price of which is the rebate on the just price of the goods sold. On the other hand if a man wishes to allow a rebate on the just price in order that he may have his money sooner, he is not guilty of the sin of usury.

[. . . .]

"Ex-Gov. Dead Meat" and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC)


Admission-jobs swap has old-school stink

by John Kass

As originally posted on: chicagotribune.com
June 26, 2009


If there were any doubts that Illinois is the diseased poster child of political corruption, those doubts are long gone.

Friday's story in the Tribune exposes a widening pattern of corruption at the University of Illinois. This time, with the trading of law school admission for patronage-style jobs.

So any doubts about where this state stands should be erased. What remains is the smell.

The state stinks, from Rich Daley's City Hall to Springfield, and now all that's left, for taxpayers, is the smell and the stain. Corruption and patronage, once thought to be the exclusive province of greasy politicians, now reach into the law school of the state's premier public university.

Friday's story details how University Chancellor Richard Herman forced the university's law school to accept an unqualified student. That student had the backing of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. The student's relative dropped wads of campaign money on ex-Gov. Dead Meat.

In exchange for corrupting his law school's admissions policy, Herman wanted to get jobs for five of his law school graduates. University officials considered the law grads so far at bottom of their class that they needed political clout to get a decent salary at a good law firm. If that wasn't possible, the U. of I. was willing to place them in government jobs.

"Yeah, I'm betting the Governorship will be open," Heidi M. Hurd, then dean of the university's College of Law, wrote in an e-mail to Herman on April 29, 2006, perhaps joking that Blagojevich's time in public life was coming to an end.

What followed in her e-mail was worse.

"Other jobs in Government are fine, since kids who don't pass the bar and can't think are close enough for government work," Hurd wrote. In another e-mail to other U. of I. officials, Hurd wrote:

"FYI: The deal is supposed to be that WE get to pick the students - and they are supposed to be bottom-of-the-class students who face a hell of a time passing the Bar and otherwise getting jobs!"

That's law school the Chicago Way. If they can't pass the bar on the first or second try, they're qualified to become mayor.

The latest e-mails from Herman, Hurd and other U. of I. officials were released Thursday. The Tribune had asked for all such e-mails in April. But these somehow were forgotten, until U.S. Atty. Patrick Fitzgerald issued subpoenas. Then, magically, that which was lost was found. A miracle!

Did the U. of I. search by the light of Batman's beacon, Diogenes' lantern or some other powerful lamp of truth?

Thomas Hardy, spokesman for the University and a former Tribune colleague whom I know and respect, dismisses my skepticism and deserves his say.

"We've made a good-faith effort to respond to the Tribune's Freedom of Information requests, and others," Hardy said. "Some documents were not produced that apparently should have been. We don't know right now the reason for that, but the fact of the matter is that in collecting documents and doing interviews for the Quinn commission, we've come across these new e-mails and made them publicly available."

Within days, perhaps sooner, you'll hear a few thudding sounds, like lonely bowling balls tossed down a dark alley, and you'll realize you're listening to the political heads of Chancellor Herman and his crew rolling into history.

But don't make the mistake of thinking that lopping a few heads and burning the stumps will clean things up.

Not in the state where our boss Democrats in the state legislature - guys like state Senate President John Cullerton (D-DeLeo) - are still slapping themselves on the back for stopping the Illinois Reform Commission led by former assistant U.S. Atty. Patrick Collins.

Not in the state where Mayor Daley can pretend not to know that his nephew received $68 million in city pension money to invest, and then, without telling his taxpayers, puts them on the hook for likely cost overruns in his 2016 Olympic dream.

Not in the state where - just before the patronage abuse trial of Daley's top aides a few years ago - mayoral mouthpiece David Axelrod, now the media wizard for President Barack Obama, defended political patronage by arguing it is the grease that helps government run smoothly.

Think about your taxes. And all the fine students denied admission to the U. of I., though they have the grades.

Think of the clout that's been reported by this newspaper. Consider the thousands of excellent, hardworking students at the U. of I. who've been dishonored by the corruption of adults who are supposed to protect them.

If you've read carefully here and elsewhere, you know about corrupt politicians, corrupt cops, corrupt businesses. But the last line of defense for the corrupt are kinky judges.

How do you get such judges? You begin in law school, with university officials establishing corrupt practices, leveraging unqualified lawyers into jobs.

Lawyers become judges, don't they?

jskass@tribune.com

28 June 2009

The Islamic Republic of Iran


I know the true nature of Iran's regime: Deemed a 'threat' to the government, I was brutalized

by Amir Farshad Ebrahimi

As originally posted: NY Daily News
June 23, 2009


Most reasonable people believe that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's reelection was a fraud, and that the leaders of Iran have lost any right they had left to rule. But there are still many people in America and Europe who do not entirely grasp how far the regime is willing to go in order to hold on to power.

It is to such people that I address my story.

After graduating high school in Tehran, I joined the Revolutionary Guard and served as a lieutenant in the Quds force. I eventually moved on to Ansar-e Hezbollah and became political secretary. Our loyalty was to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and, among other things, my comrades and I attacked members of then-President Mohammad Khatami's cabinet.

It was in 1999, just after I resigned from Ansar-e Hezbollah, that I was first arrested. That July we were ordered to attack student demonstrators at Tehran University. I refused to take part and quit my unit in protest. Ten days later, I was abducted by several plainclothes agents, among them Col. Akbar Sharafi, a police intelligence officer whom I knew when we were both on the same side of the fight.

For most of the next five years, I was imprisoned in secret detention facilities around Tehran. More than a year and a half of that time I was held in solitary confinement. My cell was a space roughly the size of a coffin.

I was physically and psychologically abused on a regular basis. I was whipped repeatedly with cable wires and beaten over and over. I was denied any contact with the outside world. My family was threatened, and my grandfather arrested. I was forced to confess to all sorts of trumped-up charges, including having sexual relations with my lawyer, Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi.

Those torturing me had close ties to the Office of the Supreme Leader. I even knew one of them personally, a brigadier general whom I had served with and called a friend. He now heads the Revolutionary Guard unit responsible for protecting the supreme leader.

After a total of 41/2 years in captivity, I was finally released, but my ordeal was far from over. In 2003, I was targeted for assassination. I was lucky to escape into exile.

Such was my treatment for being a "threat" to the regime.

The protesters now out in the streets in support of Mir Hossein Moussavi are undoubtedly also being viewed as "threats" to the ruling establishment. What treatment will they suffer in the coming weeks and months? Will they share the fate of the student demonstrator my comrades killed in July 1999? There is more than enough evidence to believe that they will suffer greatly.

I would urge anyone who thinks otherwise to read the stories being collected by the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center in New Haven. Students, journalists, economists, even one of the founders of the Revolutionary Guard - all of us interviewed by the documentation center shared the fate of being abducted and tortured by intelligence agents answering only to the Office of the Supreme Leader.

Our crime? Nothing more than refusing to ignore the regime's ongoing rape of our country.

Today, many of my fellow Iranians are bravely out on the streets in protest, but tomorrow, they may be in prison - or worse. Will America and Europe stand up for them, or will they be left to suffer like I did?

Ebrahimi, a former member of the Revolutionary Guard's Quds force and of Ansar-e Hezbollah, a militant conservative Islamic group in Iran, lives in exile in Berlin. This op-ed was translated from the Farsi.

27 June 2009

The United States Congress and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York


More Fed Lawlessness: AIG

by Karl Denninger

As originally posted on: The Market Ticker
June 26, 2009


See what happens when Congress refuses to enforce The Federal Reserve Act's provisions that require that equity ownership be taken only in instruments that have the full faith and credit of the US Government behind them?

Under the agreement, AIG will split off AIA and Alico into separate company-owned entities called "special purpose vehicles," or SPVs. The New York Fed will receive preferred shares now valued at $25 billion - $16 billion in AIA and $9 billion in Alico - and in exchange will forgive an equal amount of AIG debt.

So now The Federal Reserve (actually the NY Fed) partially owns an insurance company through more off-balance-sheet Frankenstein monsters.

This is blatantly in violation of The Federal Reserve Act but nobody in Congress seems to care.

The FRA was written as it stands to explicitly preclude this sort of transaction. If we are to take an equity ownership position in AIG linked to the taxpayer it has to be done through an appropriation passed by and overseen by Congress, not through an administrative action by The Federal Reserve or one of its districts!

The New York Fed said in a statement that the agreements "further the goals of enabling AIG to fully repay the assistance that it has received from U.S. taxpayers and advancing the company's global restructuring process. The exchange of senior secured debt for preferred equity interests reduces AIG's financial leverage and facilitates the independence of these two key subsidiaries."

And who authorized The New York Fed to engage in that transaction? Where is the explicit legislative authorization permitting the creation of an SPV that amounts to EQUITY OWNERSHIP of an insurance company?

The NY Fed just nationalized an insurance company without a bill proffered in Congress and signed by The President!

WHERE ARE THE DAMN COPS?

26 June 2009

"The Greedy Tradesman"



Of Cheating, Which Is Committed in Buying and Selling

by St. Thomas Aquinas

The following is excerpted in its entirety from Question 77 of the Second Part of the Second Part of Aquinas' Summa Theologica, 2nd rev. ed., trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province (N.p: N. pub., 1920), pp. 1 - 5. It has been edited in terms of both its content and formatting.


[. . . W]e shall consider cheating, which is committed in buying and selling[.]

[. . . T]here are four points of inquiry:

(1) Of unjust sales as regards the price; namely, whether it is lawful to sell a thing for more than its worth?
(2) Of unjust sales on the part of the thing sold;
(3) Whether the seller is bound to reveal a fault in the thing sold?
(4) Whether it is lawful in trading to sell a thing at a higher price than was paid for it?


Whether it is lawful to sell a thing for more than its worth?

Objection 1. It would seem that it is lawful to sell a thing for more than its worth. On the commutations of human life, civil laws determine that which is just. Now according to these laws it is just for buyer and seller to deceive one another (Cod. IV, xliv, De Rescind. Vend. 8,15): and this occurs by the seller selling a thing for more than its worth, and the buyer buying a thing for less than its worth. Therefore it is lawful to sell a thing for more than its worth.

Objection 2. Further, that which is common to all would seem to be natural and not sinful. Now Augustine relates that the saying of a certain jester was accepted by all, “You wish to buy for a song and to sell at a premium,” which agrees with the saying of Prov. 20:14, “It is naught, it is naught, saith every buyer: and when he is gone away, then he will boast.” Therefore it is lawful to sell a thing for more than its worth.

Objection 3. Further, it does not seem unlawful if that which honesty demands be done by mutual agreement. Now, according to the Philosopher (Ethic. viii, 13), in the friendship which is based on utility, the amount of the recompense for a favor received should depend on the utility accruing to the receiver: and this utility sometimes is worth more than the thing given, for instance if the receiver be in great need of that thing, whether for the purpose of avoiding a danger, or of deriving some particular benefit. Therefore, in contracts of buying and selling, it is lawful to give a thing in return for more than its worth.

On the contrary, It is written (Mat. 7:12): "All things . . . whatsoever you would that men should do to you, do you also to them." But no man wishes to buy a thing for more than its worth. Therefore no man should sell a thing to another man for more than its worth.

I answer that, It is altogether sinful to have recourse to deceit in order to sell a thing for more than its just price, because this is to deceive one's neighbor so as to injure him. Hence Tully says (De Offic. iii, 15): "Contracts should be entirely free from double-dealing: the seller must not impose upon the bidder, nor the buyer upon one that bids against him."

But, apart from fraud, we may speak of buying and selling in two ways. First, as considered in themselves, and from this point of view, buying and selling seem to be established for the common advantage of both parties, one of whom requires that which belongs to the other, and vice versa, as the Philosopher states (Polit. i, 3). Now whatever is established for the common advantage, should not be more of a burden to one party than to another, and consequently all contracts between them should observe equality of thing and thing. Again, the quality of a thing that comes into human use is measured by the price given for it, for which purpose money was invented, as stated in Ethic. v, 5. Therefore if either the price exceed the quantity of the thing's worth, or, conversely, the thing exceed the price, there is no longer the equality of justice: and consequently, to sell a thing for more than its worth, or to buy it for less than its worth, is in itself unjust and unlawful.

Secondly we may speak of buying and selling, considered as accidentally tending to the advantage of one party, and to the disadvantage of the other: for instance, when a man has great need of a certain thing, while an other man will suffer if he be without it. On such a case the just price will depend not only on the thing sold, but on the loss which the sale brings on the seller. And thus it will be lawful to sell a thing for more than it is worth in itself, though the price paid be not more than it is worth to the owner. Yet if the one man derive a great advantage by becoming possessed of the other man's property, and the seller be not at a loss through being without that thing, the latter ought not to raise the price, because the advantage accruing to the buyer, is not due to the seller, but to a circumstance affecting the buyer. Now no man should sell what is not his, though he may charge for the loss he suffers.

On the other hand if a man find that he derives great advantage from something he has bought, he may, of his own accord, pay the seller something over and above: and this pertains to his honesty.

Reply to Objection 1. [. . . H]uman law is given to the people among whom there are many lacking virtue, and it is not given to the virtuous alone. Hence human law was unable to forbid all that is contrary to virtue; and it suffices for it to prohibit whatever is destructive of human intercourse, while it treats other matters as though they were lawful, not by approving of them, but by not punishing them. Accordingly, if without employing deceit the seller disposes of his goods for more than their worth, or the buyer obtain them for less than their worth, the law looks upon this as licit, and provides no punishment for so doing, unless the excess be too great, because then even human law demands restitution to be made, for instance if a man be deceived in regard to more than half the amount of the just price of a thing.

On the other hand the Divine law leaves nothing unpunished that is contrary to virtue. Hence, according to the Divine law, it is reckoned unlawful if the equality of justice be not observed in buying and selling: and he who has received more than he ought must make compensation to him that has suffered loss, if the loss be considerable. I add this condition, because the just price of things is not fixed with mathematical precision, but depends on a kind of estimate, so that a slight addition or subtraction would not seem to destroy the equality of justice.

Reply to Objection 2. As Augustine says "this jester, either by looking into himself or by his experience of others, thought that all men are inclined to wish to buy for a song and sell at a premium. But since in reality this is wicked, it is in every man's power to acquire that justice whereby he may resist and overcome this inclination." And then he gives the example of a man who gave the just price for a book to a man who through ignorance asked a low price for it. Hence it is evident that this common desire is not from nature but from vice, wherefore it is common to many who walk along the broad road of sin.

Reply to Objection 3. In commutative justice we consider chiefly real equality. On the other hand, in friendship based on utility we consider equality of usefulness, so that the recompense should depend on the usefulness accruing, whereas in buying it should be equal to the thing bought.


Whether a sale is rendered unlawful through a fault in the thing sold?

Objection 1. It would seem that a sale is not rendered unjust and unlawful through a fault in the thing sold. For less account should be taken of the other parts of a thing than of what belongs to its substance. Yet the sale of a thing does not seem to be rendered unlawful through a fault in its substance: for instance, if a man sell instead of the real metal, silver or gold produced by some chemical process, which is adapted to all the human uses for which silver and gold are necessary, for instance in the making of vessels and the like. Much less therefore will it be an unlawful sale if the thing be defective in other ways.

Objection 2. Further, any fault in the thing, affecting the quantity, would seem chiefly to be opposed to justice which consists in equality. Now quantity is known by being measured: and the measures of things that come into human use are not fixed, but in some places are greater, in others less, as the Philosopher states (Ethic. v, 7). Therefore just as it is impossible to avoid defects on the part of the thing sold, it seems that a sale is not rendered unlawful through the thing sold being defective.

Objection 3. Further, the thing sold is rendered defective by lacking a fitting quality. But in order to know the quality of a thing, much knowledge is required that is lacking in most buyers. Therefore a sale is not rendered unlawful by a fault (in the thing sold).

On the contrary, Ambrose says (De Offic. iii, 11): "It is manifestly a rule of justice that a good man should not depart from the truth, nor inflict an unjust injury on anyone, nor have any connection with fraud."

I answer that, A threefold fault may be found pertaining to the thing which is sold. One, in respect of the thing's substance: and if the seller be aware of a fault in the thing he is selling, he is guilty of a fraudulent sale, so that the sale is rendered unlawful. Hence we find it written against certain people (Is. 1:22), "Thy silver is turned into dross, thy wine is mingled with water": because that which is mixed is defective in its substance.

Another defect is in respect of quantity which is known by being measured: wherefore if anyone knowingly make use of a faulty measure in selling, he is guilty of fraud, and the sale is illicit. Hence it is written (Dt. 25:13, 14): "Thou shalt not have divers weights in thy bag, a greater and a less: neither shall there be in thy house a greater bushel and a less," and further on (Dt. 25:16): "For the Lord . . . abhorreth him that doth these things, and He hateth all injustice."

A third defect is on the part of the quality, for instance, if a man sell an unhealthy animal as being a healthy one: and if anyone do this knowingly he is guilty of a fraudulent sale, and the sale, in consequence, is illicit.

In all these cases not only is the man guilty of a fraudulent sale, but he is also bound to restitution. But if any of the foregoing defects be in the thing sold, and he knows nothing about this, the seller does not sin, because he does that which is unjust materially, nor is his deed unjust [. . .]. Nevertheless he is bound to compensate the buyer, when the defect comes to his knowledge. Moreover what has been said of the seller applies equally to the buyer. For sometimes it happens that the seller thinks his goods to be specifically of lower value, as when a man sells gold instead of copper, and then if the buyer be aware of this, he buys it unjustly and is bound to restitution: and the same applies to a defect in quantity as to a defect in quality.

Reply to Objection 1. Gold and silver are costly not only on account of the usefulness of the vessels and other like things made from them, but also on account of the excellence and purity of their substance. Hence if the gold or silver produced by alchemists has not the true specific nature of gold and silver, the sale thereof is fraudulent and unjust, especially as real gold and silver can produce certain results by their natural action, which the counterfeit gold and silver of alchemists cannot produce. Thus the true metal has the property of making people joyful, and is helpful medicinally against certain maladies. Moreover real gold can be employed more frequently, and lasts longer in its condition of purity than counterfeit gold. If however real gold were to be produced by alchemy, it would not be unlawful to sell it for the genuine article, for nothing prevents art from employing certain natural causes for the production of natural and true effects, as Augustine says (De Trin. iii, 8) of things produced by the art of the demons.

Reply to Objection 2. The measures of salable commodities must needs be different in different places, on account of the difference of supply: because where there is greater abundance, the measures are wont to be larger. However in each place those who govern the state must determine the just measures of things salable, with due consideration for the conditions of place and time. Hence it is not lawful to disregard such measures as are established by public authority or custom.

Reply to Objection 3. As Augustine says (De Civ. Dei xi, 16) the price of things salable does not depend on their degree of nature, since at times a horse fetches a higher price than a slave; but it depends on their usefulness to man. Hence it is not necessary for the seller or buyer to be cognizant of the hidden qualities of the thing sold, but only of such as render the thing adapted to man's use, for instance, that the horse be strong, run well and so forth. Such qualities the seller and buyer can easily discover.


Whether the seller is bound to state the defects of the thing sold?

Objection 1. It would seem that the seller is not bound to state the defects of the thing sold. Since the seller does not bind the buyer to buy, he would seem to leave it to him to judge of the goods offered for sale. Now judgment about a thing and knowledge of that thing belong to the same person. Therefore it does not seem imputable to the seller if the buyer be deceived in his judgment, and be hurried into buying a thing without carefully inquiring into its condition.

Objection 2. Further, it seems foolish for anyone to do what prevents him carrying out his work. But if a man states the defects of the goods he has for sale, he prevents their sale: wherefore Tully (De Offic. iii, 13) pictures a man as saying: "Could anything be more absurd than for a public crier, instructed by the owner, to cry: 'I offer this unhealthy horse for sale?'" Therefore the seller is not bound to state the defects of the thing sold.

Objection 3. Further, man needs more to know the road of virtue than to know the faults of things offered for sale. Now one is not bound to offer advice to all or to tell them the truth about matters pertaining to virtue, though one should not tell anyone what is false. Much less therefore is a seller bound to tell the faults of what he offers for sale, as though he were counseling the buyer.

Objection 4. Further, if one were bound to tell the faults of what one offers for sale, this would only be in order to lower the price. Now sometimes the price would be lowered for some other reason, without any defect in the thing sold: for instance, if the seller carry wheat to a place where wheat fetches a high price, knowing that many will come after him carrying wheat; because if the buyers knew this they would give a lower price. But apparently the seller need not give the buyer this information. Therefore, in like manner, neither need he tell him the faults of the goods he is selling.

On the contrary, Ambrose says (De Offic. iii, 10): "In all contracts the defects of the salable commodity must be stated; and unless the seller make them known, although the buyer has already acquired a right to them, the contract is voided on account of the fraudulent action."

I answer that, It is always unlawful to give anyone an occasion of danger or loss, although a man need not always give another the help or counsel which would be for his advantage in any way; but only in certain fixed cases, for instance when someone is subject to him, or when he is the only one who can assist him. Now the seller who offers goods for sale, gives the buyer an occasion of loss or danger, by the very fact that he offers him defective goods, if such defect may occasion loss or danger to the buyer - loss, if, by reason of this defect, the goods are of less value, and he takes nothing off the price on that account - danger, if this defect either hinder the use of the goods or render it hurtful, for instance, if a man sells a lame for a fleet horse, a tottering house for a safe one, rotten or poisonous food for wholesome. Wherefore if such like defects be hidden, and the seller does not make them known, the sale will be illicit and fraudulent, and the seller will be bound to compensation for the loss incurred.

On the other hand, if the defect be manifest, for instance if a horse have but one eye, or if the goods though useless to the buyer, be useful to someone else, provided the seller take as much as he ought from the price, he is not bound to state the defect of the goods, since perhaps on account of that defect the buyer might want him to allow a greater rebate than he need. Wherefore the seller may look to his own indemnity, by withholding the defect of the goods.

Reply to Objection 1. Judgment cannot be pronounced save on what is manifest: for "a man judges of what he knows" (Ethic. i, 3). Hence if the defects of the goods offered for sale be hidden, judgment of them is not sufficiently left with the buyer unless such defects be made known to him. The case would be different if the defects were manifest.

Reply to Objection 2. There is no need to publish beforehand by the public crier the defects of the goods one is offering for sale, because if he were to begin by announcing its defects, the bidders would be frightened to buy, through ignorance of other qualities that might render the thing good and serviceable. Such defect ought to be stated to each individual that offers to buy: and then he will be able to compare the various points one with the other, the good with the bad: for nothing prevents that which is defective in one respect being useful in many others.

Reply to Objection 3. Although a man is not bound strictly speaking to tell everyone the truth about matters pertaining to virtue, yet he is so bound in a case when, unless he tells the truth, his conduct would endanger another man in detriment to virtue: and so it is in this case.

Reply to Objection 4. The defect in a thing makes it of less value now than it seems to be: but in the case cited, the goods are expected to be of less value at a future time, on account of the arrival of other merchants, which was not foreseen by the buyers. Wherefore the seller, since he sells his goods at the price actually offered him, does not seem to act contrary to justice through not stating what is going to happen. If however he were to do so, or if he lowered his price, it would be exceedingly virtuous on his part: although he does not seem to be bound to do this as a debt of justice.


Whether, in trading, it is lawful to sell a thing at a higher price than what was paid for it?

Objection 1. It would seem that it is not lawful, in trading, to sell a thing for a higher price than we paid for it. For Chrysostom says on Mat. 21:12: "He that buys a thing in order that he may sell it, entire and unchanged, at a profit, is the trader who is cast out of God's temple." Cassiodorus speaks in the same sense in his commentary on Ps. 70:15, "Because I have not known learning, or trading" according to another version: "What is trade," says he, "but buying at a cheap price with the purpose of retailing at a higher price?" and he adds: "Such were the tradesmen whom Our Lord cast out of the temple." Now no man is cast out of the temple except for a sin. Therefore such like trading is sinful.

Objection 2. Further, it is contrary to justice to sell goods at a higher price than their worth, or to buy them for less than their value [. . .]. Now if you sell a thing for a higher price than you paid for it, you must either have bought it for less than its value, or sell it for more than its value. Therefore this cannot be done without sin.

Objection 3. Further, Jerome says (Ep. ad Nepot. lii): "Shun, as you would the plague, a cleric who from being poor has become wealthy, or who, from being a nobody has become a celebrity." Now trading would net seem to be forbidden to clerics except on account of its sinfulness. Therefore it is a sin in trading, to buy at a low price and to sell at a higher price.

On the contrary, Augustine commenting on Psalm 70:15, "Because I have not known learning," says: "The greedy tradesman blasphemes over his losses; he lies and perjures himself over the price of his wares. But these are vices of the man, not of the craft, which can be exercised without these vices." Therefore trading is not in itself unlawful.

I answer that, A tradesman is one whose business consists in the exchange of things. According to the Philosopher (Polit. i, 3), exchange of things is twofold; one, natural as it were, and necessary, whereby one commodity is exchanged for another, or money taken in exchange for a commodity, in order to satisfy the needs of life. Such like trading, properly speaking, does not belong to tradesmen, but rather to housekeepers or civil servants who have to provide the household or the state with the necessaries of life. The other kind of exchange is either that of money for money, or of any commodity for money, not on account of the necessities of life, but for profit, and this kind of exchange, properly speaking, regards tradesmen, according to the Philosopher (Polit. i, 3). The former kind of exchange is commendable because it supplies a natural need: but the latter is justly deserving of blame, because, considered in itself, it satisfies the greed for gain, which knows no limit and tends to infinity. Hence trading, considered in itself, has a certain debasement attaching thereto, in so far as, by its very nature, it does not imply a virtuous or necessary end. Nevertheless gain which is the end of trading, though not implying, by its nature, anything virtuous or necessary, does not, in itself, connote anything sinful or contrary to virtue: wherefore nothing prevents gain from being directed to some necessary or even virtuous end, and thus trading becomes lawful. Thus, for instance, a man may intend the moderate gain which he seeks to acquire by trading for the upkeep of his household, or for the assistance of the needy: or again, a man may take to trade for some public advantage, for instance, lest his country lack the necessaries of life, and seek gain, not as an end, but as payment for his labor.

Reply to Objection 1. The saying of Chrysostom refers to the trading which seeks gain as a last end. This is especially the case where a man sells something at a higher price without its undergoing any change. For if he sells at a higher price something that has changed for the better, he would seem to receive the reward of his labor. Nevertheless the gain itself may be lawfully intended, not as a last end, but for the sake of some other end which is necessary or virtuous, as stated above.

Reply to Objection 2. Not everyone that sells at a higher price than he bought is a tradesman, but only he who buys that he may sell at a profit. If, on the contrary, he buys not for sale but for possession, and afterwards, for some reason wishes to sell, it is not a trade transaction even if he sell at a profit. For he may lawfully do this, either because he has bettered the thing, or because the value of the thing has changed with the change of place or time, or on account of the danger he incurs in transferring the thing from one place to another, or again in having it carried by another. In this sense neither buying nor selling is unjust.

Reply to Objection 3. Clerics should abstain not only from things that are evil in themselves, but even from those that have an appearance of evil. This happens in trading, both because it is directed to worldly gain, which clerics should despise, and because trading is open to so many vices, since "a merchant is hardly free from sins of the lips" (2 Ecclus. 26:28). There is also another reason, because trading engages the mind too much with worldly cares, and consequently withdraws it from spiritual cares; wherefore the Apostle says (2 Tim. 2:4): "No man being a soldier to God entangleth himself with secular businesses." Nevertheless it is lawful for clerics to engage in the first mentioned kind of exchange, which is directed to supply the necessaries of life, either by buying or by selling.

The Taliban


Put the Taliban on the terror list, already

by Fred Gedrich

As originally posted: NY Daily News
June 23, 2009


Hardly a day passes without some news outlet reporting yet another Taliban atrocity, attack or kidnapping. The harrowing ordeal and recent escape of New York Times reporter David Rohde is just one window into the vicious tactics employed by this group.

But here's news that may surprise most Americans and surviving Taliban victims: The State Department's top diplomat, Hillary Clinton, and her predecessors haven't designated it a foreign terrorist organization. What's it going to take?

The Taliban have shocked the conscience of every decent global citizen by engaging in a reign of terror against noncombatants and enemies since gaining control of Afghanistan's government in the mid-1990s. While ruling Afghanistan, the Taliban sheltered Osama Bin Laden and his minions, they destroyed the country's education system in favor of schooling by Muslim clerics teaching little more than Koranic verses, and they banned women from attending school. After being removed from power by American and Afghanistan Northern Alliance forces in 2001, they have gradually grown in strength - largely the result of benefiting from opium poppy drug trade revenues and intimidating and terrorizing local populations.

According to the International Council on Security and Development and BBC reports, the Taliban currently control and/or have a permanent presence in 72% of Afghanistan and 62% of northwest Pakistan, respectively. The group endangers the freely elected Afghan and Pakistani governments and their people, American troops and U.S. regional security interests - and if it ever gains control of any of Pakistan's nuclear weapons, it will directly threaten global peace and security.

Since foreign terrorist organization (FTO) designations play a critical role in fighting terrorists, curtailing support for terrorist activities and pressuring groups to get out of the terror business, the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended, requires the secretary of state to provide Congress, by April 30 of each year, a full and complete report on terrorism with regard to those countries and groups meeting criteria set forth in the legislation.

The report submitted to Congress by Clinton for 2008 identified four nations and 44 groups engaged in various degrees of terror activities. The Taliban are not among them.

To receive an FTO designation, groups must meet the following criteria:

1. Be a foreign organization. The Taliban fit that bill. This Sunni Muslim fundamentalist group operates exclusively in Afghanistan and Pakistan and practices the strictest form of Islam. It grew out of an Islamic religious school student movement in the two countries' sprawling Pashtun regions. The group and its affiliates draw primarily from a tribal network of 40 million Pashtuns residing in those two countries, particularly poverty-stricken and undereducated youth who receive indoctrination in jihad in local mosques and madrasahs. Its two most prominent leaders, Afghanistan's Mullah Mohammed Omar and Pakistan's Baitullah Mehsud - along with ally Bin Laden - are believed safely havened in Pakistan's Taliban-controlled territory.

2. Engage in terrorist activity. The Taliban measure up here, as well. The U.S. National Counterterrorism Center reported for 2008 that, "according to open source reports, the Taliban, more than any other group, claimed credit for the largest number of terrorist attacks and highest fatality totals." The list of Taliban-attributed attacks presented in this report includes a horrifying array of kidnappings, beheadings and bombings of innocents in buses, hospitals, public areas and events, private residences and mosques.

3. Threaten the security of U.S. nationals and the national security of the United States. Again, the Taliban check the box. Presidents George W. Bush and Obama have judged acts committed by the Taliban and their leaders to be threats to U.S. national security, foreign policy and citizens. Since American military action commenced in and around Afghanistan, U.S. casualties total 632 killed and 3,122 wounded (most through hostile action by Taliban jihads), with combat and assistance expenditures totaling more than $250 billion.

Neither the Bush nor Obama administrations has articulated the reasons for failing to designate the Taliban as an FTO, and congressional overseers haven't publicly asked them why. The most reasonable assumption is that administration officials were hopeful that nonlisting would eventually facilitate rapprochement with "reconcilable" Taliban elements.

To date, the facts prove this option illusory. A much better case could be made for placing the group on the list and afterward using delisting the group, or elements of it, as an inducement to give up the fight.

Leaving the Taliban off the State Department's terror list diminishes the report's value, undermines the department's credibility and could further threaten U.S. national security. Let's hope Clinton reverses course soon - for the sake of American troops, U.S. embassy personnel and others who are risking their lives daily in and around Afghanistan in defense of the United States.

Gedrich is a foreign policy and national security analyst and served in the State and Defense departments.

South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford


E-mails detail intimate affair

by John O'Connor

As originally posted: The State
June 25, 2009


E-mails obtained by The State newspaper in December detailed an affair between Gov. Mark Sanford and Maria, a woman in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

However, attempts to verify the e-mails — from an anonymous source — were fruitless, until Wednesday. Then, acting on another anonymous tip that Sanford would be on a plane returning from Argentina, the paper sent a reporter to Atlanta.

When Sanford got off a plane from Buenos Aires, he stopped an interview with The State when asked if he had been with anyone in Argentina.

The State then contacted Sanford’s office and a former aide, explicitly saying it had e-mails between the governor’s personal e-mail address and an Argentine woman and thought them to be genuine.

Sanford’s office subsequently scheduled a news conference, at which time the governor confessed to an affair.

Late Wednesday, the governor’s office said it would not dispute the authenticity of the e-mails.

The e-mails, published in today’s newspaper and at thestate.com, sound like Sanford.

There is talk of Coosaw, his Beaufort plantation, and his love of digging holes on the property. The e-mails refer to his known public schedule — a governor’s meeting and an audition for the Republican vice presidential nomination with John McCain.

One e-mail from Sanford’s personal address also referred to the Bible, a Sanford favorite. In response, his Argentine lover recommended an economics book, another Sanford favorite.

The e-mails also match much of what Sanford said at his Wednesday news conference: That his sexual relationship with the Argentine woman grew from a much-longer friendship, that it started about a year ago and that the woman has two sons.

From Sanford’s e-mail address to the woman: “I could digress and say that you have the ability to give magnificently gentle kisses, or that I love your tan lines or that I love the curves of your hips, the erotic beauty of you holding yourself (or two magnificent parts of yourself) in the faded glow of night’s light — but hey, that would be going into the sexual details ...”

The State has removed the woman’s full name and other personal details, including her address, e-mail address and children’s names.

A McClatchy special correspondent, Angeles Mase, Wednesday visited the 14-story apartment building in Buenos Aires where, according to the e-mails that included her address, the woman lives. . The woman at the address answered to the name in the e-mails and, at first, agreed to speak to a visitor, but she declined after the visitor identified herself as a reporter.

The doorman at the building, shown a photograph of Sanford, said he did not recognize him. According to the doorman, the woman has two sons, one a teenager of driving age and the other younger. The e-mails refer to the woman’s two sons.

25 June 2009

South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford


Sanford admits affair: 'I've let down a lot of people'

by Clif LeBlanc and John O'Connor

As originally published in: The State
June 25, 2009


Gov. Mark Sanford admitted Wednesday to an extramarital affair with a woman living in Argentina and to lying to South Carolinians to cover up his tryst — then asked everyone, including his family, for forgiveness.

The two-term S.C. Republican, a rising GOP star, fought tears during a news conference hours after a reporter from The State newspaper surprised him at the Atlanta airport on his way back from seeing the mother of two during Father’s Day weekend.

Sanford did not respond in the State House rotunda when asked whether he would resign his office. Spokesman Joel Sawyer later said the governor had no plans to step down.

“I’ll lay it out,” a solemn, red-eyed Sanford said as he faced a media throng outside his office. “It’s going to hurt, and let the chips fall where they may.

“I’ve been unfaithful to my wife. I’ve let down a lot of people. That’s the bottom line.”

Sanford stood alone at a podium. Neither first lady Jenny Sanford nor his sons attended.

He apologized to his family, supporters, the faith community and to all other South Carolinians.

His secret South American trip prompted national attention after state officials questioned why no one had heard from Sanford for four days, starting last Thursday. Some demanded to know who was in charge of the executive branch.

Sanford, 49, would not say directly Wednesday whether he and Jenny Sanford, 46, are separated officially.

“I don’t know how you want to define that,” the governor said. “I’m here and she’s there. I guess in a formal sense we are not.”

Later in the day, Jenny Sanford said in a statement she asked her husband to leave their Sullivan’s Island home two weeks ago.

“This trial separation was agreed to with the goal of ultimately strengthening our marriage,” she said.

In e-mails obtained by the state written last summer to a woman in Argentina named Maria, Sanford characterized their relationship as a “hopelessly impossible situation of love.”

Just after midnight on July 10, 2008, he writes: “You have the ability to give magnificently gentle kisses. ... I love your tan lines ... the curves of your hips, the erotic beauty of you holding yourself ... in the faded glow of night’s light.”

On July 4, she wrote: “I wasn’t aware till we met last week, the strong feelings I had for you. I haven’t felt this since I was in my teen ages. I do love you.”

FROM FRIENDS TO LOVERS

Sanford said Wednesday he met the woman — whom he did not name — eight years ago. At one point, he said he counseled the mother of two not to give up on her strained marriage.

He said he told her to keep trying for the sake of her sons. The Sanfords have four sons.

“There is a certain irony to this,” Sanford said.

“I have let them down in a profound way,” he said of his wife and sons.

The Sanfords have been in counseling for five months, since the first lady learned of the affair, the governor said.

What began as a casual friendship grew deeper, largely through e-mail conversations, Sanford said. Despite the distance between them, “It developed into something much more than that.”

Sanford said he had seen the woman three times since their relationship became sexual.

He did not respond Wednesday when asked if leaving his family during Father’s Day weekend was tantamount to placing them beneath a mistress.

“I spent the last five days of my life crying in Argentina. I’m committed to trying to get my heart right.”

Sanford said this was his first and only extramarital affair during a 19-year marriage.

He invoked Scripture and his faith several times during the 18-minute news conference.

“Believe it or not, I’ve been a person of faith all my life. There are moral absolutes,” intended “to protect you from yourself.”

He called his actions, “selfish,” and said they carry consequences.

“As we work through this, there are going to be some hard decisions,” Sanford said. “I would simply ... ask for forgiveness.”

POLITICAL DEBRIS

Sanford has built a 15-year maverick political career that took him from a wealthy, Lowcountry plantation to Congress and the governor’s office.

Jenny Sanford, an heiress, was instrumental in his career, including running his first gubernatorial campaign — a fact Mark Sanford acknowledged Wednesday.

Sanford developed his adherence to his conservative principles and family values into a political base that was weakened by many contentious fights with the GOP-controlled Legislature, where he garnered many enemies.

In the first political fallout, Sanford said he is resigning as chairman of the Republican Governor’s Association.

He used that platform in recent months to fight President Obama’s economic stimulus package, becoming the nation’s only governor to file a lawsuit rather than accept $700 million in aid for a poor state racked by one of the country’s highest unemployment rates.

Sanford’s frequent appearances on national news outlets fueled talk of a possible GOP presidential run in 2012.

Though Sanford frequently has fought with lawmakers, state leaders largely held their fire Wednesday.

But some said the governor’s actions were unacceptable.

“He left the country and deliberately made himself unavailable ... he misled his staff who unknowingly misled the public,” Senate Majority Leader Harvey Peeler said in a statement. “We cannot let the Governor’s personal life overshadow his public responsibility, or in this case, his negligence of gubernatorial authority.”

Others reiterated the need to clarify state law about when a governor should hand over power if traveling, ill or disabled.

Some are wondering if Sanford now lacks the standing to lead the state during a troubled economy and should resign.

“The state needs someone who can be effective,” said Greenville-based consultant Chip Felkel. “I don’t think Mark can be effective at all.”

Other political analysts say Sanford’s presidential aspirations are over.

Admitting an affair and failing to stay in touch with the responsibilities of his office is “dereliction of duty,” said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.

CHANGING STORIES

Last Thursday about 5:30 p.m., Sanford drove a security vehicle from the Governor’s Mansion to Columbia Metropolitan Airport.

The State Law Enforcement Division, others responsible for his security and his own staff could not reach the governor through mobile phone and text messages between Thursday and Tuesday.

Questioned by reporters and state officials Monday, Sanford’s office first said he was recharging after losing the bruising political and legal fight over stimulus money from Washington.

Sanford’s staff declined to disclose his location but said nothing was wrong.

Later on Monday, Jenny Sanford said she did not know her husband’s whereabouts. He left to get away from the boys and “write something.” She said she was not worried.

Late Monday night, the governor’s office said Sanford was hiking the Appalachian Trail to unwind, something he said he has done since high school.

Tuesday, his staff said Sanford had communicated by phone and was bemused by the public interest in his whereabouts.

“I let them down by creating a fiction,” Sanford said Wednesday of his staff.

As the governor returned to Columbia, the black, SLED-owned Suburban he drove to Columbia’s airport Thursday without a security detail remained near a shade tree in Row 13 of an asphalt parking lot.

Inside, a worn canvas bag sat on the front passenger seat on top of a well-worn pair of Asics running shoes.

SLED director Reggie Lloyd said he supports changing the law to require governors to accept security. Sanford has resisted that since he took office, law enforcement officials have said.

Lloyd, a Sanford appointee, said the agencies that make up the detail — SLED, the departments of Public Safety and Natural Resources —should control how protection is provided.

Lloyd also said he is upset with Sanford’s staff.

“I think they were probably not the most candid and honest statements ... made to us as an agency,” Lloyd said. “It’s going to necessitate us to look at our policies on how we interact with staff.”

Sanford flew back to the U.S. Wednesday.

As he walked into Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson airport about 6:30 a.m., he was met by an aide — and a reporter from The State.

Sanford appeared surprised by the reporter’s presence.

He acknowledged for the first time he went to Buenos Aires, Argentina’s capital city. He said he decided against a hiking trip, to “do something exotic.”

Sanford said then, eight hours before his public confession of philandering, that he had been alone. He would say only that he drove along the Argentine coastline.

24 June 2009

Former United States District Court Judge Samuel Kent



H. Res. 520






In the House of Representatives, U.S.,
June 19, 2009.

Impeaching Samuel B. Kent, judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, for high crimes and misdemeanors.

Resolved, That Samuel B. Kent, a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, is impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors, and that the following articles of impeachment be exhibited to the Senate:

Articles of impeachment exhibited by the House of Representatives of the United States of America in the name of itself and all of the people of the United States of America, against Samuel B. Kent, a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, in maintenance and support of its impeachment against him for high crimes and misdemeanors.

ARTICLE I

Incident to his position as a United States district court judge, Samuel B. Kent has engaged in conduct with respect to employees associated with the court that is incompatible with the trust and confidence placed in him as a judge, as follows:

(1) Judge Kent is a United States District Judge in the Southern District of Texas. From 1990 to 2008, he was assigned to the Galveston Division of the Southern District, and his chambers and courtroom were located in the United States Post Office and Courthouse in Galveston, Texas.

(2) Cathy McBroom was an employee of the Office of the Clerk of Court for the Southern District of Texas, and served as a Deputy Clerk in the Galveston Division assigned to Judge Kent's courtroom.

(3) On one or more occasions between 2003 and 2007, Judge Kent sexually assaulted Cathy McBroom, by touching her private areas directly and through her clothing against her will and by attempting to cause her to engage in a sexual act with him.

Wherefore, Judge Samuel B. Kent is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors and should be removed from office.

ARTICLE II

Incident to his position as a United States district court judge, Samuel B. Kent has engaged in conduct with respect to employees associated with the court that is incompatible with the trust and confidence placed in him as a judge, as follows:

(1) Judge Kent is a United States District Judge in the Southern District of Texas. From 1990 to 2008, he was assigned to the Galveston Division of the Southern District, and his chambers and courtroom were located in the United States Post Office and Courthouse in Galveston, Texas.

(2) Donna Wilkerson was an employee of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

(3) On one or more occasions between 2001 and 2007, Judge Kent sexually assaulted Donna Wilkerson, by touching her in her private areas against her will and by attempting to cause her to engage in a sexual act with him.

Wherefore, Judge Samuel B. Kent is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors and should be removed from office.

ARTICLE III

Samuel B. Kent corruptly obstructed, influenced, or impeded an official proceeding as follows:

(1) On or about May 21, 2007, Cathy McBroom filed a judicial misconduct complaint with the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. In response, the Fifth Circuit appointed a Special Investigative Committee (hereinafter in this article referred to as "the Committee") to investigate Cathy McBroom's complaint.

(2) On or about June 8, 2007, at Judge Kent's request and upon notice from the Committee, Judge Kent appeared before the Committee.

(3) As part of its investigation, the Committee sought to learn from Judge Kent and others whether he had engaged in unwanted sexual contact with Cathy McBroom and individuals other than Cathy McBroom.

(4) On or about June 8, 2007, Judge Kent made false statements to the Committee regarding his unwanted sexual contact with Donna Wilkerson as follows:

(A) Judge Kent falsely stated to the Committee that the extent of his unwanted sexual contact with Donna Wilkerson was one kiss, when in fact and as he knew he had engaged in repeated sexual contact with Donna Wilkerson without her permission.

(B) Judge Kent falsely stated to the Committee that when told by Donna Wilkerson his advances were unwelcome no further contact occurred, when in fact and as he knew, Judge Kent continued such advances even after she asked him to stop.

(5) Judge Kent was indicted and pled guilty and was sentenced to imprisonment for the felony of obstruction of justice in violation of section 1512(c)(2) of title 18, United States Code, on the basis of false statements made to the Committee. The sentencing judge described his conduct as "a stain on the justice system itself".

Wherefore, Judge Samuel B. Kent is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors and should be removed from office.

ARTICLE IV

Judge Samuel B. Kent made material false and misleading statements about the nature and extent of his nonconsensual sexual contact with Cathy McBroom and Donna Wilkerson to agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation on or about November 30, 2007, and to agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and representatives of the Department of Justice on or about August 11, 2008.

Wherefore, Judge Samuel B. Kent is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors and should be removed from office.







Speaker of the House of Representatives.


Attest:





Clerk.

23 June 2009

Alberta Provincial Legislative Assembly Member Doug Elniski


'Men are attracted to smiles,' Alberta MLA advised girls on blog

CBC NEWS
June 22, 2009


Edmonton-Calder Conservative MLA Doug Elniski apologized late Monday afternoon for controversial comments that he posted on his blog, and insisted that he is not sexist.

Elniski posted the text of a speech on June 13 that he said he gives to junior high school students at Grade 9 graduation ceremonies.

Part of the posting included advice to girls saying, "Ladies, always smile when you walk into a room, there is nothing a man wants less than a woman scowling because he thinks he is going to get s--t for something and has no idea what."

It continues, "Men are attracted to smiles, so smile, don't give me that 'treated equal' stuff. If you want Equal, it comes in little packages at Starbucks."

Elniski's blog was taken down on Monday afternoon.

The "advice" shows Elniski does not believe in women's equality, NDP MLA Rachel Notley said Monday.

"I'm also very concerned that this is the kind of message that may be being given at junior high schools that this particular MLA is visiting," she said. "It's hurtful and it sets the issue of women's equality back."

"What does it say about Alberta when a government MLA is telling young girls that their understanding of equality can be found in a diet sweetener at Starbucks?" Notley asked in a news release. "Equal is a woman's right, not a Starbucks sweetener."

MLAs need to be held accountable for the comments they make in public either verbally or on the web, she added.


MLA said he paraphrased comedian

Notley has asked Conservative Premier Ed Stelmach to make it clear that these kinds of sentiments are not the prevailing opinion of members of his caucus.

Reached late Monday afternoon, Elniski said he was apologetic to those who took offence to his blog: "That's why I took it down," he said.

The comment regarding Equal being a package to pick up at Starbucks was paraphrased from a comedian's routine, Elniski said. The comments have never been part of any speech he gives to students, but simply a preamble on his website, he explained.

"In hindsight, it was a stupid, inappropriate thing to put on the blog," he admitted. "It completely missed the message I was trying to achieve."

Elniski said the message was that men and women should be friendly and approachable in dealing with others.


2nd apology in week

The rookie MLA, who was first elected to the legislature last year, apologized over the weekend for a separate online thread he posted from his Twitter account during Edmonton's Pride Parade on June 13.

Among the tweets he posted were "I am surrounded by bumping and grinding lesbians," and "that guy has size-14 stilettos."

The messages offended some members of Edmonton's gay community. Murray Billet, a gay rights activist and a member of the Edmonton Police Commission, said the comments were embarrassing and "narrow-minded."

Elniski said on the weekend he's not insensitive to the gay community, adding that he has a cousin who is gay.

"The Pride Parade was an awful lot of fun and there were some people there that were really, really, really into what they do," he said Monday.

"I really honestly had no malice or anything with respect to what went on at that parade. Those guys get a rough ride all the time."

With files from The Canadian Press

22 June 2009

The "Obstructionist Sitting Illegally on That Bench" and "the Fascists Who Run the Florida Bar"



The following court submission has been edited from its original content (to remove irrelevant references to attached exhibits).


IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA

THE FLORIDA BAR,

Complainant,

v.

JOHN B. THOMPSON,

Respondent.


Case Numbers SC 07 - 80 and 07- 354


THOMPSON’S FORMAL OBJECTION TO JUNE 4 SANCTIONS “HEARING”

This document is hereby submitted to the referee at the commencement of this non-hearing sanctions “hearing” and read into the record as well, and thus I depart from the traditional identification of myself, a party herein, in the third person and instead speak in my own voice in the first person directly to the referee.

I object, strenuously, as I have in the past on the record, to the very notion that this proceeding can even occur, on various grounds any single one of which is fatal to its legitimacy, including but not limited to the following grounds:

You, the referee, are not even a judge. The law in Florida on that is clear, and it is found in Florida’s Loyalty Oath Statute 876.05, et sequitur, held constitutional and binding by the United States Supreme Court in Connell v. Higginbotham.

We know now from a recently concluded State Attorney’s investigation and Report that your first state loyalty oath was forged. We also know that your next two oaths, which you signed, did not conform to that statute in that the language deviated from what is required and they were not even notarized. A number of formal opinions by Florida’s Attorney General state that such flaws are fatal regardless of intent. The statute itself states that if any state official, including a judge, fails to comply strictly with the loyalty oath statute, then that judge is without legal authority to serve and must immediately be removed from office. I will accomplish your removal from office in the days and weeks ahead, as the litigation that will achieve that has already been filed by me in Miami-Dade Circuit Court. The Supreme Court of Florida, which you, the referee think is your ally in what you are doing here has ruled that your loyalty oath screw-up is fatal.

As Richard Nixon found, the cover-up is worse than the initial law breaking. When I found out about your forged loyalty oath and then about your two subsequent inadequate loyalty oaths, I moved for your recusal. You then immediately commenced a cover-up, refusing by a false, formal order to acknowledge the loyalty oath problem, pretending it did not exist. Proving the cover-up, you even more foolishly executed on February 4, 2008, finally, a loyalty oath [. . .] that complies with the state statute, but you did so too late to keep you in office, as the oath must be timely executed, and yours is years too late. The law is clear; your post facto oath is invalid. This panicked oath is an irrefutable admission that you never had a valid oath in the first place. How could you do something so dumb? Easy; desperate people do desperate things. You will be removed from office, and all of what you have done in this Bar matter will be voided as a result.

Secondly, we know now that six of the seven Florida Supreme Court Justices never executed valid state loyalty oaths. I have proven that, as has Florida and Washington, D.C. lawyer Montgomery Blair Sibley, whose own Bar referee, Judge Prescott, had his oath forged by the same person, Sayed A. Shah, who forged yours. What a coincidence.

The Florida Supreme Court entered its order seeking to deny me my right to represent myself before it on this disciplinary matter when I alerted the Court to its loyalty oath problem. They, too, in a panic, executed too-late, post facto, wholly ineffectual loyalty oaths after the whistle was blown on them. This just proves that sitting on the highest court in the state neither make you clever. The consequence of all of this post facto oath taking is that all that the Florida Supreme Court has done in this case is invalid and will be voided, and if you think I will not accomplish that end then a) you do not understand the lawsuit already filed, and b) you don’t know Jack.

Thirdly, we are here today because you issued a written document you called “Recommendations” by which you announced to the world with this document you leaked to the press, that I am guilty on 27 of 31 counts brought by The Bar. In issuing and leaking this document called “Recommendations,” you have clearly violated Florida Bar Rule 3-7.6 (m) which states in pertinent part:

The referee’s report shall include:

(A) a finding of fact as to each item of misconduct of which the respondent is charged, which findings of fact shall enjoy the same presumption of correctness as the judgment of the trier of fact in a civil proceeding;
(B) recommendations as to whether the respondent should be found guilty of misconduct justifying disciplinary measures;
(C) recommendations as to the disciplinary measures to be applied;


English is the greatest of all languages. It allows its users to be very precise. Any rational person conversant in English understands, upon reading Rule 3-7.6, that the document containing findings of guilt must also contain “findings of fact” as to what I am guilty of. Your “Recommendations” have absolutely no findings of fact, and yet we are here today on that invalid document. There is absolutely no provision in our Bar Rules for a document called “Recommendations” devoid of such findings of fact. You and The Bar have made it up. You and The Bar have made a lot of things up in the last four years, and this is just your latest.

From the day this Bar effort began four years ago and in which you, the referee have become ensnared, although you have certainly warmed to the recruitment, I have been asking for a document that informs me what I have done to violate the Rules. Four years later, I still have no such document and no notice and thus no due process by virtue of that failure. You couldn’t even come up with it in your “Recommendations.” This is a game of “hide and seek,” Referee Tunis, which you cannot win.

I have said it before, and I will say it again to you, and of course you will not listen, but the record must be made clear: You can’t charge a lawyer and you can’t charge a rapist with anything unless you tell him in the charging document with specificity—with facts alleged—what he has done.

We went into the trial here in November 2007 with no specific charges. The Bar said, “Here are the Rules you have violated, here are the documents, you figure it out.” At the trial, there was absolutely no evidence—no facts—put forth that I violated any of these Bar Rules. My favorite “testimony,” if you want to call it that, which highlights the problem of not telling an accused what he has done wrong, was from Alabama Judge James Moore, who admitted under oath, that I did not withhold any of my colorful disciplinary history from him, as Blank Rome alleged, but that in fact I gave him more facts than I was required to give. My sin was that I did not tell him how “serious” were my Bar sins. I didn’t even have to tell him I was merely reprimanded by The Bar in 1992 for trying to protect my family from death threats, but because I did not characterize my sins as more serious than The Florida Bar itself did, when I provided him all the facts, he said I had not “see the whole picture.” Believe me, I see the whole picture. I am to be punished for telling the truth because I pose a threat to this white judge who put this black teen on death row in Alabama. That’s the “whole picture.” I am also to be punished, you have concluded, for going on 60 Minutes and warning the American people, like Paul Revere, that, inspired by video games, “the murders are coming.” And they have come. I am to be punished for trying to save lives, over the objection of Blank Rome, which gives more money to the Bush family than any other law firm in the world. This is the Bush family that put you on this bench and whom you have protected by refusing to give me a subpoena that puts Jeb Bush under oath about his personal, financial relationship with the two law firms that are behind all of these Bar complaints, Tew Cardenas and Blank Rome. You are Jeb Bush’s protector and shield from Jack Thompson, and you have discharged your sordid task in that regard effectively.

Fourthly, most of what I am charged with I did not do on behalf of any client but in pursuit of efforts to secure enforcement of laws for the common good. The Florida Supreme Court ruled, again in English so that any rational person can understand, in Florida Bar v. Brake, that a lawyer cannot violate Rule 4-8.4(d) unless he is “engaged in the practice of law on behalf of a client.” I had no client, Referee Tunis, in almost all of this, and thus you have had no jurisdiction over any of that. You have ignored this clear Florida Supreme Court ruling, and you will be undone by this cavalier disregard for the law in this regard as well.

Fifthly, you have received numerous motions to recuse, all of which have been facially and legally sufficient. The law in Florida in state court is clear as to recusal. Once you receive a motion to recuse which on its face conforms to the requirements of Florida Statute 38.10 and Rule 2.330, Florida Rules of Judicial Administration, you must withdraw from a case. You are not allowed to assess the validity of the facts in the motion. The filing of a motion that conforms to the statute mandates recusal, period. There is no wiggle room on this. You have wiggled, repeatedly, like a nightcrawler on a hook. You have thumbed your nose at this Florida recusal law as well, and this alone will undo you and which renders whatever you do today and after null and void.

Sixthly, we come to an issue about which The Florida Bar’s Board of Governors and I are in total agreement. The Governors have come up with a new Rule that before Judges can serve as referees in Bar matters they must be trained as to how to discharge these specialized duties of a referee. In the other Bar case you had Arthur Teele was the respondent, and he solved your problem by killing himself in the lobby of the Miami Herald. I’m not giving you that out.

The Bar Governors have decided: No training, you can’t be a referee. Leaving aside your bias against me, which you have never missed an opportunity to express, proof of your incompetence and total lack of training as a referee has been legion. You did whatever The Bar told you to do, even to the point of refusing to give me hearings, refusing to issue subpoenas, and refusing to afford me any semblance of due process. Smiling and saying “Have a nice day,” after you have just informed me that I can’t get a continuance for my wife’s cancer surgery and chemotherapy is not due process, Referee Tunis. It is incompetence wedded to arrogance, poorly masked by a happy face.

Going into this complex “disciplinary” matter with no training on what a referee should do and how you should act undoes all of what you have done and will yet do to me, as the new Bar Rule—let’s call it the Tunis Rule—will alone be a basis for reversal.

There is more that I could say and frankly want to say at this Star Chamber, kangaroo court “hearing,” but the record has probably been sufficiently made to date to make it easy enough to undo this mess, but I note here, as I conclude my objection to these proceedings:

You have been so cruel and at the same time so foolish as to call my pleadings herein “propaganda.” That word means something, given how propaganda was used in the last century by the Third Reich in Nazi Germany to justify the placement of people of faith in “relocation centers” where they were starved and gassed as the “final solution” to the problem they posed. A human spirit that could do that is more than capable of doing to me what you have done. Clarence Thomas, at his Senate confirmation hearings, spoke of those proceedings as “a high-tech lynching for uppity blacks who in any way deign to think for themselves, to do for themselves, to have different ideas, and it is a message that unless you kowtow to an old order, this is what will happen to you. You will be lynched, destroyed, caricatured by a committee of the U.S. Senate rather than hung from a tree."

The US Senate, Referee Tunis, has nothing on you and your high-tech lynching of the uppity Christian who stands before you.

U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas warned in Lathrop v. Donohue that integrated state bars, like Florida’s, if they were left unchecked as to their ideologies, would turn into, his phrase “goose-stepping brigades” for nonconforming lawyers who did not fit the majority’s mold. There is a reason my e-mail address is amendmentone@comcast.net. It is because of the fascists who run The Florida Bar identified as such by a U.S. Supreme Court Justice.

You also smeared me with the epithet that I am involved in some petty “culture war” into which I have tried, you allege, to recruit you. Some of us, Referee Tunis, simply know and dare act upon the fact that children should be protected from corporate predation, whether it be the violent pornography in Grand Theft Auto IV, sold to my 15-year-old son in a sting he did at Best Buy in Dadeland, in which women proclaim “I’ll suck your cock real nice” then do so, only to be killed by the hero in the game. We actually do something about the sale of simulators to underage teens on how to kill policemen in ways you would not even imagine, which is precisely what Devin Moore did in a police station in Fayette, Alabama. We come against radio broadcast descriptions, in our hometown on WQAM-AM, by Howard Stern as kids are going to school at 8 am by female amputees on how to lubricate their stumps and place them into the anuses of men to achieve orgasm.

Those of us who have done something about this do not want you in what you derisively call a “culture war” anymore than we would want Frank Fuster to run a day care center. I represented Ileana Fuster in her divorce from Frank Fuster, and she knows more about what I have been trying to do and why I have been trying to do it over the past twenty years than you even care to know and yet which you mock. It’s your and The Bar’s culture war on me and upon people of faith that indicts you, not me.

The Preamble to your and my Bar Rules, Referee Tunis, prohibits the bringing of Bar complaints by opposing parties and counsel as a means of collateral attack. Such SLAPP Bar complaints are illegal and they are void. When I provided you a letter from The Bar’s own prosecutor in Ft. Lauderdale saying just that, you refused to have a hearing on the matter. You refuse to have a hearing on any matter that threatens to derail this locomotive in whose engine you oh-so-primly sit, as it careens toward the bridge that is already washed out.

Just this past week you entered an order asserting that The Bar has never demanded a mental health assessment of me. I have the letters from The Bar that prove you a liar. It was in response to those repeated demands that I went to one of The Bar’s own favored forensic psychologists, Oren Wunderman, Executive Director of the Family Resource Center of South Florida, who spent hours examining me, administering tests, and he found me a) wonderfully sane, and b) a person whose Christian faith has enhanced his activities as a lawyer. The Bar has a real problem in that Dr. Wunderman simply echoes what The Bar itself had to formally admit in 1991 when its insurer paid me damages for forcing me to undergo forced psych evaluations, on the order of the oathless Florida Supreme Court. The Bar then formally found my actions stemmed from my religious faith, and it has never gotten over being bested at its own game. This latest installment of this anti-Christian persecution is simply payback by The Bar, and you have allowed yourself to become part of it.

You have chosen to ignore Dr. Wunderman’s findings and The Bar’s own previous findings as to why Jack Thompson does what he does, because you must: To do otherwise would have given me a hearing to which I am entitled under Florida Statute 761, called the Florida Religious Freedom Restoration Act, held constitutional by the United States Supreme Court, which provides me a total defense in these Bar proceedings and which also, when they are over, gives me a cause of action against you personally and against the State of Florida. This act provides that if my actions stem from a religious impulse, then The Bar cannot discipline me for acting upon my religious impulse. Good luck to a Bar whose own formal findings establish why I do what I do.

When I wrote a letter to Al Cardenas, calling him to be ashamed of what he and his law firm have done to harm children by fronting for the Howard Stern Show, I was acting upon the Scriptural template of John the Baptist confronting Herod about marrying his brother’s wife and the example of Jesus confronting the Pharisees, who called them “hypocrites, whited sepulchers, and vipers.” Jesus was not a silent doormat and neither am I.

This Florida Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which you arrogantly chose to pretend does not exist and on which you would not give me a hearing as to my defense thereunder, has been found to protect as a religious practice the consumption of peyote because there is a religious sect that makes doing so a sacrament. You cannot be serious, Referee Tunis, if you think that a jury will not look at what you have done to me for what I have done, in the name of Jesus Christ, and not be appalled at your discrimination against this uppity Christian “propagandist” whom you smear as a mere “culture warrior.”

Finally, and then I am done with this formal objection to these proceedings, over a year ago I taught an evening class at Miami-Dade Community College on the campus a few minutes from here. When I was introduced by the professor as the man who got Howard Stern off terrestrial radio, which Stern himself admits, and despite the Bar complaints of Tew Cardenas and other porn lawyers made at the time, all of the African American women in that classroom gave me an ovation. They get it. They understand the racism and the misogyny by Stern targeting them. You, a white woman of privilege living on Key Biscayne, obviously don’t “get it.”

Those black female students are the people who will be on my jury in the trial in which you and The Bar will be a defendant. I do what I do for them, and not for you, not for the ultra-liberal extremists on the Board of Governors like Steve Chaykin, my actual designated reviewer who publicly states that lawyers like Jack Thompson who oppose gay adoption are “enemies of The Bar and outside the core values of The Bar.” My other designated reviewer was Ben Kuehne, to the left of Stalin ideologically who is an operative for the ACLU, which national organization has targeted me for years. Kuehne is now under federal indictment for money-laundering and you, you obstructionist sitting illegally on that bench, would not issue a subpoena to allow me to depose him. In that single act of ministerial arrogance you violated any conceivable notion of due process under our Constitution. In doing so, you embarrass the bench more than any words I could write about Judge Ron Friedman.

The Steve Chaykins and the Ben Kuehnes who have hijacked this Bar, and who have hijacked you, the referee, are the ones who have fashioned Justice Douglas’ “goose-stepping brigades” that will undo both you and The Bar. I have put up with your serial breaches of Florida laws, of the Canons of Judicial Conduct, of the Constitution, and of common decency for a year and a half now. When this is done, and when you recommend my disbarment, and when the Supreme Court does disbar me, as I am presently bound and gagged and unable to represent myself before them in this matter, even though I now have a client whom I represent before them in that very same court, the tables will be turned. It will then be my time at bat, and a jury of normal people in this County will undo all that you have done.

Even now, this day, I thank God that I am who I am, in the situation in which I now find myself, rather than the one in which you brazenly put yourself. From the Gospel of John 15: 18-25 I end with the words of Jesus of Nazareth, which you, Referee Tunis, have proven true:

18"If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. 19If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you. 20Remember the words I spoke to you: 'No servant is greater than his master.' If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also. If they obeyed my teaching, they will obey yours also. 21They will treat you this way because of my name, for they do not know the One who sent me. 22If I had not come and spoken to them, they would not be guilty of sin. Now, however, they have no excuse for their sin. 23He who hates me hates my Father as well. 24If I had not done among them what no one else did, they would not be guilty of sin. But now they have seen these miracles, and yet they have hated both me and my Father. 25But this is to fulfill what is written in their Law: 'They hated me without reason.'”

Having only scratched the surface with what is wrong about these lawless proceedings and why they are illegitimate under the laws and Constitution that you were supposed to take an oath to uphold, I have no choice, as a matter of law, but to depart from these proceedings now and not participate in them other than to object to them, which I have now done.

To do otherwise, to participate in any fashion in these invalid, unauthorized, unconstitutional, vicious proceedings, waives my objection to them and in fact validates them. I will not do that because I am too good a lawyer to do that, having practiced law, Referee Tunis, in continuous good standing for 31 years, despite the efforts of the anti-Christian Florida Bar that recruited you to do exactly what you have done like a good little soldier in your own little culture war on a man who protects the children you should be protecting.

Jesus said, “If any of you should cause one of these little ones to stumble, then it would be better for you that a millstone be tied around your neck and that you be cast into the uttermost depths of the sea.”

By perseverance and by God’s grace, I have fashioned a legal millstone that I will place around your neck and the neck of The Bar. Don’t blame me, Referee Tunis, when you feel the water rising.

I have been invited to be one of four honorees this year in Utah at what is called America’s Freedom Festival. I will ride with the other four honorees in a parade attended in the past by 250,000 folks lining the streets of Provo. The petty hypocrisy by which you, a referee, seek to harm me cannot undo the blessing that awaits me, by God’s mercy and grace, in middle America a month from this day. [. . .] I am being blessed because I have stood against The Bar, not in spite of that stand. I have put myself in harm’s way, at the hands of harmful people like you, Referee Tunis, and in doing so I have “fought the good fight” to protect little ones who mean more to me than anything you think you can do to me.

You are the one who is out of touch, Ms. Tunis. Senators Clinton and Obama have both warned the American people, specifically, of the danger posed by the Grand Theft Auto games. The Blank Rome lawyers who protect this game want me disbarred because I dared to sound the alarm about Grand Theft Auto on CBS’ 60 Minutes before Senators Clinton and Obama followed my lead. Now, in part because of my efforts, a recent poll shows that 65% of the American people want a federal law to prohibit the sale of games like GTA to kids. I am “guilty” of being right and ahead of the curve when it came to Howard Stern and as to Grand Theft Auto. Because I took on Bar complainant, Al Cardenas, the Howard Stern Show is off terrestrial radio and his influence diminished. Because I took on this cop-killing, woman-bashing video game, the Presidential race is now addressing the issue and this particular video game.

Try to get me disbarred. Go ahead, do your worst, Referee Tunis. I will continue to do my best.

I HEREBY CERTIFY that this has likely been hand-delivered this June 4, 2008, to Bar staff counsel Sheila Tuma in the courtroom.





JOHN B. THOMPSON, Attorney
Florida Bar #231665
1172 South Dixie Hwy., Suite 111
Coral Gables, Florida 33146
305-666-4366
amendmentone@comcast.net

21 June 2009

The "Father's Day" Industry

"The Federal Union"



Declaration of Independence of the People of New Hampshire

_____

Drafted by Caleb Johnson

_____

Being the resolution adopted by the undersigned, who petition to the New Hampshire General Court for Redress of the Grievances filed herein, by which the citizens of New Hampshire have been victimized and oppressed by the Federal Union, contrary to New Hampshire Law and the decent standards of Mankind:


Since the dawn of time, mankind has been involved in an epic struggle for freedom: On the one hand, he finds his nature to be unaccustomed to change, so that even when faced with tyranny, he will bear such burdens as he finds tolerable rather than to disrupt his security by effecting change. On the other hand, men have periodically been compelled to cast aside their usual compunction and embrace a change in their accustomed forms of government when that government has outraged their morality and devastated their liberties. When compelled to such momentous change, men feel impelled to express the reasons which have forced their actions, both to satisfy the curiosity of others, and to serve as a message for posterity.

If there were a principle more noble, more honorable, more American than any other, is it not that we men and women are all equal, and entitled to equal treatment before the law? We suffer no King, no despot, no tyrant. All men, from President to pauper, hold the same precious liberty, and are accountable to the same measure of justice. It is the government that serves the people, not the people who serve the government. Thus, when any government fails to serve these ends, it is incumbent upon the people to change that form of government and adopt such government as they believe will serve them adequately.

Sanity and reason compel us to admit that imperfect men cannot be expected to form perfect governments, and thus we would be foolish indeed to dispose of our governments for trivial causes. But when any people are subjected to a series of authoritarian and repressive measures, which continue unabated throughout successive generations and successive administrations, it is folly to hold out continued hope for reform, for the evil finds its root in the institutions themselves, and is not the heinous work of a single administrator. And men living under such a regime find themselves in the unenviable position of accepting the necessity of change, which is so naturally repulsive to the human soul. Yet, that is the present situation of the citizens of New Hampshire. The history of the present Federal Government is a history of despotism, tyranny, and oppression, which threatens to forever destroy our liberties and, worse yet, implicates us in morally reprehensible crimes against humanity.

To prove this, let the facts be submitted to a candid world:

The Federal Government has held persons indefinitely, both foreigners and citizens, without charging them of crimes, in violation of the writ of habeas corpus.

The Federal Government, in direct contravention of our Law and Constitution, has engaged in spying on American citizens, using advanced technology to monitor our every move. Nothing that we say, do, read, or write is safe from their surveillance.

The Federal Government has inflicted cruel and unusual punishment upon us, contrary to our Law.

The Federal Government has deported friendly foreign nationals to severe places, to experience the most inhumane of treatment at the hands of supposed allies. The Federal Government has rounded up masses of people, based solely on ethnicity, and subjected them to the loss of their property and dignity.

The Federal Government has engaged in a policy of near-Genocide towards the original inhabitants of this land.

The Federal Government, in contravention of all law and practice, has set forward plans for implementing martial law in the case of declared emergencies, threatening to suspend our Constitutions and impose upon us a law contrary to our consent.

In anticipation of the above emergency powers, the federal government has devised and implemented plans for creating emergencies, intending to implement its nefarious schemes upon the peaceful people of New Hampshire.

The Federal Government has conspired, through executive edict, legislative law, and judicial rulings, to annihilate due process and institute the despicable principle of guilt by association and innuendo.

The Federal Government has repeatedly used the military and other federal forces to crush dissent and free speech.

The Federal Government has authorized the use of deadly force by the military against those who are engaged in such dissent, men who are merely asserting their Right to Petition for Redress of Grievances.

The Federal Government has restricted the right to travel, based merely upon suspicion of misconduct through such outrages as the no-fly list.

The Federal Government, contrary to the natural law, has extended the rights of persons to corporations, which have used these rights to deny and disparage the inherent rights received by mankind from his Creator.

Where powerful governments are controlled by business, the shadow of fascism trails not far behind. Where powerful businesses are controlled by governments, the echos of socialism and communism ring. The unnatural rights and alliances formed between our Federal Government and corporations have combined these political Tyrannies into nearly unbreakable manacles, by which our people are stripped and flogged.

Even more dangerously, the Federal Government has endangered our security and implicated us in morally reprehensible crimes by arrogantly presuming, on behalf of American Corporations, to wage warfare, economic, political, and military, on other nations which do not permit us free access to their economies. A few examples suffice:

The Federal Government has presumed to assassinate leaders of foreign nations.

The Federal Government has presumed to stage military coups in foreign nations, installing puppet dictators for the purpose of securing American interests.

The Federal Government has resorted to the most immoral of methods in these foreign countries, including torture, death camps, and mass slaughter. It has maintained the School of the Americas, based in Georgia, USA, for the purpose of training foreign governments to institute such brutal measures to maintain control.

The Federal Congress has issued a report alleging that the CIA commits over 100,000 serious crimes per year, crimes which are never brought to justice. These intelligence agencies engage in drug trafficking, carry out assassinations, disseminate false propaganda, and commit economic espionage and sabotage.

Furthermore, in the waging of warfare, the federal government has engaged in immoral behavior, which is universally condemned throughout the civilized world: It lays land mines, tortures prisoners of war, and intentionally inflicts massive civilian casualties, contrary to international treaty. Moreover, countries which fail to obey the orders given by the federal government have been the victims of devastating embargoes, embargoes which target the civilian populace.

Throughout these crimes and injustices, we have never ceased to hold out hope for change; and yet, our constant pleadings have only been met with greater outrages. Our choice has thus been clearly submitted to us: Submit to the federal yoke of slavery, or dispose of the federal government and be free men and women.


____________________


We, the undersigned, thus hereby request that the legislature of New Hampshire make the following Resolution:

That the State of New Hampshire is, and of right ought to be, a free and independent State; that she is absolved from all allegiance to the Federal Union, and that all political connection between us and the United States of America, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as a free and independent State, we have full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent States may of right do.

20 June 2009

Canadian Federal Member of Parliament Shelly Glover


Achtung!

by "Greg"

As originally posted on: They Call Me "Mr. Sinister"
June 20, 2009


The following exchange between the press and MP (and cop on leave) Shelly Glover will give you some pause. It certainly makes me think about how cops view democracy and free speech. I hope Ms. Glover is the exception rather than the rule:

But a press conference in Ottawa today added a new twist. Justice Minister Rob Nicholson and Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan were at the Canadian War Museum to announce new legislation related to Internet surveillance.

They were joined on stage by several police officers who supported the measures as a way to nab child predators lurking online.

But it was a big news day and reporters also had questions for the ministers on the case of Abousfian Abdelrazik, the ongoing Cornwall bridge closure and a report from the House of Commons public safety committee.

The moderator, former Winnipeg police officer and first-term Conservative MP Shelly Glover, would have none of it.

“If I could interject,” she said after a question on Mr. Abdelrazik. “Today’s a very, very special day for the people who have come from a long distance. Could we please keep our questions focused on today’s announcement?”

“With due respect, it is a news conference,” CTV’s Roger Smith replied.

“Yes,” Ms. Glover replied sternly. “And when they put a police officer in charge, they give directions and we hope that you follow them.”

Translation: Shut the fuck up and write what we tell you to write. Charming. Ms. Glover has a future in Iranian politics, if she ever gets tired of Canada.

The State


Competing, voluntary governments could be better choice

by Kent McManigal

As originally posted: Albuquerque Libertarian Examiner
June 17, 2009


In a comment a couple of days ago, MamaLiberty spoke of the Constitution establishing a non-voluntary government. That is true. People seem to accept, on the whole, that government is necessarily non-voluntary. At least if you get rid of the nonsense about voting making government "of the people". Government, as it now exists, is a coercive monopoly.

But why should government be non-voluntary? Why not let people choose among competing governments? If it is good enough for us where cell phone companies or insurance providers are concerned, why not governments too? Some people would scream about those who refuse to sign on with ANY government, if given a choice. Well, what about those people who refuse a government? If government is so wonderful, why would anyone refuse? If, as is so often claimed, governments benefit those who live under them, people would be clamoring to sign on with some government, right? Especially if you could choose the features you want. Or, if governments really give no benefits, or if the liabilities outweigh the benefits, maybe it is time for governments to change or go out of business.

If a government can arise that can compete, and prosper, others would adopt the good parts of that one while trying to improve upon the model. Want your government to provide welfare? Fine, but you will bear the cost, as your government can't "tax" anyone not on their client list. Want to keep all your money all your working life, but collect some equivalent of Social Security


in your old age instead of planning ahead? Too late to switch when you retire, unless the welfare-doling government's clients will let you join and live off of them now.

I still prefer good old self-government. The only kind that has ever worked, or ever will.

19 June 2009

United States President Barack Obama


Obama's promise of a new beginning now hollow

by Joseph L. Galloway

As originally posted: McClatchy
June 19, 2009


Who stole our change?

Who hijacked a popular uprising that was going to put a stop to business as usual in Washington, D.C.?

What happened to Barack Obama on his way to the White House?

The Republicans have been so busy trying to paint President Obama as a socialist, as a radical, as a Marxist, as a Muslim, as the Devil, that they haven't even noticed that he has become one of them.

What a difference a year can make. A year ago Barack Obama was on the campaign trail, promising an American electorate disheartened and disgusted by eight years of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney that he was going to change everything if he was elected President.

He would be the new broom, sweeping out the dirt, collecting the trash, and fixing everything that was broken and tarnished and perverted in our government, in our nation's capital, in our White House.

He swept into office on a high tide of good will and anticipation. He was going to fix Wall Street. He was going to end the war in Iraq. He was going to bring a new era of transparency to government. He was going to stimulate a faltering economy and give new hope to a shrinking, frightened middle class. He was going to close the prison at Guantanamo and end the torture policies of his predecessors. There was even a hope that we would investigate how we went wrong and who ordered it.

He came to town on a white horse, riding a staggering wave of popular approval in the polls, a golden leader in a golden moment with a golden opportunity, and then he did what? Nothing much. Nothing different.

Oh, he can still talk the talk and he does that incessantly. But he seemingly can't walk the walk. He may still sound like a revolutionary but more and more he looks and acts like George W. Bush, albeit a George W. Bush who can speak a complete sentence in the English language.

Obama's approval ratings are beginning to unwind and begin a long downward spiral among those who had believed in the promises of change. There was a golden moment when change was possible, but it is gone now.

There was one thing Obama absolutely had to do, even before tackling an economic meltdown and the Wall Street and big bank rip-offs:

He had to reassure Americans that we all live under the rule of law; that no one by virtue of holding the highest offices in the land, or having the biggest bank account, is above the law.

It was incumbent on new President Obama to step back and let justice be done. Let the investigators do their job, Not only to let justice be done but let justice be seen to be done.

But no. He said he wanted to focus on the future, not revisit the past. He needed to get moving on stimulating a floundering economy. And he screwed that up, too, reaching out to the very pirates who had looted their stockholders, their own companies, their own country to find someone to appoint as Treasury Secretary, thus reassuring Wall Street that he wasn't going to turn over any apple carts.

He declared that we, as a nation and people, would no longer torture our enemies and suspected enemies; would no longer lock them up and throw away the key; would no longer violate our own laws and those of the international conventions governing warfare.

But he trooped over to the Central Intelligence Agency headquarters to reassure those who had "only followed orders" when they tortured and abused helpless prisoners that they would never face justice. Nor would those who gave those illegal orders.

He promised to release another big batch of torture photos from our concentration camps in Afghanistan and Iraq and then reneged on that promise under pressure from the national security mavens.

His promises of transparency in government weren't worth a pitcher of warm spit. He sent the new, cleaner Justice Department lawyers into court to use the same limp arguments of national security to ask judges to back off on doing their jobs.

And bit-by-bit the possibility of change disappeared; bit-by-bit the hope of a renewed and reinvigorated American democracy and way of government faded away. Those who had held a dream in their hand closed their hand and crushed it.

The South Carolina Republican Party


How online racist jokes hurt S.C. GOP

Experts, Democrats see lasting effects; Republicans disagree

by John O'Connor

As originally published in: The State
June 18, 2009


State Republican leaders said they do not think online racist jokes by party activists will have a long-term impact on the party’s ability to attract black voters and candidates. But political experts and Democrats disagree.

Twice this week Republican activists have apologized for racist humor.

Wednesday, flanked by members of the NAACP, Columbia GOP activist Rusty DePass apologized for the Facebook remark that likened first lady Michelle Obama’s ancestors to an escaped Riverbanks Zoo gorilla. On Tuesday, Mike Green, an employee with Lexington GOP consulting firm Starboard Communications apologized for an online joke about President Barack Obama taxing aspirin “because it’s white and it works.”

Starboard has been hired by U.S. Rep. Gresham Barrett, an Oconee Republican who is running for governor.

Despite the apologies, observers said voters likely will remember the incident as part of a longer history of disputes that includes removing the Confederate battle flag from the State House dome.

And voting data show S.C. Republicans have a tougher time attracting black voters than do Republicans nationally.

“I think it makes a strain to invite African-Americans to the Republican Party,” said state Rep. Leon Howard, D-Richland. “This kind of behavior does not close that gap very much.”

Howard, former chairman of the State House Black Caucus, said he works well with Republicans often, but there are a handful of party members “that are completely out of control.”

DePass issued an apology during a press conference called by the South Carolina NAACP.

“I am truly sorry for any offense I have caused,” DePass said to a small crowd of NAACP supporters who turned out for the noon press event. “My remark was clearly inappropriate, and I apologize for writing it.”

The NAACP had called on DePass to make a clear apology.

DePass said he also had written a letter of apology to Michelle Obama. He declined to make the contents of that letter available to the public. During Wednesday’s press briefing, DePass called his remarks “offensive,” “flippant” and “indefensible.”

“I have embarrassed myself as well as my friends and associates and the members of my family,” DePass said in his prepared comments. “All I can do is ask you to forgive me.”

Howard said the incident has hurt DePass.

“I’ve heard he has done a lot of good things in this state, and it would be a tragedy to be remembered by this event,” said Howard, who Tuesday helped push a legislative resolution to express sympathy to Michelle Obama. The proposal was stopped when Rep. Wendy Nanney, R-Greenville, objected to suspending House rules to pass the bill without a committee hearing. Five House members joined her dissent.

The Republican bid to block the resolution also did not help the party’s image. Republican leaders acknowledge they have struggled with the race issue and are working to change the perception of their party.

Black Republican candidates had a strong year in 2008, with Charleston Rep. Tim Scott becoming the first black Republican elected to the State House in 100 years. In total, the GOP fielded six black State House candidates. The party also elected York County’s Glenn McCall, a banking executive and veteran, as one of three black Republican national committeemen.

McCall said local efforts in York County, such as the county Republican Party sponsoring a basketball league, were having a positive impact.

“They’re growing the connection,” McCall said. “I think this is happening all over the state.

“I don’t think it has any (lasting impact)” McCall said of DePass’ online posting. “He is a citizen who doesn’t speak for the party. I think people understand that.”

Former party chairman Katon Dawson said the S.C. GOP has found some agreement with black voters on issues — particularly school choice.

But voting data show the S.C. party lags behind the Republican Party nationally, where typically one in 10 black voters chooses Republican candidates.

According to S.C. Election Commission primary data, the only data that breaks out party voting by race, about one in 14.5 nonwhite voters cast ballots for Republicans in 2008 primaries. That’s down from the high-water mark in 2002 — when Democrats had uncontested gubernatorial and U.S. Senate races. In 2002, one in 7.5 nonwhite voters voted Republican, up from 1994, when about one in 26 nonwhite voters chose the GOP.

Clemson University political scientist Dave Woodard says he sees the discrepancy when he conducts polling. Polled African-Americans frequently say they like GOP candidates, but their votes never appear.

“This is a legacy, I think,” Woodard said. “They just cannot convince African-Americans that they are the party of (President Abraham) Lincoln.”

NAACP state president Lonnie Randolph said he was sure some good would come of the incident, and thanked DePass and others, current and former S.C. GOP leadership, and Columbia Mayor Bob Coble, a Democrat, for speaking out.

“South Carolina’s books on bigotry and hatred have been open since the country was founded,” Randolph said.

Staff writer Roddie Burris contributed to this report. Reach O’Connor at (803) 771-8358.

18 June 2009

"The Warfare-Welfare System"



The Anti-Electorate Manifesto



We, the Anti-Electorate, do not believe there is a need for "strong leadership" in government.


We are not drawn to "intellectual" authorities and political "heroes."


We are not impressed with titles, ranks, and pecking orders - politicians, celebrities, and gurus.


We do not struggle for control of organizations, social circles, and government.


We do not lobby the State for favors or permission to control those with whom we disagree.


Rather, we advocate freedom.


By its very nature, the State does not.


Exercise your right to say "No!" to the warfare-welfare system.


Refuse to vote. Then tell your friends why.



Movement of the Libertarian Left
MLL

MOVEMENT OF THE LIBERTARIAN LEFT
Agora - Anarchy - Action!
http://Agorism.info

17 June 2009

"This Federal Perversion of the United States of America"


Pledging allegiance

by Kent McManigal

As originally posted: Albuquerque Libertarian Examiner
June 16, 2009


"I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

Um. No.

Even if you discount the socialistic parentage, and Nazi stepchildren, of the Pledge of Allegiance, really reading it should disturb anyone. Pledging allegiance to a flag; a banner made of cloth? "Allegiance" is loyalty or the obligation of loyalty, or devotion. To a flag? What is this flag demanding you do with this "obligation of loyalty"? Invade foreign lands and kill in its name, or in the name of its government? Torture people because you can't prove they are guilty? Violate the rights of the people who blindly worship this banner in order to protect the illegitimate power of the government that waves the banner to distract the people from its real actions? It's disgusting.

The hand-wringing drama over "God" being added to the pledge during the panicky 1950s is not the foundational problem. The Constitution, not the flag, was the basis of the "Republic", but that is a historical curiosity now, isn't it.

No "nation" has ever been, or ever will be, "indivisible" nor should they be. Circumstances change. People change. Divorce happens for a reason. Governments grow ever more corrupt, then they dissolve. As they should. "Forever stamps"? Ridiculous. No government has ever lasted forever, and none ever will. Good riddance to them all.

Liberty? Tell that to people forced to be corralled in "free speech zones" to avoid subjecting politicians to the truth. Justice for all? Try telling that to the millions of political prisoners in America who have harmed no one, but violated some counterfeit "law" against intoxicants, consensual sex, guns, or keeping their own property out of the hands of the federal thieves who "tax".

America was supposed to be united states of America, not this federal perversion of The United States of America. Constitutionally, if you care about such things, there should be no such entity in existence that this pledge is declaring your loyalty to.

At the risk of being hated I will say: I pledge NO allegiance, to any flag, not even of the former America. And of the republic for which it stood: now an empire under surveillance, launching attacks against liberty and justice for all.

16 June 2009

"Our Power Elite"


The American Empire Is Bankrupt

by Chris Hedges

As originally posted on: Truthdig
June 14, 2009


This week marks the end of the dollar’s reign as the world’s reserve currency. It marks the start of a terrible period of economic and political decline in the United States. And it signals the last gasp of the American imperium. That’s over. It is not coming back. And what is to come will be very, very painful.

Barack Obama, and the criminal class on Wall Street, aided by a corporate media that continues to peddle fatuous gossip and trash talk as news while we endure the greatest economic crisis in our history, may have fooled us, but the rest of the world knows we are bankrupt. And these nations are damned if they are going to continue to prop up an inflated dollar and sustain the massive federal budget deficits, swollen to over $2 trillion, which fund America’s imperial expansion in Eurasia and our system of casino capitalism. They have us by the throat. They are about to squeeze.

There are meetings being held Monday and Tuesday in Yekaterinburg, Russia, (formerly Sverdlovsk) among Chinese President Hu Jintao, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and other top officials of the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization. The United States, which asked to attend, was denied admittance. Watch what happens there carefully. The gathering is, in the words of economist Michael Hudson, “the most important meeting of the 21st century so far.”

It is the first formal step by our major trading partners to replace the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. If they succeed, the dollar will dramatically plummet in value, the cost of imports, including oil, will skyrocket, interest rates will climb and jobs will hemorrhage at a rate that will make the last few months look like boom times. State and federal services will be reduced or shut down for lack of funds. The United States will begin to resemble the Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe. Obama, endowed by many with the qualities of a savior, will suddenly look pitiful, inept and weak. And the rage that has kindled a handful of shootings and hate crimes in the past few weeks will engulf vast segments of a disenfranchised and bewildered working and middle class. The people of this class will demand vengeance, radical change, order and moral renewal, which an array of proto-fascists, from the Christian right to the goons who disseminate hate talk on Fox News, will assure the country they will impose.

I called Hudson, who has an article in Monday’s Financial Times called “The Yekaterinburg Turning Point: De-Dollarization and the Ending of America’s Financial-Military Hegemony.” “Yekaterinburg,” Hudson writes, “may become known not only as the death place of the czars but of the American empire as well.” His article is worth reading, along with John Lanchester’s disturbing exposé of the world’s banking system, titled “It’s Finished,” which appeared in the May 28 issue of the London Review of Books.

“This means the end of the dollar,” Hudson told me. “It means China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Iran are forming an official financial and military area to get America out of Eurasia. The balance-of-payments deficit is mainly military in nature. Half of America’s discretionary spending is military. The deficit ends up in the hands of foreign banks, central banks. They don’t have any choice but to recycle the money to buy U.S. government debt. The Asian countries have been financing their own military encirclement. They have been forced to accept dollars that have no chance of being repaid. They are paying for America’s military aggression against them. They want to get rid of this.”

China, as Hudson points out, has already struck bilateral trade deals with Brazil and Malaysia to denominate their trade in China’s yuan rather than the dollar, pound or euro. Russia promises to begin trading in the ruble and local currencies. The governor of China’s central bank has openly called for the abandonment of the dollar as reserve currency, suggesting in its place the use of the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights. What the new system will be remains unclear, but the flight from the dollar has clearly begun. The goal, in the words of the Russian president, is to build a “multipolar world order” which will break the economic and, by extension, military domination by the United States. China is frantically spending its dollar reserves to buy factories and property around the globe so it can unload its U.S. currency. This is why Aluminum Corp. of China made so many major concessions in the failed attempt to salvage its $19.5 billion alliance with the Rio Tinto mining concern in Australia. It desperately needs to shed its dollars.

“China is trying to get rid of all the dollars they can in a trash-for-resource deal,” Hudson said. “They will give the dollars to countries willing to sell off their resources since America refuses to sell any of its high-tech industries, even Unocal, to the yellow peril. It realizes these dollars are going to be worthless pretty quickly.”

The architects of this new global exchange realize that if they break the dollar they also break America’s military domination. Our military spending cannot be sustained without this cycle of heavy borrowing. The official U.S. defense budget for fiscal year 2008 is $623 billion, before we add on things like nuclear research. The next closest national military budget is China’s, at $65 billion, according to the Central Intelligence Agency.

There are three categories of the balance-of-payment deficits. America imports more than it exports. This is trade. Wall Street and American corporations buy up foreign companies. This is capital movement. The third and most important balance-of-payment deficit for the past 50 years has been Pentagon spending abroad. It is primarily military spending that has been responsible for the balance-of-payments deficit for the last five decades. Look at table five in the Balance of Payments Report, published in the Survey of Current Business quarterly, and check under military spending. There you can see the deficit.

To fund our permanent war economy, we have been flooding the world with dollars. The foreign recipients turn the dollars over to their central banks for local currency. The central banks then have a problem. If a central bank does not spend the money in the United States then the exchange rate against the dollar will go up. This will penalize exporters. This has allowed America to print money without restraint to buy imports and foreign companies, fund our military expansion and ensure that foreign nations like China continue to buy our treasury bonds. This cycle appears now to be over. Once the dollar cannot flood central banks and no one buys our treasury bonds, our empire collapses. The profligate spending on the military, some $1 trillion when everything is counted, will be unsustainable.

“We will have to finance our own military spending,” Hudson warned, “and the only way to do this will be to sharply cut back wage rates. The class war is back in business. Wall Street understands that. This is why it had Bush and Obama give it $10 trillion in a huge rip-off so it can have enough money to survive.”

The desperate effort to borrow our way out of financial collapse has promoted a level of state intervention unseen since World War II. It has also led us into uncharted territory.

“We have in effect had to declare war to get us out of the hole created by our economic system,” Lanchester wrote in the London Review of Books. “There is no model or precedent for this, and no way to argue that it’s all right really, because under such-and-such a model of capitalism ... there is no such model. It isn’t supposed to work like this, and there is no road-map for what’s happened.”

The cost of daily living, from buying food to getting medical care, will become difficult for all but a few as the dollar plunges. States and cities will see their pension funds drained and finally shut down. The government will be forced to sell off infrastructure, including roads and transport, to private corporations. We will be increasingly charged by privatized utilities—think Enron—for what was once regulated and subsidized. Commercial and private real estate will be worth less than half its current value. The negative equity that already plagues 25 percent of American homes will expand to include nearly all property owners. It will be difficult to borrow and impossible to sell real estate unless we accept massive losses. There will be block after block of


empty stores and boarded-up houses. Foreclosures will be epidemic. There will be long lines at soup kitchens and many, many homeless. Our corporate-controlled media, already banal and trivial, will work overtime to anesthetize us with useless gossip, spectacles, sex, gratuitous violence, fear and tawdry junk politics. America will be composed of a large dispossessed underclass and a tiny empowered oligarchy that will run a ruthless and brutal system of neo-feudalism from secure compounds. Those who resist will be silenced, many by force. We will pay a terrible price, and we will pay this price soon, for the gross malfeasance of our power elite.

15 June 2009

"The Status Quo Hoi Polloi"


I Don't and Won't Vote: Here's Why

by Alex R. Knight III

As originally posted on: Strike the Root
June 8, 2009


It was really Larken Rose’s idea, not mine. In case you don’t know who Larken is, he is a fellow anarchist, but is more infamous still for his assertion that there is in fact no government law that makes anyone liable for the U.S. income tax. While I agree with his overall assessment, I profoundly disagree with the specific intellectual path by which he arrives at the same conclusion. No matter. We’re both a lot more on the same page when it comes to viewing government in general as possessing not a shred of legitimacy in a sane, rational, and hence, real world. Thus, I tried repeating a little social experiment I heard him describe once on Marc Stevens’ The No-State Project.

I recently attended a college class wherein I was giving a presentation on Anarchism in America, and I started it off something like this:

“All right, here it is: I hereby unilaterally declare forever and hereafter that I will never use physical violence, fraud, or deception in order to control the life or property of anyone in this room. Is that clear?”

There were eight other people in the room, one of whom was the professor. Everyone nodded assent. So far so good.

“Okay. Now, is there anyone here who does not agree to extend the same treatment and philosophy towards myself?”

The professor asked for some clarification, and made clear his belief that he felt hurting someone’s feelings, even by proxy, might constitute aggression. I tried assuring him that this wasn’t so, but that started eating up a lot of time. In the end, he abstained from answering either Yes or No. No one else objected in any way to what I’d said.

“Well, all right. Now, let me see a show of hands – how many of you are voters?”

To my shock, everyone raised a hand – except me, of course.

“Wow,” I said, genuinely stunned. “Well, my next question to all of you then is, when are you going to stop voting?”

Blank stares, and mostly grim ones at that. One fellow said, in a harsh, defiant tone, “Never!” I asked if everyone understood my position, and what I was getting at; to wit, that voting isn’t theft and murder in and of itself, but that it’s precisely like hiring a hit man to do the same things for you. Someone then said, “Yes, but not intentionally.” I tried responding, but things started to erupt from there, and I never got the chance.

Nothing, however, is erupting now except these words as I sit here typing on a warm, sunny morning at my writing desk, and so I will now form an answer.

I have a very hard time believing that grown adults, quite able to grasp the concepts I laid before them, do not understand what they are intentionally doing by being so foolish, shortsighted, self-degrading, and destructive as to continue voting in political elections. I also find it sad and utterly loathsome that those who vote, whether they recognize it or not, are nothing short of beggars with little or no self-respect. Voting is buying into a con-game. It is seeking permission to be given freedom – something voting and government will never and cannot by its very intrinsic nature give you even if those running it wanted to, which I assure you they don’t and never will. Voting is a tacit endorsement of inflicting theft and violence not only upon one’s self, but upon the rest of society and humanity in general. It is a callous disregard of life, liberty, and property. It is one of the most destructive activities imaginable, tantamount to robbery and murder.

I do not and resolutely refuse to vote because I hold myself to a higher moral and spiritual character. I have a stronger and healthier ego; a greater sense of pride and self-worth. I don’t get on my knees and beg anyone. I denounce thievery and violence; I consider myself more advanced than that. I possess greater intellect than to believe anything so preposterous as the notion that anyone else has the right to run my life or manage my property without my explicit consent – consent I refuse to give by voting.

I don’t need to be “one of the gang.” I don’t care about being “accepted” because I just do what everyone else does to avoid being considered too radical, or far-out, or just plain weird. I’m not caught up in those kinds of weak, ridiculous social threats that only prove the fear and ignorance of those who are timid victims of the lies and propaganda of the status quo hoi polloi. You know, the bullshit that says if you’ll only just be like everyone else, you’ll end up with all the girls, all the admiration, all the success. Try taking a look at where the people who believe that actually are and I need nothing more to prove my point. Being a challenger, a defier, a revolutionary, an outcast – these are things that take innovation. They take strength. They take integrity. They require principles and character. They take balls, dammit.

These are some of the reasons I don’t and won’t vote. For anyone. Ever. I invite you – the brave, the strong, the intelligent, and the wise to join me.

Oh, and in case this whole extrapolation sounded condescending and pedantic to you, go ahead and keep voting. See if it puts you on the high road.



Alex R. Knight III is the author of numerous horror, science-fiction, and fantasy tales, including Victoria's Place and Other Tales of Terror. He has also written and published poetry; non-fiction articles, reviews, and essays for a variety of venues; and is former Communications Director for the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire. In 1998, he was awarded Activist of the Year for that organization. He now lives and writes in rural southern Vermont where he is currently an undergraduate at Union Institute and University, seeking a B.A. in Writing & Literature. In addition, he is a regularly featured guest on Marc Stevens' The No-State Project, and looks forward to living in a governmentless society of liberty.

United States President Barack Obama and Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson


Obama Fires IG Who Exposed Supporter’s Fraud

As originally posted on: Corruption Chronicles: A Judicial Watch Blog
June 12, 2009


A government inspector general who has exposed widespread waste in taxpayer-financed community service groups has been fired by Barack Obama after finding that one of the president’s political supporters, a California mayor, misused federal funds.

In violation of a law established to keep the watchdogs independent and free of political pressure or interference, Obama has refused to explain why he got rid of the inspector general charged with investigating the government’s so-called national service programs.

Among them is AmeriCorps which annually receives millions of federal dollars to conquer everything from illiteracy to affordable housing and the environment. Much of the work is done through local nonprofits which receive hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal grants from the agency.

One of the local charities (St. HOPE Academy) that has benefitted tremendously from the arrangement is based in Sacramento and is operated by a powerful Obama ally who happens to be the city’s mayor. AmeriCorps’ inspector general found that Mayor Kevin Johnson’s nonprofit education group misused nearly a $1 million in federal grants.

The inspector general determined that Johnson, a former professional basketball player, illegally used the money to pay volunteers for political activities, run personal errands and even wash his car. The mayor, who has acknowledged that there “may have been administrative errors,” reached a settlement with federal prosecutors to repay half of the money.

Earlier this month the fired inspector general caught a multi million-dollar fraud scheme in AmeriCorps most expensive program, a teaching fellow project at the City University of New York. Walpin found that AmeriCorps’ funding duplicated existing programs and that the government should recover up to $75 million that it has spent on the project in the past six years.

This indicates that Walpin was doing his job—rooting out government fraud, waste and abuse—quite efficiently. At least one lawmaker is demanding that the president explain the abrupt firing of a watchdog that has indentified millions of dollars in wasted taxpayer funds.

In a letter to Obama, Iowa Senator Charles Grassley urges the president to review a law—cosponsored by both men—which requires cause for removing an inspector general. The letter and spirit of the law intended to safeguard the independence of inspector generals from the heavy hand of the executive branch may have been circumvented, according to the veteran Republican.

14 June 2009

The Borough of Bridgeville and the State of Pennsylvania


Team 4 Update: Bridgeville Man Arrested After Complaining To Borough

Pa. Superior Court Hears Marshall Pappert's Appeal

As originally posted on: ThePittsburghChannel.com
June 9, 2009


PITTSBURGH - A Bridgeville man who was arrested and convicted after making repeated complaints to his local government took his appeal to one of Pennsylvania's highest courts on Tuesday.

Team 4 investigative reporter Jim Parsons, who originally broke the story, was in Superior Court for the arguments. At issue: How many letters to borough officials does it take to constitute a crime?

Marshall Pappert freely admits that when you add up all of the letters he has written to government officials - and include the copies of those letters he has sent to other public officials - the number of letters is about 350.

While waiting for his case to be called, Pappert made no apologies for his letter-writing campaign to Bridgeville Borough.

"I did what any citizen should do when you see something that's unhealthy to the community," Pappert said.

Pappert lives across Union Street from a Bridgeville concrete plant. The dust, the noise, the idling diesel trucks all combined to cause him to complain to the borough. He wrote letter after letter - hundreds of them - and he left voice mail messages for the borough manager.

In one message, Pappert said, "I'm asking you as a Bridgeville resident of 56 years to resign and get off of your position. Do the right thing."

Instead, Pappert got arrested on a harassment charge and was convicted.

At Tuesday's appeal hearing, Assistant District Attorney Peggy Ivory told the court that Pappert "clearly crossed the line to a course of conduct designed to harass" the borough manager.

Ivory declined an interview with Team 4 on Tuesday.

"We really maintain that this is about the First Amendment and that public officials just have to tolerate it," said Bruce Boni, an attorney from the American Civil Liberties Union who's representing Pappert.

Bridgeville Councilman Pat DeBlasio said he doesn't just tolerate Pappert's actions, he embraces them.

"We go to Memorial Day and stand there and listen to 'Taps' and honor the people who died. Well, they didn't die so we could have five different choices of breakfast cereal. They sacrificed their lives so that you have the right to complain when you see something wrong," DeBlasio said.

"If you can't talk and do what I did to your government, what can you do? What are they going to do next to you?" Pappert said.

A decision on whether to overturn Pappert's criminal conviction is not expected until sometime in the summer.

Team 4 also learned on Tuesday that Ed Bogats - who arrested Pappert - submitted his resignation as Bridgeville police chief last month.

The borough council unanimously accepted Bogats' resignation. DeBlasio said Bogats cited medical reasons.

Bogats did not return Team 4's call to his home on Tuesday.

13 June 2009

The United States of America (USA)


My Taxes

by Karl Hess

As originally published in: The Libertarian
May 1, 1969


On April 15, I sent the following letter, accompanying my filled-out 1040 Form, to the Tax Collector:

The Declaration of Independence of the United States of America establishes a bill of particulars in regard to intolerable infringements, abuses, and denials of political power which belongs to the people.

The Federal government of the United States of America today is guilty of exactly every sort of infringement, abuse, and denial stated as intolerable by the Declaration of Independence.

I cannot, in conscience, sanction that government by the payment of taxes.

Further, the Federal government of the United States of America has established as a principle, and ruthlessly by the power of its officials enforces as a practice, that it can demand the primary loyalty of the people, that it can exercise all political power on their behalf, that it can wage war without their approval, and that it can and should establish the standards of their behavior and the goals of their lives.

I could not, in conscience, sanction such a government by the payment of taxes.

Finally, the Declaration of Independence, in the clearest possible language, tells Americans that when a government becomes destructive of the ends of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness that it is the right and duty of the people to abolish such government, to "throw off such government."

It is in the spirit of that Declaration, and in comradeship with men everywhere who seek freedom and to throw off such government, that I now refuse to pay the taxes demanded by the government in the attached form.

12 June 2009

"Dictatorship"


Freedom or Government?

by Harry Hoiles

The following essay is reprinted from The Voluntaryist (October 2000), p. 2. It has been edited in terms of its content (simply to eliminate an unnecessary reference to another article).


The other day we received a letter in which the writer stated that in his opinion the choice was between government and anarchy. He asked what we proposed in place of government and we said that we proposed freedom.

Government by its very nature must govern. To govern is to dictate. All governments are dictatorships of one form or another. They may be one-man dictatorships, constitutional dictatorships, dictatorships in republican or democratic form, majority rule dictatorships, dictatorships by bureau or what have you. But the fact remains that to govern is to dictate.

The alternative to government is freedom. The individual who believes in freedom does not seek to govern others. He merely wants to govern himself. He is perfectly willing to let other people govern themselves also.

"Ah, but what about the criminals who would aggress against people who would be helpless without the protection of government?" say those who are afraid of freedom.

In the first place, the criminals are a small proportion of the population. We do need protection from criminals but we should recognize the size of the problem and not blow it up out of all proportion as is done when we organize our whole society around an agency (government) whose only [alleged] legitimate function is to protect us from the small proportion of the population who are criminals.

If criminals were more than a small proportion of the population, it would be impossible to protect the rest of the population from them anyway. As big as the government now is, it, or any agency its size, could not protect innocent people from criminals if criminals represented a large proportion of the population.

Most people by nature are not criminals. Most people do not seek to aggress against others. People are not naturally thieves, murderers, rapists, etc. They are naturally peaceful and harmless. This is the nature of things as they are.

The nature of government is to govern, to dictate to everyone in its sphere of influence. Since government dictates to everyone in its sphere of influence and since most people are peaceful and harmless, most government actions involve dictation to peaceful, harmless people. This is the nature of government and this is the nature of people.

Is this what any thinking person wants?

Do we want dictatorship be it by a sole dictator, an oligarchy, a president, a legislature, a government, a county commission, a city council, the school board in a school district, or the majority in any political area?

Or do we want freedom?

That is the question of our age.

Either we want dictatorship, which we now have in every governing body constituting our government, or we want freedom.

Freedom by its very nature is not government. It is self-control, no more no less.

[. . . .]

11 June 2009

Suspended Manitoba Lawyer Sherry Ritchot


THE LAW SOCIETY OF MANITOBA

DISCIPLINE CASE DIGEST

Case 09-01

Member Sherry Denise Ritchot

Jurisdiction Winnipeg, Manitoba

Called to the Bar: June 15, 2000

Particulars of Charges: Conduct Unbecoming:

- Breach of Chapters 1 and 9 of the Code of Professional Conduct [failing to act with integrity and to treat the tribunal with courtesy and respect when appearing on her own behalf before a tribunal]

Dates of Hearing: September 18 and 28, 2007, February 6, March 17, August 27, September 23 and 29, October 16, 2008

Date of Sentencing Decision: December 18, 2008

Panel:

- Donald R. Knight, Q.C., Chair
- James W. Hedley
- Robert Gabor, Q.C.

Disposition:

- Reprimand
- Suspension of practising certificate until the member provides a medical report as to her fitness to practice law, satisfactory to a Discipline Panel of The Law Society of Manitoba
- Costs of $8,500.00, payable within two years from the date the certificate is re-issued in the event of a finding that she may return to practice.

Counsel:

- C. Kristin Dangerfield for The Law Society of Manitoba
- Member Unrepresented
__________________________

Breach of Integrity / Failing to Treat Tribunal with Courtesy and Respect
__________________________

Facts

Ms Ritchot represented herself at a Pre-Hearing Conference on November 24, 2006 before an administrative tribunal. There was discussion about the evidence and witnesses to be called at the hearing and the amount of time required to complete the matter. There was a verbal confrontation with the Chairperson of the tribunal during which Ms Ritchot swore at the Chairperson.

Plea

Ms Ritchot entered a plea of not guilty.

Decision and Comments

The Panel concluded that Ms Ritchot used language that was disrespectful and inappropriate at the Pre-Hearing Conference and failed to conduct herself with integrity and to treat the tribunal with courtesy and respect, contrary to Chapters 1 and 9 of the Code of Professional Conduct. The Panel found her guilty of conduct unbecoming a lawyer.

Penalty

The Panel received psychological evidence at Ms Ritchot’s sentencing and concluded that a further assessment of her fitness to practice was required prior to determining whether her practising certificate ought to be re-issued. The Panel ordered that Ms Ritchot’s practising certificate would be suspended until she provided a detailed medical report at a hearing before a Discipline Panel to consider the issue of her fitness to practise law. The Panel declined to order that Ms Ritchot be required to practice under supervision. Ms Ritchot was ordered to pay costs in the amount of $8,500.00.

Ms Ritchot has filed an appeal from the Panel’s decision to the Manitoba Court of Appeal.

Former Ohio Lawyer Marc Greenberg



FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
CINCINNATI


Press Release

For Immediate Release
May 4, 2009

FBI Cincinnati
Contact: Special Agent Michael E. Brooks
(513) 562-5720


Kettering Attorney/Girls Basketball Coach Arrested on Transfer of Obscene Images to Minors Charges

Keith L. Bennett, Special Agent in Charge (SAC), of the Cincinnati Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Gregory G. Lockhart, United States Attorney, Southern District of Ohio, announce that Marc Norman Greenberg, age 32 of Centerville, Ohio, was arrested without incident this morning at his law office in Kettering by FBI agents. Greenberg has been charged in a federal complaint filed at the U.S. District Court, Southern District of Ohio, Dayton, with 12 counts of violating Title 18, U.S. Code Section 1470 (Obscenity). Greenberg is the Girls Basketball Coach at Chaminade-Julienne High School in Dayton.

The complaint charging Greenberg alleges that during the period February through April of 2009, Greenberg used computers at his home and office to engage in graphic sexual conversations and to transmit obscene images including videos of a male masturbating. These images were sent to individuals who Greenberg believed were underage females. Conviction on each count carries a maximum punishment of 10 years imprisonment.

The affidavit in support of the complaint alleges that beginning in late January 2009 a New York law enforcement officer, posing as an underage female, began electronic communication with an individual utilizing the screen names bballguy5555@aol.com and aig2010@aol.com. These conversations became increasingly sexually explicit and included requests by the subject to the underage female to send sexually explicit images of herself and to meet the subject in New York to engage in sexual acts. Eventually the subject sent streaming video of himself masturbating. The affidavit further alleges that the subject, using the same screen names, also engaged in similar conversations with a person who he believed was an underage daughter of a military service member but who was, in fact, a Naval Criminal Investigative Service Investigator. Requests for subscriber information from AOL revealed that the screen names were registered to IP addresses at Greenberg’s office in Kettering.

The charges against Greenberg do not allege any illegal conduct by him in his role as the Chaminade-Julienne Girls Basketball Coach. FBI investigators and Dayton Police Officers have been in contact with officials at Chaminade-Julienne High School and those officials are cooperating in this on-going investigation.

Greenberg will receive an Initial Appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Sharon Ovington at 1:30 pm today.

SAC Bennett thanked the Dayton Police Department, Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office and the Kettering Police Department for their assistance in this morning’s operations as well as in the execution of federal search warrants associated with this investigation. He also noted that this investigation was aided by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, the New York State Police, and the FBI Detroit Division.

The public is reminded that criminal complaints contain only allegations of criminal misconduct and that a defendant is presumed to be innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Canadian Federal Member of Parliament / Transport Minister John Baird


Baird apologizes to Toronto mayor over use of expletive

CBC NEWS
June 9, 2009


Federal Transport Minister John Baird apologized to Toronto Mayor David Miller for using an expletive in criticizing the city's application for stimulus funding.

Baird was overheard using the language during "an unguarded moment" while talking to aides in a media room at a Whistler, B.C., convention centre on Monday.

Baird said the City of Toronto's application for money from the federal government's $4-billion infrastructure fund was the only one among 2,700 submitted that wasn't done properly, so it shouldn't complain that Ottawa was dragging its feet.

The city was "bitching at us," Baird said. "They should f--- off," he added.

On Tuesday, a contrite Baird told the House of Commons during question period that he "was speaking out of frustration."

"I, this morning, phoned mayor Miller and apologized," said Baird. "The mayor and I both agreed, let's look to the future, let's continue to build on the important investment that we need to make in public transit, and we've committed to work with them over the next two weeks to make it happen."

Miller said he was never informed by federal officials of any problems with his bid for federal funding.

Toronto wants to buy 204 streetcars from Bombardier, at a cost of $1.2 billion, but the city needs to secure funding from the federal and provincial governments by June 27 to make it happen.

10 June 2009

The Harper Conservatives


Baird facing allegations he made board appointments to cover up Raitt allegations

THE CANADIAN PRESS
June 9, 2009


TORONTO — Transport Minister John Baird is facing allegations that he appointed additional members to the Toronto Port Authority to "cover up" claims of mismanagement against cabinet colleague Lisa Raitt.

The NDP is calling on the auditor general to examine some $80,000 in travel and hospitality expenses that Raitt, now the natural resources minister, rung up in two years while she was CEO of the federal public authority.

New Democrat Olivia Chow also wants Baird's appointment of two board members last December scrutinized by the auditor general.

Chow says four of the nine port authority directors requested an examination into Raitt's expenses and other management practices at the port authority.

Chow says that instead of trying to sort out the allegations, Baird changed the agency's constitution the day after Parliament was prorogued in December to add two new board members.

Port authority chairman Mark McQueen, in a letter to Chow, dismissed the allegations of mismangement as an effort by a disgruntled minority to smear the reputation of members who support the Toronto City Centre Airport.

"Their smear campaign appears to have become only more outlandish," McQueen writes in the letter released Monday.

Chow calls the change in the board's constitution undemocratic and says it suggests the Tories have something to hide.

"We know that Mr. Baird pays close attention to the Toronto Port Authority," Chow said in a release.

"In order to cover up alleged management violations of former CEO Lisa Raitt, he changed the constitution of the board from seven to nine members. That is why I appeal to the auditor general to conduct an audit of the Toronto Port Authority."

At a news conference, Chow alleged that Baird changed the constitution of the authority to "get his way."

"Instead of seven members of the port authority, he made it to be nine members, and of course he wanted to make sure that he put his own people in."

A spokesman for Baird referred questions to McQueen, but said the agency was due for a special examination, scheduled every five years, and will undergo a review by a qualified, independent auditor at that time.

"This special examination offers an ideal mechanism for the board to examine, in detail, many of its practices and protocols related to financial and management control, information systems, and management practices," Baird spokesman Chris Day said in an e-mail.

"The report will be reviewed by both the Minister of Transport and the board upon its completion to ensure that all appropriate protocols are in place and a summary of the report will be made public."

Raitt was not immediately available for comment.

The island airport is a point of contention for many residents who oppose its expansion.

The Toronto Port Authority owns and operates the airport, two marine terminals and a marina.

Chow's comments come just days after Raitt offered to resign after sensitive government documents were left at CTV's Ottawa offices for over a week.

Prime Minister Harper rejected the resignation offer, but did accept the resignation of one of Raitt's aides.

Raitt is also under fire for reportedly making disparaging remarks about a cabinet colleague - Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq - in a tape recording that is part of court fight in Halifax.

The port authority board members questioned the practices of some of senior management and board members, and allege expense payments were made without board knowledge.

Management expenses include $50,000 spent on hospitality and meals at a local steak house - with one internal management lunch alone costing about $1,000.

In his letter, McQueen notes the hospitality expenses were approved by the board as a line item in the annual budget, and adds approvals for such expenses now must go through a supervisor.

Chow says Raitt also ignored standing policy by paying $65,000 to a law firm retained by a few board members who then held onto the legal advice exclusively.

McQueen called the accusation "without foundation."

Raitt stepped down from the authority in 2008 to run in the last federal election.

She had been with the agency since 1999 and its CEO since 2002.

09 June 2009

Canadian Federal Member of Parliament / Natural Resources Minister Lisa Raitt and the Harper Conservatives


Raitt calls isotope issue 'sexy' in recorded conversation made public by court

by Murray Brewster

THE CANADIAN PRESS
June 8, 2009


OTTAWA - Natural Resources Minister Lisa Raitt, speaking in an inadvertently recorded conversation, calls solving the isotope shortage a "sexy" issue that she hopes to take credit for and she also expresses doubts about the parliamentary skills of Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq.

The comments come in a more than five-hour recording that was made on Jan. 30 and obtained by the Halifax Chronicle Herald.

In a lengthy conversation with her former aide, Jasmine MacDonnell, Raitt also accuses Michael Ignatieff of buckling to threats from Canadian bankers who say they won't donate to the party if the Liberal leader forces another federal election.

As the two are being chauffered in British Columbia, they discuss Aglukkaq's handling of the isotope shortage caused by a heavy water leak at the Chalk River nuclear reactor near Ottawa.

"They're terrified of the issues," Raitt says during the recording, details of which were posted on the Chronicle Herald's website after a Nova Scotia judge ruled Monday the newspaper could report the conversation.

"You know what? Good. Because when we win on this, we get all the credit. I'm ready to roll the dice on this. This is an easy one. You know what solves this problem? Money. And if it's just about money, we'll figure it out. It's not a moral issue."

Raitt also says she is disappointed in Aglukkaq.

"Oh, God, she's such a capable woman, but it's hard for her to come out of a co-operative government into this rough-and-tumble. She had a question in the House yesterday, or two days ago, that planked. I really hope she never gets anything hot."

Raitt's woes were compounded Monday when New Democrats reignited a controversy over tens of thousands of dollars in questionable expenses the rookie minister racked up while as a senior executive with the Toronto Port Authority.

A spokesman for Stephen Harper said late Monday the prime minister has confidence in Raitt and Aglukkaq.

In Halifax, MacDonnell went to court to block the Halifax Chronicle Herald from publishing the contents of what was on her digital recorder.

Justice Gerald Moir of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court dismissed MacDonnell's application and spoke about what is in the recording.

"... Raitt and Ms. MacDonnell discuss in a critical manner the political skills of the federal health minister, the honourable Leona Aglukkaq, on the handling of the medical isotope issue. She (Raitt) also discussed her desire to receive credit for dealing with the medical isotope issue and expresses the view it is a sexy issue," he said in his judgment.

"They also discussed pressure placed on Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff by major businesses to refrain from defeating the Conservative government."

In court, Michelle Awad, MacDonnell's lawyer, said the conversation was private and was accidentally taped while the recorder was in MacDonnell's bag.

"The conversations were always meant to be private, they were private, they were recorded completely unintentionally," she said.

"Neither Ms. MacDonnell nor the minister knew the conversations was being recorded. ... It (tape recorder) was turned on inadvertently in the bag she was travelling with."

But Moir ruled the five-hour and 16 minute recording should be public.

"It is wrong to deprive the press, and the public it serves, of remarks made privately but not confidentially in the sense of trade secrets," he said.

The judge said the minister's statement on the medical isotopes is important for the public to know and outweighs any potential harm to the reputation of MacDonnell.

"The issue of the political oversight of Canada's medical isotope system is literally a matter of life and death for cancer patients. It is a matter of intense public interest," he said.

"The handling of this issue by the government and the cabinet ministers is a matter of immediate public and political interest."

In court documents, Chronicle Herald reporter Stephen Maher says he let MacDonnell know he had the device - which was found in a press gallery washroom - but she never picked it up from his offices on Parliament Hill.

It wasn't until June 4 that the newspaper decided to listen to the tape, a day after MacDonnell resigned over a gaffe involving sensitive documents.

The judge said he "doubted" criminal laws preventing interception of private conversations would apply to the case because the recording was left in a public place.

MacDonnell left court without commenting on the judge's ruling.

As the storm over the tape recording raged in the House of Commons on Monday, Transport Minister John Baird was accused of re-jigging the Toronto port authority's board to "cover up" allegations of mismanagement against Raitt.

The NDP demanded the auditor general examine some $80,000 in travel and hospitality expenses that Raitt ran up in two years while she was CEO of the federal public authority.

She quit the job to run for the Tories.

New Democrat Olivia Chow said four of the nine port authority directors have requested an examination into Raitt's expenses and other management practices at the port authority.

Neither Baird, nor Raitt were available Monday to comment.

The opposition parties, speaking before the recording of the Raitt-MacDonnell conversation was released, said an internal squabble between the natural resources minister and Aglukkaq would undermine the confidence of Canadians at a time when the shutdown of the Chalk River, Ont., nuclear reactor is creating a shortage of medical isotopes.

"Unless these allegations prove to be false it's clear this minister has absolutely no confidence in her colleague's ability to handle what is now a full-fledged health care crisis," said Liberal MP David McGuinty.

Raitt offered to step down last week after it was revealed sensitive documents about Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. were left at the CTV Ottawa news bureau - a resignation the prime minister refused to accept.

Instead it was MacDonnell who took the fall.

If Raitt offers to quit again, McGuinty said Harper should accept it.

The Prime Minister's Office would not say whether Raitt had offered, or been asked for, her resignation. However, Harper's spokesman, Dimitri Soudas, hinted Raitt's head wouldn't roll over the recording.

"While this issue may be embarrassing, in no way does it affect the minister's ability to do her job," Soudas said.

"Ministers Raitt and Aglukkaq have the confidence of the prime minister."

Opposition MPs called on Harper to fire Raitt.

"She's looking for a political win on the backs of people's misery," New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen said.

-With files from Michael Tutton in Halifax

08 June 2009

"Comrade Obama"


Venezuela Chavez says "Comrade" Obama more left-wing

REUTERS
June 2, 2009


CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez said on Tuesday that he and Cuban ally Fidel Castro risk being more conservative than U.S. President Barack Obama as Washington prepares to take control of General Motors Corp.

During one of Chavez's customary lectures on the "curse" of capitalism and the bonanzas of socialism, the Venezuelan leader made reference to GM's bankruptcy filing, which is expected to give the U.S. government a 60 percent stake in the 100-year-old former symbol of American might.

"Hey, Obama has just nationalized nothing more and nothing less than General Motors. Comrade Obama! Fidel, careful or we are going to end up to his right," Chavez joked on a live television broadcast.

During a decade in government, Chavez has nationalized most of Venezuela's key economic sectors, including multibillion dollar oil projects, often via joint ventures with the private sector that give the state a 60 percent controlling stake.

Obama has vowed to quickly sell off General Motors once the auto giant is back on its feet, but the government will initially control the company after a $30 billion injection of taxpayer funds.

Chavez, a vehement critic of the U.S. "empire," has toned down his rhetoric since Obama took office in January and the two men shook hands during a summit in Trinidad and Tobago in April.

(Reporting by Enrique Andres Pretel; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel, Editing by Jackie Frank)

"Monopoly and Territorial Government"


Essentials of Panarchism

by Michael S. Rozeff

As originally posted on: LewRockwell.com
June 1, 2009


Panarchism is a new political philosophy that builds upon and extends the core concept of consent of the governed, which goes back primarily to John Locke. Consent of the governed is a concept that permeated revolutionary America. It appears in Article 6 of the Virginia Bill of Rights. It appears in the Essex Result. Benjamin Franklin wrote "In free governments the rulers are the servants and the people their superiors and sovereigns." The Declaration of Independence asserts that "Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."

Panarchism proposes a comprehensive extension of liberty to the consensual choice of government itself, in form and content. It proposes government by consent for any persons who arrange such government for themselves. Conversely, it proposes that a government has no authority over any persons who do not consent to it.

Panarchy is a condition of human relations in which each person is at liberty to choose his own social and political governance without being coerced. Panarchy means that persons may enter into and exit from social and political relations freely. It means that government exists only with the consent and by the consent of the governed.

Panarchism has new conceptions of what a people who are governed, a government, and consent mean. These give rise to a new conception of the nonterritorial State and revised ideas about sovereignty and authority. By viewing government as nonterritorial, panarchism reorients the movement for liberty away from destroying the governments that others may prefer and toward obtaining the governments that each of us may prefer.

Free persons in a free society already practice a degree of panarchy. By individual consent, they associate with those whom they wish to associate with (and who wish to associate with them), and they do not associate with others. By choice, they vary their associations by time, place, duration, and other dimensions. They choose companions, places to live, workplaces, clubs, and churches on the basis of individual consent rendered in a noncoercive social context. Free persons form consensual organizations, associations, and groups. They form themselves into sub-societies and "peoples," which are groups of persons that, via individual consent, willingly aggregate on various grounds and interests. In doing so, they create multiple coexisting forms of governance whose basis is not territorial (although it may optionally be so) but relational.

Panarchism proposes that panarchy be extended to government (or functions of government) in the same way that it is already present in society. Let persons be free to form peoples and to choose their own forms of government.

Why? Because consent today is too limited to allow a meaningful sovereignty of people. Because the rulers have become the sovereign and the people their servants. Because complex systems of voting and parties have diluted consent to the vanishing point. Because would-be peoples are thwarted from forming. Liberty does not mean a vote for one of two parties that runs a single monopoly government. It means active consent over the very form, as well as the content, of one’s governing relations.

Why panarchism? Because in today’s governing relations, we find ourselves living under distant States and governments whose form is not of our choosing. Because the planet is blanketed with States and governments that too often deliver injustice, insecurity, disorder, waste, misery, death, and destruction, as States and governments historically have done. Because States and governments focus and amplify power, using it for purposes that many of us do not believe in. And because governments today legitimate and encourage contentious struggles for domination where one group’s gains is another group’s loss, and where the struggles absorb more and more resources and divert energy from productive to unproductive uses.

The liberty that is basic to panarchy promises a better way of life, by extending to each of us the capacity to engage in the social and political relations of our own choosing in accord with our own beliefs. Since persons will not freely consent to governments whose decisions in the main leave them, by their own estimation, worse off, the free choice of government will provide the kind of check-and-balance on government failures and misdeeds that is a critical missing element of today’s political arrangements.

Panarchy envisages many possible societies and sub-societies across a land, region, or province. There need not be a single sovereign authority that imposes law on all, unless it happens to be by consent. In panarchy, multiple and diverse sources of self-chosen sovereignty coexist side-by-side, each finding its source of legitimacy from the consent of those who are willing to place themselves within a particular set of governing relations. People freely place themselves within multiple non-territorial governing associations, as contrasted with finding themselves assigned by authorities on a geographical basis.

The American revolutionaries blazed a trail toward nonterritorial government when they called for consent of the governed, but they simultaneously veered away from that trail. Just as they skirted the slavery question, they skirted the issues of what constituted a people, a legitimate government, consent, and secession. Article 14 of the Virginia Declaration of Rights sought "to maintain Virginia’s sovereignty over its restless, far-flung western counties." It proclaimed "That the people have a right to uniform government; and, therefore, that no government separate from, or independent of the government of Virginia, ought to be erected or established within the limits thereof." This particular territorial idea of government was justified by a false appeal to a mythical right to uniform government, in order to prevent the formation of West Virginia. Some 85 years later, West Virginia, which for decades had many sound reasons not to be governed by Richmond, finally seceded from Virginia.

Little has changed. Despite hundreds of breakaway and secession movements worldwide, the territorial notion of government has not changed. Indeed, many such movements themselves view government as territorial. American federalism has become nationalism. Governments of today are making societies over, based upon claims of legitimate authority that are less rooted in consent than in territorial claims of rulership.

The idea of government needs to be severed from the idea of the territorial State and from the notion that the government of such a State is all that government is or can be. Since the State is single, territorial, and coercive, such an idea views government as single, territorial, and coercive. The territorial idea supports States in place. It empties consent of all real meaning and replaces it by the machinations of meaningless votes, party politics, lobbying, redistricting, power, and campaign money flows. The territorial idea of government without consent dooms mankind to living without one of the most basic liberties, which is the liberty to choose one’s government.

It is a mistake to identify government as the executive and administrative means of the monopoly State. When those who are pro-State do this, it leaves little or no room for those who do not consent and wish to live by their own forms of government. When those who are anti-State do this, they become anti-government, a position that does not allow those who want various forms of their own government to exercise their choices.

Government is the social coordination of human personal interactions. To the extent that human beings interact with one another, government is thus inescapable. Advocates of no government, unless they eschew all social interaction, can no more live without government than can statists. But the necessity of government does not imply that government must be nonconsensual and territorial. We have an alternative to living under a single territorial State that makes and enforces all sorts of rules, for all of us, all the time. Panarchy is that alternative.

We ourselves govern a vast range of human activities by consent, nonterritorially, and without the State. This was historically and is currently the case. Persons within human societies create governance from varied and multiple sources that include moral and ethical codes, custom, bodies of judge-discovered law, rules, principles, manners, religion, pacts, agreements, understandings, and contracts, as well as through a variety of instruments, institutions, and organizations that include family, associations, churches, schools, corporations, and business firms. Society, in this sense, which is really many interpenetrating and diverse societies, already reflects a high degree of panarchy. Societies everywhere already employ panarchy as a beneficial principle of social organization and order.

Panarchism proposes extending panarchy further. It stands for a world in which people live by the governing relations of their choice while abiding by the decisions of their neighbors to live by theirs. A society with such liberty will hold together in the same ways that societies have always held together: through a complex network of shared values, beliefs, ways, language, and other commonalities that are put to work through self-interest that is expressed in individual, associational, and cooperative endeavors. It will hold together better than today’s societies because the nonconsensual government that fertilizes today’s constant political and economic battles, rebellions, and civil wars will have been reduced.

Different people understand freedom and liberty in different ways, and even when they agree, they place different values on liberty. One woman may choose to labor for another for a wage, while another may regard wage-labor as slavery. One man may allow himself to be inducted into an army, while another may look upon the draft as slavery. These different ideas of good and bad government can coexist in panarchy. Liberty and government are not at mutually exclusive poles. Abolishing government per se does not bring liberty for all. Abolishing government and replacing it with one’s own personal vision of liberty does not bring liberty for all. Liberty for all entails the capacity for all to choose their own governments. In panarchy, men and women are free to be unfree (in the eyes of others) to any desired degree. They may enter into many different kinds of governing relations. This sets panarchy apart from political conceptions that deny them the choice of State and government. Panarchists do not attempt to smash the governments others want. They deny no one the freedom to be unfree. However, they deny others (and their States and governments) the freedom to make them unfree.

Once we open up our thinking on the question of what government is, we can get away from the idea of "a government" and "the government." Government is a set of functions that can be identified. Change is not a question of today's government or none. There are all sorts of intermediate possibilities.

National governments have absorbed major functions such as old age security, aid to the indigent, and health care from civil society and local government. They have done so via complex majority rules and voting procedures that circumvented consent of the governed. Governments across the world often suppress minorities of many kinds. The imposition of nation-wide rules discriminates against and suppresses all those who do not consent and who do not want their government to handle certain critical issues. Medicare, for example, involves a taking and a wealth transfer. This kind of program could become nonterritorial and consensual. Mr. K can subscribe to a plan and belong to a government that deducts from his wages, while Mr. J need not. They can be neighbors and do this.

Many of today's government functions can remain in place for those who want them while making them voluntary for those who do not. The idea in these cases is not to end government but make it consensual. Vast amounts of regulation of labor relations, energy, education, health, and welfare are such that one neighbor can live without certain rules even if his neighbor wants them. Instead of attempting to take Medicare away or attempting to persuade voters to vote it down, which plays the game of accepting monopoly and territorial government, panarchism goes at the problem of lack of consent and unjust powers of government in a different way. Let those who want Medicare have it; let those who don't withdraw. Panarchism seizes the moral high ground. Why should those who don't want Medicare be impressed into it by those who do? Isn't this like making everyone belong to the same church? How can there be consent of the governed when we are herded, whether we like it or not, into programs that affect our lives in major ways?

Coordination problems involving human interaction are not going to disappear. The reform of government even where coordination issues are not at issue may well be difficult. Panarchism does not deny these difficulties. It sets out a just and peaceful destination that can be achieved peaceably, which is a future of reform in which the State abandons its territorial claims. This may happen little by little. It may happen by degrees. It may happen partially and gradually, or it may happen by leaps. Consensual and nonconsensual government are likely to continue to exist alongside one another for some time. Reforms, small and large, are unpredictable. They are for people themselves to advance and accomplish. Every step that people take, peaceful and nonaggressive, toward devising and living by their own government is a step toward more complete panarchy and greater liberty.

The helpful comments of Adam Knott and John Zube are gratefully acknowledged, but all errors herein are solely mine.

June 1, 2009

Michael S. Rozeff [send him mail] is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.

07 June 2009

"Beijing’s Autocrats"


Remembering Tiananmen

As originally published in: The New York Times
June 5, 2009


Twenty years after the massacre of pro-democracy activists, Chinese authorities flooded Tiananmen Square with security forces this week to ensure that there were no protests and no commemorations. Visitors were searched at checkpoints, foreign television crews were turned away and certain Internet sites were also blocked.

Despite the country’s stunning economic growth over the past two decades, Beijing’s autocrats are clearly still afraid of their own people. In the months before the anniversary, they intensified a crackdown on human rights activists, including mothers of Tiananmen Square victims.

According to Amnesty International, at least 100 people advocating for land, labor and housing rights were detained or attacked by authorities. In another 15 cases, lawyers working for activist clients were threatened, blocked from meeting clients or detained.

Activists in China, and those who have been exiled, are right to worry that the massacre — and the demands for reform that drove the protests — will be forgotten. Chinese students are not allowed to study that crucial moment in their history. And a world eager for China’s business is eager to ignore its repressive ways.

We were encouraged when Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called on China this week to confront its past.

She urged Beijing to provide a public accounting of those killed or detained, release protestors who are still in jail and begin a dialogue with victims’ families. She said China must embrace the rule of law and protect human rights and civil liberties with the same urgency given to economic reform.

China’s leaders prize stability. But repression is not the answer. China’s citizens are restive. Activists say there are 100,000 protests a year, mostly over local grievances. Beijing may be able to repress the memory of Tiananmen. But the yearning for freedom remains.

Musical Performer / Pop Celebrity Britney Spears


Britney Spears' MTV meltdown revealed

Britney Spears allegedly went into meltdown just moments before her chaotic comeback performance at the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards and went on stage drunk.

BANG MEDIA INTERNATIONAL
June 3, 2009


(BANG) - Britney Spears allegedly binged on tequila shots moments before her disastrous performance at the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards.

The 'Toxic' singer - who had months earlier entered rehab after shaving her head - had been planning her routine at the prestigious event for months to prove to the world she had fully recovered from her personal problems.

However, insiders have now revealed she wasn't mentally ready to perform and was drunk when she went out on stage.

In his new book 'Britney: Inside the Dream', writer Steve Dennis claims: "Britney herself managed to ruin the most important performance of her life. Hours before the show, her anxieties raged. She decided it was a good idea to start drinking tequila shots to calm her nerves - one after the other."

Britney's fragile mental state was also reportedly tested when her ex-boyfriend Justin Timberlake came into her dressing room to wish her luck.

Dennis revealed in the book: "Justin was cool and couldn't have been friendlier, but that wigged her out more."

Her preparations descended into chaos when Britney allegedly refused to let celebrity hairstylist Ken Paves attach her hair extensions.

When Britney told Ken to leave, her staff began desperately searching for other hair extensions - which were needed because her natural locks were still very short - and they had to quickly find some from her hotel's salon.

When the mother-of-two did appear on stage - dressed in an unflattering black underwear set and fishnet tights, after reportedly refusing to wear the agreed more flattering one-piece - she looked dazed, forgot some of the lyrics to her song 'Gimme More' and barely joined in with the dance routines.

The performance was ridiculed by many critics and the book claims Britney - who was going through a messy divorce and custody battle with ex-husband Kevin Federline - was in tears for 45 minutes after leaving the stage.

The months after her chaotic comeback saw her lose custody of her two young sons, Sean Preston and Jayden James.

In January 2008, was taken to a psychiatric ward after holding Jayden hostage in her home.

She has since turned her life around and at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards she looked a picture of health and collected two prizes.

She is currently performing in 'The Circus Starring Britney Spears', her first concert tour in five years.

06 June 2009

United States President Barack Obama


Ted Rall: It’s increasingly evident that Obama should resign

by Ted Rall

As originally posted: The State Journal Register
May 29, 2009


MIAMI — We expected broken promises. But the gap between the soaring expectations that accompanied Barack Obama’s inauguration and his wretched performance is the broadest such chasm in recent historical memory. This guy makes Bill Clinton look like a paragon of integrity and follow-through.

From health care to torture to the economy to war, Obama has reneged on pledges real and implied. So timid and so owned is he that he trembles in fear of offending, of all things, the government of Turkey. Obama has officially reneged on his campaign promise to acknowledge the Armenian genocide. When a president doesn’t have the nerve to annoy the Turks, why does he bother to show up for work in the morning?

Obama is useless. Worse than that, he’s dangerous. Which is why, if he has any patriotism left after the thousands of meetings he has sat through with corporate contributors, blood-sucking lobbyists and corrupt politicians, he ought to step down now — before he drags us further into the abyss.

I refer here to Obama’s plan for “preventive detentions.” If a cop or other government official thinks you might want to commit a crime someday, you could be held in “prolonged detention.” Reports in U.S. state-controlled media imply that Obama’s shocking new policy would only apply to Islamic terrorists (or, in this case, wannabe Islamic terrorists, and also kinda-sorta-maybe-thinking-about-terrorism dudes). As if that made it OK.

In practice, Obama wants to let government goons snatch you, me and anyone else they deem annoying off the street.

Preventive detention is the classic defining characteristic of a military dictatorship. Because dictatorial regimes rely on fear rather than consensus, their priority is self-preservation rather than improving their people’s lives. They worry obsessively over the one thing they can’t control, what George Orwell called “thoughtcrime” — contempt for rulers that might someday translate to direct action.

Locking up people who haven’t done anything wrong is worse than un-American and a violent attack on the most basic principles of Western jurisprudence. It is contrary to the most essential notion of human decency. That anyone has ever been subjected to “preventive detention” is an outrage. That the president of the United States, a man who won an election because he promised to elevate our moral and political discourse, would even entertain such a revolting idea offends the idea of civilization itself.

Obama is cute. He is charming. But there is something rotten inside him. Unlike the Republicans who backed George W. Bush, I won’t follow a terrible leader just because I voted for him. Obama has revealed himself. He is a monster, and he should remove himself from power.

“Prolonged detention,” reported The New York Times, would be inflicted upon “terrorism suspects who cannot be tried.”

“Cannot be tried.” Interesting choice of words.

Any “terrorism suspect” (can you be a suspect if you haven’t been charged with a crime?) can be tried. Anyone can be tried for anything. At this writing, a Somali child is sitting in a prison in New York, charged with piracy in the Indian Ocean, where the U.S. has no jurisdiction. Anyone can be tried.

What they mean, of course, is that the hundreds of men and boys languishing at Guantánamo and the thousands of “detainees” the Obama administration anticipates kidnapping in the future cannot be convicted. As in the old Soviet Union, putting enemies of the state on trial isn’t enough. The game has to be fixed. Conviction has to be a foregone conclusion.

Why is it, exactly, that some prisoners “cannot be tried”?

The Old Grey Lady explains why Obama wants this “entirely new chapter in American law” in a boring little sentence buried a couple of paragraphs past the jump and a couple of hundred words down page A16: “Yet another question is what to do with the most problematic group of Guantánamo detainees: those who pose a national security threat but cannot be prosecuted, either for lack of evidence or because evidence is tainted.”

In democracies with functioning legal systems, it is assumed that people against whom there is a “lack of evidence” are innocent. They walk free. In countries where the rule of law prevails, in places blessedly free of fearful leaders whose only concern is staying in power, “tainted evidence” is no evidence at all. If you can’t prove that a defendant committed a crime — an actual crime, not a thoughtcrime — in a fair trial, you release him and apologize to the judge and jury for wasting their time.

It is amazing and incredible, after eight years of Bush’s lawless behavior, to have to still have to explain these things. For that reason alone, Obama should resign.

Ted Rall is a columnist for Universal Press Syndicate.

The "Former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and Three Associates"



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 2, 2009
WWW.USDOJ.GOV/USAO/MA

CONTACT: CHRISTINA DiIORIO-STERLING
PHONE: (617) 748-3356
E-MAIL: USAMA.MEDIA@USDOJ.GOV

FORMER SPEAKER OF THE MASSACHUSETTS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND THREE ASSOCIATES INDICTED ON CORRUPTION CHARGES

Boston...A federal grand jury has returned an Indictment charging SALVATORE F. DiMASI, former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and three of his associates, with engaging in a wire and mail fraud scheme to deprive the citizens of Massachusetts of his honest services by allegedly improperly using his power and influence to enable a software company to obtain multi-million dollar procurements from agencies of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Acting United States Attorney Michael K. Loucks and Warren T. Bamford, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation - Boston Field Division announced today that DiMASI, age 64, of Boston, MA; JOSEPH P. LALLY, Jr, age 48, of North Reading, MA; RICHARD W. McDONOUGH, age 64, of Foxboro, MA; and RICHARD D. VITALE, age 64, of Boston, MA are all charged with one count of conspiracy, three counts of honest services mail fraud and four counts of honest services wire fraud. LALLY is also charged with one count of money laundering.

According to the Indictment, Cognos ULC (“Cognos”) was a Canadian software company that sold business intelligence and performance management software and related services. LALLY was an Area Vice-President of Sales for Cognos’ State and Local Government Division, which targeted agencies in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as potential customers. According to the Indictment, in February, 2006, LALLY left Cognos and formed his own company, Montvale Solutions, LLC which was licensed to resell Cognos software to agencies in Massachusetts. The Indictment alleges that McDONOUGH was a lobbyist hired by LALLY and was a close friend of DiMASI. According to the Indictment, VITALE was DiMASI’s accountant and financial advisor, as well as his long-time close friend. In June, 2006, VITALE formed WN Advisors LLC (“WN Advisors”) as a purported consulting entity, of which he was the sole owner. The Indictment alleges that VITALE was hired by Montvale because of his close friendship with DiMASI and would be paid hundreds of thousands of dollars if and when deals with Cognos and the Commonwealth were closed.

The Indictment alleges that beginning in around December 2004, the defendants conspired with each other to improperly use the power, authority and influence of DiMASI as Speaker of the House to enable Cognos to obtain multi-million dollar software procurements from agencies of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It is alleged that one way in which the scheme worked was that from March 2005 (while LALLY was still employed by Cognos) LALLY, McDONOUGH and DiMASI arranged to have regular payments made to DiMASI from Cognos for the purpose of influencing DiMASI to use his authority as Speaker of the House to assist the interests of Cognos for the financial benefit of the coconspirators. It is alleged that these improper payments were accomplished by retaining a lawyer, who formerly shared office space with DiMASI, as “local counsel” for Cognos upon DiMASI’s referral and having Cognos pay him $5,000 a month, a percentage of which went to DiMASI as a “referral fee.” The Indictment also alleges that the coconspirators further intended to conceal the true nature of these payments to DiMASI by carrying the lawyer on the books at Cognos as a lobbyist, although no legal or lobbying services were ever requested of him, and none were ever performed. The Indictment further alleges that when LALLY left Cognos in 2006, he told a Cognos executive never to cancel the contract of that lawyer who was a friend to “Sal.”

The Indictment alleges that in 2005 and 2006, Cognos wanted to sell software licenses and related services worth $5.2 million to the Department of Education (“DOE”) of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for an Education Data Warehouse and Reporting System. To fund this purchase by DOE, it was necessary for the Massachusetts legislature to appropriate the money in its Fiscal Year 2007 budget. The Indictment also alleges that in 2006 and 2007, Cognos wanted to sell software licenses and related services worth $15 million to the Department of Administration and Finance (“A&F”) and its Information Technology Division (“ITD”) of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for a statewide performance management system. To fund this purchase by A&F, it was necessary for the Massachusetts legislature to enact legislation authorizing the Commonwealth to issue general obligation bonds.

The Indictment alleges that in 2006, DiMASI caused a budget amendment to be introduced and facilitated its final passage, appropriating $5.2 million for DOE to purchase an Education Data Warehouse and Reporting System (“EDW”) and requiring not less than $4.5 million be spent on software. DOE’s contract with Cognos for the EDW resulted in payment of $891,000 to LALLY’s Montvale Solutions, which in turn paid McDONOUGH $100,000 and VITALE’s WN Advisors $100,000 as consulting fees. Although DiMASI knew that Cognos was the vendor to benefit from this legislative action, the Indictment alleges that he and his coconspirators deceived the citizens of Massachusetts by DiMASI deliberately failing to disclose his financial ties to Cognos, as well as the personal enrichment of his friends from his official actions.

According to the Indictment, in 2007, DiMASI, using legislative language provided by LALLY, McDONOUGH and VITALE on behalf of Cognos, caused a provision for $15 million for the purchase of statewide performance management software by A&F to be included in the Immediate Needs Capital Bond Bill of 2007 (“Emergency Bond Bill”). It is alleged that the coconspirators then used the power and influence of DiMASI to help Cognos secure the contract from A&F. A&F’s contract with Cognos resulted in a payment of $2.8 million to LALLY’s Montvale Solutions, which in turn paid McDONOUGH $200,000 and VITALE’s WN Advisors $500,000. The Indictment alleges that DiMASI and his coconspirators again deceived the citizens of Massachusetts by DiMASI deliberately failing to disclose his financial ties to Cognos, as well as the personal enrichment of his friends from his official actions.

The Indictment alleges approximately 80 overt acts committed in furtherance of the conspiracy. For example, the Indictment alleges that in the latter months of 2006, the lawyer hired by Cognos had not received monthly $5,000 checks from Cognos, and DiMASI instructed him to check with McDONOUGH to find out what was wrong. On or about December 12, 2006, LALLY allegedly then sent an email to a Cognos executive, stating “I just got off the phone with Dickey he says we need to look into the [lawyer] issue fast. Can you escalate this please? We don’t want to piss anyone off this late in the game.” It is alleged, that the next day, after finding a bookkeeping error, Cognos sent a $25,000 check to the lawyer for the missed payments. It is further alleged that when informed by the lawyer that a $25,000 check from Cognos had arrived, DiMASI told the lawyer that he wanted all of it. According to the Indictment, after the lawyer wrote and mailed a $25,000 check made out to DiMASI, DiMASI instructed the lawyer to replace the $25,000 check with four backdated checks in the amounts of $8,000, $4,000, $6,000 and $7,000 to further disguise the payments as typical referral fees.

Each defendant faces a maximum punishment of 5 years in prison to be followed by 3 years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine on the conspiracy count. Each defendant also faces 20 years in prison to be followed by 5 years of supervised release and $250,000 fine on each of the eight counts of mail and wire fraud. LALLY faces an additional maximum punishment of 10 years in prison, to be followed by 3 years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine for the money laundering count.

The case was investigated the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with the assistance of the Massachusetts Inspector General’s Office. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys S. Theodore Merritt and Anthony E. Fuller of Loucks’ Public Corruption Unit.

###

05 June 2009

Former Canadian Federal Liberal Party Organizer Benoit Corbeil


Former Quebec Liberal official pleads guilty to fraud

by Sue Montgomery

CANWEST NEWS SERVICE
June 3, 2009


MONTREAL - Lawyers will argue Sept. 10 what kind of sentence the former head of the Quebec wing of the Liberal Party of Canada deserves for using his influence in a land deal and defrauding the party of over $100,000.

Benoit Corbeil, 45, stood before Quebec Court Judge Suzanne Coupal Wednesday and in a loud and clear voice pleaded guilty to one charge of influence peddling and one of fraud. A third count of conspiracy was withdrawn.

Although Mr. Corbeil was a key figure in the federal sponsorship scandal, both his lawyer and the Crown said that the crimes to which he pleaded guilty had no direct link to the scam that eventually brought down the federal Liberals. His lawyer, Michel Grenier, also said his client didn’t benefit financially from his crimes.

Court heard Wednesday that in 1997, Mr. Corbeil offered to help a private quarry and paving company in St.-Jean-sur-Richelieu, south of Montreal, buy land belonging to the federal government. In exchange, the company’s then owner, Real Ouimet, handed over $50,000 cash. Mr. Ouimet has since died.

Mr. Corbeil also authorized six false invoices amounting to $117,300. The money came out of the coffers of the Liberal party and into the hands of Giuseppe (Joe) Morselli, a Liberal fundraiser who died in 2006.

“He had no choice [but to plead guilty],” said Crown prosecutor Josee Fontaine. “The evidence we had against him was very strong.”

During the inquiry into the federal sponsorship scandal, headed by Justice John Gomery, Mr. Corbeil was fingered as an organizer who funnelled thousands of dollars in secret contributions to the Liberals between 1995 and 2001.

In 1997, Mr. Corbeil was regional director of the Liberal party’s Monteregie office. He became head of the Quebec wing in 1998.

Montreal Gazette

04 June 2009

Suspended Manitoba Lawyer David Davis


Lawyer suspended, charged

Live-in nannies complain about treatment

by Carol Sanders

As originally published: Winnipeg Free Press
May 31, 2009


A Winnipeg immigration lawyer has been suspended for six months and fined $25,000 after a live-in nanny complained he hired her out to third parties and put her application for immigration at risk.

A copy of the Law Society of Manitoba discipline committee report said David Davis pleaded guilty in March to four counts of professional misconduct for paying a referral fee to a non-lawyer, two counts of conflict of interest, and failure to act with integrity by charging fees that were not fully disclosed, fair and reasonable.

Davis was fined $25,000 to be paid in $1,000 monthly instalments, and is suspended from practising law for six months starting June 1.

At a forum on the exploitation of migrant workers Saturday, MLA Flor Marcelino said she learned of Davis's suspension Friday from one of her constituents.

"I know several of his clients," said Marcelino, whose constituency office helps people having problems with their immigration applications.

Davis's suspension follows a law society hearing in March after complaints were made by a live-in nanny from the Philippines who sued Davis. In a civil suit filed in 2007, she said the immigration lawyer hired her out to third parties but never paid her - and put her immigration status at risk.

The nanny agreed to an out-of-court settlement that included a confidentiality clause. Her original statement of claim said she hired Davis in January of 2004 to help her obtain a work permit under Citizenship and Immigration Canada's Live-in Caregiver Program. Through the program, she was hoping to apply for permanent resident status for herself, her husband and two children in the Philippines.

She obtained a work permit in April 2005 and went to work for Davis as a live-in caregiver to his two children for $1,250 a month for a 40-hour work week until December 2006.

She claimed Davis paid her less than that amount, and that she was required to work unpaid overtime. She said Davis also arranged for her to work for third parties and didn't pay her. Working for the third parties put her immigration application at risk because it's in violation of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, her claim said.

The citizen of the Philippines said Davis failed in his duty as her lawyer to advise her properly, and that his role as her employer and lawyer was a conflict from the beginning.

The Winnipeg lawyer's statement of defence said a third party retained him as an immigration lawyer to provide limited services to the nanny. He had no responsibility to protect or ensure her immigration status, the court document said. Davis denied arranging for the nanny to do any unauthorized work for third parties.

Any services she allegedly provided for third parties were of her own accord "knowing full well the risks and consequences, if any," his statement of defence said.

Reached by phone Saturday night, Davis declined to comment.

In December, he is to go on trial for complaints made by another live-in nanny.

Davis was charged last spring by the Canada Border Services Agency for employing Adelaida Cruspe Perena, a Philippines national, in 2007 in a capacity for which she was not authorized.

He faces a second charge of knowingly misrepresenting or withholding material facts relating to her employment, according to information filed in provincial court.

The maximum penalty for a conviction under the first charge is a $50,000 fine and a two-year prison sentence. A guilty verdict concerning the latter charge could lead to fine of up to $100,000 and a prison sentence of up to five years.

Davis's misconduct precedes the recent furore over allegations that MP Ruby Dhalla, a former Winnipegger, mistreated live-in caregivers hired to look after her mother.

Allan Fineblit, chief executive officer of the Law Society of Manitoba, confirmed that Davis's suspension is "in relation to the matters involving nannies that were also the subject of charges before the courts."

carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca

03 June 2009

"The First Couple"


Obama Hides Taxpayer Tab For Romantic N.Y. Date

As originally posted on: Corruption Chronicles: A Judicial Watch Blog
[Post date not given]


In yet another violation of his infamous pledge to run the most transparent administration in history, President Barack Obama refuses to disclose how much U.S. taxpayers spent on his highly publicized New York date with his wife.

While many regular Americans suffer through an economic crisis, the president and First Lady took a taxpayer-financed government jet to Manhattan for dinner and a Broadway show. The Obama’s paid for dinner and the theater tickets but Americans picked up the hefty tab for the transportation, motorcades and security details.

Estimates for the trip have ranged from $24,000 to $75,000 but the White House could end the speculation by revealing the actual cost. After all, unprecedented transparency was one of Obama’s main campaign promises and it wasn’t that long ago that he boldly proclaimed that “Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

So why not end the guesstimates by revealing the actual numbers? A Washington D.C. newspaper speculates that the cost is far more exorbitant than most Americans imagine, providing in a lengthy story details to support the theory and rule out the $24,000 estimate as “absurdly low” and the $75,000 estimate as “spectacularly low.”

The article helps calculate the actual cost by offering details of the logistics involved in the president’s intricate security operation. First, the Obama’s and their entourage flew from the White House to Andrews Air Force Base which required three choppers, two decoys and the one carrying the First Couple. That trip alone requires dozens of military personnel for radar, communications, mechanics and crews.

The piece points out that transporting the president on a weekend still takes a full operation, which means D.C. police, uniformed Secret Service officers and Capitol police making overtime pay. At least three jets ferried the Obama’s aides and reporters to New York and a motorcade of at least a dozen vehicles was set up in New York. Then, at least three helicopters flew the whole party from JFK Airport to a Wall Street landing zone.

Hundreds of New York Police Department officers—earning overtime pay—were stationed along the Obama route, shutting down roads and holding back pedestrians. An army of police cars and motorcycles as well as New York City ambulance participated in the procession. Finally, the U. S. Secret Service had to survey the route in advance and station agents and sharpshooters throughout the area.

Americans deserve to know how much of their tax dollars the president spent to take his wife on this date, which he evidently promised her during the rigors of campaigning. His secrecy on the matter is only the latest violation of his own transparency rule.

In December Obama failed to make public—as promised—details of crucial transition meetings with special interest groups. A few months later, Obama’s Justice Department defended a Bush Administration secrecy rule it had harshly criticized in court. Earlier this month the president revealed that his highly touted database for Americans to track “every dime” of the $787 billion stimulus bill wouldn’t be available until half the money is spent.

02 June 2009

The People's Republic of China


China: Leading Civil Rights Lawyers Face Threats to Licenses

Government Should Guarantee Independence of the Legal Profession

As originally posted on: Human Rights Watch
May 26, 2009


(New York) - More than 20 of China's most prominent civil rights lawyers face the possible loss of their right to practice law as an apparent official reprisal for their rights advocacy efforts, Human Rights Watch said today.

Under Chinese law, lawyers and law firms must get their licenses to practice renewed annually, a process sometimes marred by political considerations. These civil rights lawyers say that in recent weeks the Beijing judicial authorities have been trying to pressure their firms not to endorse their re-licensing applications. The lawyers say that the firms' heads have been warned by judicial officials in meetings and telephone conversations about possible adverse consequences for their business if they continue to employ lawyers who take up rights cases.

"Control over the yearly renewal of professional licenses remains one of the main obstacles to the independence of China's legal profession," said Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. "Even when law firms that have been pressured decide to stand by their lawyers, this kind of interference has a chilling effect on the legal profession."

According to an official April 14, 2009, notice from the Beijing Judicial Bureau detailing the registration procedures, lawyers must present their annual applications prior to the end of the registration period on May 31. Lawyers who fail to renew their professional licenses are in effect temporarily disbarred.

A number of the lawyers currently targeted have been involved in some of the most high-profile efforts to date to litigate on behalf of victims of human rights abuses and press for greater accountability from the government. They have represented families of victims of the melamine milk-powder scandal, parents of children killed during the Sichuan earthquake who are pressing for an investigation into the causes of the disproportionately high rate of school collapses, and Tibetans arrested in connection with the massive crackdown in Tibet. Others have been involved in representing HIV/AIDS patients, victims of police abuses, farmers evicted from their land, and Falungong practitioners.

Over the past few years, Human Rights Watch has extensively documented abuses of lawyers, widespread violations of the right of the defense in legal procedures, and a pattern of interference and political control in cases viewed as politically sensitive by the authorities. Although the government vowed to establish new procedural protections for lawyers in June 2008 when it promulgated revisions to the Law on Lawyers, those efforts have been inadequate. No efforts have been made to effectively safeguard the security of lawyers discharging their functions or to allow the government-controlled All-China Lawyers Association - the country's bar association - to play such role.

Human Rights Watch pointed out that instead of the promised reforms to protect the independence of lawyers, detention and physical abuses against lawyers by law enforcement officials have multiplied. In one such incident on May 13, 2009, lawyers Zhang Kai and Li Chunfu were arrested and beaten in police custody in Chongqing after meeting with the family of a man who had died while in a re-education-through-labor camp. The authorities have so far refused to investigate the incident.

"Interference and retaliation against lawyers are direct attacks on the rule of law," said Richardson. "Such actions perpetuate injustices, undermine confidence in legal institutions, and negate the government's own commitment to governing the country according to law."

Beijing lawyers who have reported concerns over the renewal of their license include

Li Heping, Cheng Hai, Jiang Tianyong, Li Xiongbing, Li Chunfu, Wang Yajun, Tang Jitian, Yang Huimin, Xie Yanyi, Li Dunyong, Wen Haibo, Liu Wei, Zhang Lihui, Peng Jian, Li Jinglin, Lan Zhixue, Zhang Kai and Liu Xiaoyuan. Two lawyers who practice outside of Beijing, Wei Liangyue and Yang Zaixin, have also reported threats over their licenses.

To read the December 2008 Human Rights Watch report, "Walking on Thin Ice: Control, Intimidation and Harassment of Lawyers in China," click here.

Canadian Federal Member of Parliament Pierre Poilievre


Tory MP under fire for 'tar baby' comment

As originally posted on: CTV.ca
May 29, 2009


A Tory MP known for his partisan attacks and bare-knuckle parliamentary style is facing accusations of racism after he twice used the term "tar baby" in the House of Commons Friday.

Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre, parliamentary secretary to the prime minister, used the term in response to Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff's decision to back away from his predecessor's unpopular carbon tax policy.

"On that side of the House, they have the man who fathered the carbon tax, put it up for adoption to his predecessor and now wants a paternity test to prove the tar baby was never his in the first place," said Poilievre.

He used the term again later during question period.

Liberal MP Ralph Goodale raised the issue at the end of question period and asked that Poilievre apologize for using the term.

"In addition to being a pejorative term, which might well prove to be unparliamentary, the parliamentary secretary might consider that there are many authorities both in this country and many others that consider the term racist," said Goodale.

Responding, Poilievre said he wasn't aware that the term had racist connotations.

"I have worked hard to represent people of all backgrounds and I have always done so in a spirit of tolerance. My reference to the term 'tar baby' was a common reference that refers to issues that stick to one," he said.

Poilievre hasn't officially apologized and the controversy continues to spread in Ottawa.

Later on Friday, Liberal MP Marlene Jennings, who is black, decried the term and demanded an apology.

"As a black child growing up, I was called all sorts of pejorative names based on the color of my skin, including the 'n-word' and 'tar baby' - and believe me, it was hurtful," said Jennings.

"I am offended by Mr. Poilievre's insensitive remarks - and I know leaders in the black community across Canada feel the same way."

However, the prime minister's office appears to be digging in its heels and refusing to apologize.

In a press release issued Friday afternoon, the PMO stated that the term has been used by national media in Canada for something that sticks.

Tory MP Andrew Saxton said his "colleague meant no harm" when he used the term.

"It's a completely different usage of the term - it's a usage that's been used for a very long time (and used) by many politicians, including Liberals," he told CTV's Power Play on Friday.

Still, ignorance is no excuse, said NDP MP Malcolm Allen.

"It's not an excuse to say 'I'm a younger person and I don't remember those terms,'" he said. "He ought to (have) apologized this morning."

01 June 2009

Canadian Federal Member of Parliament / Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and the Harper Conservatives


Just the Facts: Jim Flaherty's top 10 mismanagement moments

As originally posted on: Liberal.ca
May 27, 2009


"I'm comfortable with our projections. I'm staying with our budget projection. We're on track."
- Jim Flaherty on the budget deficit, April 22, 2009


1. Broken promise on income trusts. By imposing a punitive 31.5 per cent tax on income trusts, the Conservative government raided the hard-earned savings of Canadian seniors.

2. Record deficits. Minister Flaherty appears incapable of managing Canada's finances. In September, he said there wouldn't be a recession. In October, he promised no deficits. In November, he predicted a surplus. In January, he tabled a budget with a $34 billion deficit. Yesterday, it turned into a deficit of at least $50 billion - the largest in Canadian history.

3. Raised income taxes. The 2006 Conservative Budget legislated an increase in the lowest tax rate to 15.5 per cent as of July 1, 2006, reversing the previous Liberal government's reduction to the lowest personal income tax rate from 16 per cent to 15 per cent effective January 1, 2005.

4. Failure to get Building Canada Fund infrastructure spending out the door. In the first year following the launch of the $8.8-billion Building Canada Fund, the Conservative government flowed zero funding to infrastructure projects. As recently as February 2009, officials at Infrastructure Canada admitted that of the $1.5 billion announced in its first two years of budgeted spending, only $80 million has flowed for municipal infrastructure projects across the country - only 5%.

5. Broken 120-day economic stimulus promise. Minister Flaherty's January 2009 budget explicitly stated, "Measures to support the economy must begin within the next 120 days to be most effective." Yet recent media reports confirm that little infrastructure money has flowed, even for projects strictly under federal jurisdiction.

6. Broken promise on equalization. Minister Flaherty's 2007 budget broke his government's promise to Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador that they would honour the Atlantic Accord commitment to leave 100 per cent of benefits from offshore resources exempt from equalization calculations.

7. Fudging the environmental benefit of the public transit tax credit. Minister Flaherty dedicated $635 million to a public transit tax credit that his government claimed would reduce green house gas emissions by 220,000 per year. Environment Canada amended the figure for expected reductions to an average of 35,000 tonnes per year-about 16 percent of the original estimate. In February 2009, Auditor General Sheila Fraser concluded that the public transit tax credit will have a negligible impact on Canada's greenhouse gas emissions. She went on to say that it is almost impossible to measure actual greenhouse gas emission reductions attributable to the tax credit, as many factors influence public transit ridership, including the price of gasoline.

8. Fiscal update led to Parliamentary crisis. Minister Flaherty's 2008 Fall Economic Statement caused a Parliamentary crisis by proposing zero economic stimulus measures on the eve of the recession, focusing instead on partisan measures and cutting funding for pay equity. Prime Minister Harper was forced to prorogue Parliament to save his job, but not before he nearly sparked a national unity crisis by pitting region against region with his rhetoric in the House of Commons.

9. Cuts to culture funding. Minister Flaherty cut $45 million of federal culture funding last year, despite the fact that Canada's culture sector directly contributed $46 billion - 3.8 per cent - to Canada's GDP in 2007. The cuts affected every sector in the culture industry, be it international touring for performing arts groups, funding for new-media research or independent film production, or financial support for Canadian writers - touching off a Canada-wide backlash among cultural organizations.

10. Cuts to scientific research. Minister Flaherty cut funding by $148 million in January's budget to Canada's three granting councils-the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canadian Institutes for Health Research and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. According to Statistics Canada, total federal funding for science and technology in 2008 was $365 million less than in 2005 when adjusted for inflation.