Categories
Common Sense

Outside Influence

Ever hear of outside funding, outside influence, so forth?

It can happen when somebody across the street drops by to share ideas with you. It’s pretty horrible, because somebody who was external to your location comes over and maybe has an impact on you. Which should be illegal.

Do I sound sardonic?

I have my reasons: Two other citizen activists and I are being victimized by this sort of anti-outsider attitude. In our case, as practiced by the political establishment of Oklahoma. Trying to jail us for failing to predict how they would re-interpret their own rules prohibiting so-called “non-resident” petition circulators. For the sordid details, visit freepauljacob.com .

But a recent story from Russia shows how tyrannical the anti-outsider prejudice becomes when taken to its logical (or illogical) conclusion.

President Vladimir Putin’s hand-picked successor, a previously unknown functionary, just won a meaningless political election in Russia. And now Putin is complaining about foreign funding of Russian political activists — whose activities are regularly censored and impeded by Putin’s own government, most conspicuously so during the recent non-election.

The plight of would-be practitioners of Russian democracy underscores the dangers of bans on “outside” influence. For influence, read “support for democratic rights” and “dialogue.”

Let’s hope Putin’s not taking his cue from Oklahoma. Or vice versa.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
property rights

Arnold v. Tourkakis

To history’s pile of outrageous court decisions Missouri’s Supreme Court just added another whopper.

The town of Arnold, Missouri, had set its sights on an area it wants to redevelop, declared the property “blighted,” and is taking it by force. From residents who don’t want to sell. Residents like Homer Tourkakis.

Tourkakis, a dentist, stood up to fight for his business and his rights.

He thought he had a good case. After all, this land grab is not for a public use, but merely to flip over to private developers

Because of the infamous Kelo decision, he knew that the Fifth Amendment couldn’t help. But he did have the Missouri Constitution. It says government’s “chief purpos” is to secure the individual’s right to “the enjoyment of the gains of their own industry,” and that “private property shall not be taken for private use with or without compensation, unless by consent of the owner.”

But Mr. Tourkakis was saddled with something he didn’t count on: his state’s highest court. The judges one-upped Kelo, ignored the state constitution, and overruled a lower court.

Governments, the court said, have an “unlimited and practically absolute sovereign power of eminent domain” to take our property at their whim.

Tourkakis is fighting the decision. What can he do, after his state’s highest court ruled against him?

He can change the law. He’s working with Missouri Citizens for Property Rights on two voter initiatives. And you can help: Go to 4agoodcause.com.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense

McCain-Feingold: The Movie

How much more proof do we need that an attack on First Amendment rights is an attack on First Amendment rights? I’m talking about campaign finance regulations and particularly the latest addendum, McCain-Feingold.

It’s precisely the kind of speech most crucial to the preservation of a free society — political speech — which is repressed by the likes of McCain-Feingold.

Consider the treatment being accorded Citizens United, a conservative organization that produced a movie called Hillary: The Movie.

As a three-judge panel pointed out in its ruling against Citizens United, under McCain-Feingold an “electioneering communication” is any “broadcast, cable or satellite communication” that refers to a candidate for federal office within 60 days of a general election or within 30 days of a primary. Such “electioneering communications” are subject to “a host of restrictions.” Oh.

It gets worse. The U.S. Supreme Court has just declined to hear an appeal in the case. They are seven of the same nine justices who said McCain-Feingold passed constitutional muster when a challenge of it first hit their desk. But the First Amendment — which is a part of the Constitution, by the way — does not say that freedom of speech ends where campaigns begin. Obviously.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense

Was George Washington a Terrorist?

Say George Washington were alive today and trying to immigrate to our country. Should we let him in with open arms? Or deny him a green card because he participated in the American Revolution?

Have I gone nuts? No. It’s our immigration policy that’s stark raving mad!

Sure, Saman Kareem isn’t George Washington. He’s an Iraqi refuge who assisted the American military as a translator. After receiving numerous death threats (as well as glowing praise for his assistance), he was allowed to come to the U.S.

But recently he was denied permanent residence status here because of his involvement many years ago in groups seeking to overthrow Saddam Hussein. Kareem is a Kurd and apparently didn’t like Saddam’s poison gas attacks that massacred his entire family. Go figure.

But wait — I thought our USA didn’t much care for Saddam, either.

Well, one tribe in our government allows folks like Kareem entry into the country, but another tribe designates groups fighting their own governments as terrorist. No matter how evil and oppressive their governments may be.

Well, after the story about Kareem broke, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced they were putting these cases on hold to review their policies.

I hope they’ll decide George Washington was no terrorist. And likewise for the thousands of others fighting tyranny.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense

Controlling Gun Control

Are you ready to relinquish your Second Amendment rights yet?

Police in Boston and Washington, DC, have been soliciting “voluntary” compliance with gun control. The plan: go house to house searching for weapons.

Many residents are resisting.

In DC the disarmament drive is particularly gauche, since Washington’s handgun ban was recently overturned in federal court. The city has appealed the decision, now being mulled over in the U.S. Supreme Court. At the time of the lower court’s decision, DC resident Tom Palmer told MSNBC: “The fact is that the criminals don’t obey the law and they do have guns.” He noted that it’s law-abiding citizens who get disarmed by such laws.

This is the first time in 70 years that the Supreme Court is considering whether the Second Amendment’s statement that the right to keep and bear arms “shall not be infringed” means what it says. Let’s just hope the justices’ reading skills are up to par.

Boston and DC activists have been alerting citizens of their right not to let the police enter their homes without a warrant. The education effort is reasonable.

Police officers may formally ask permission to enter. But their unexpected appearance on one’s doorstep can be intimidating. People don’t always have the presence of mind to assert their rights in such a situation — rights they possess even when governments decline to recognize them.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense

Blood Sport

Is politics a “blood sport”? It’s not supposed to be. But Detroit’s Channel 4 reports that folks called “blockers” are harassing voters who want to sign a petition.

The petition is to recall Michigan’s Speaker of the House Andy Dillon over his massive tax increase. People are hurting in Michigan. But legislators — led by Dillon — decided taxpayers should hurt more, so that spending could grow more than three-quarters of a billion dollars.

At The New Media Journal, Warner Todd Huston writes that “blockers scream at petition signers, calling them names, and hover menacingly over them making them feel threatened and intimidated.” Rose Bogaert of the Wayne County Taxpayers Association says, “They’re literally behaving like thugs out there.”

Who are these brutes? It turns out many of them are on the state payroll. In fact, they work for none other than Speaker Dillon.

Dillon’s office claims the blockers on his staff are doing this all on their own, taking vacation time. Yeah, right. Maybe now that they’ve been caught.

Leon Drolet, the head of the Michigan Taxpayers Alliance, isn’t buying that. Instead, he’s offering $250 a pop to identify each of these thugs.

Dillon’s tax increase was a travesty. The use of state workers to violate citizens’ most basic constitutional rights is, well, serious enough that you ought to find out more at MichiganRecalls.com.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense

So We Can Cruise

We take the most wondrous marvels for granted. We’re annoyed when we have to reboot our computers, for example. And how come we can only do 25 things at once on this magical machine, instead of 35 things?

I admit I’m the worst. But then I think, hey, at least we don’t have to wrestle with vacuum tubes and punch cards these days.

Same with vehicular transportation. You know, we’ve come a long way from the horse and buggy. We take the many convenient features of automobiles for granted.

Like cruise control. It comes to mind because of an article I stumbled across about Ralph Teetor, a mechanical engineer who invented automatic transmission, cruise control and many other enhancements of the driving experience.

Teeter realized the need for cruise control when he fell victim to his lawyer’s herky-jerky attempts to comply with the 35 mile per hour speed limit imposed during World War II. In 1945, he patented the invention and by the late ’50s it was being offered as an option in Chrysler models.

Another thing we take for granted is our eyesight. Something Ralph Teetor lost at the age of five. But that didn’t stop him from building his own one-cylinder car at age 12. He then went on to receive a Bachelor’s in Mechanical Engineering and make a career visualizing solutions to one tough problem after another.

That’s a story that reminds us that the world is not always blind to character and drive.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
general freedom

Privacy Means No Random Drug Tests

Your privacy rights vary from state to state, as citizens of Washington State may have just found out to their surprise.

In a tiny rural county in the Evergreen State, a public school had required random drug tests of its sports participants. Since not everyone wanted to pee to play, the case found its way to the court. In mid-March the issue was decided by the state’s Supreme Court. The state’s guarantee that “No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law,” was held to nix the program.

There has to be reasonable suspicion to require drug tests, at least in Washington.

Urinating into a cup, on demand, is a breach of privacy. Random demands for this were held by the court to be “warrentless.”

Some think random drug testing of children is a great idea, liberties and constitutions be damned. I prefer freedom. It is demonstrated criminal behavior that warrants the intrusion of police power. Not mere generalized suspicion.

And let’s be frank: random drug tests are there only to inspire a general level of fear, leading (it is hoped) to abstinence from the use of prohibited drugs.

You may fear drugs so much that you want your kids to live like that. I don’t.

In one state, at least, “students do not ‘shed their constitutional rights’ at the schoolhouse door.” What about your state?

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense First Amendment rights too much government

Canada’s Kangaroo Court

Hurray for the new media.

Two years ago, Ezra Levant edited a magazine that reported on the bitter controversy over cartoons featuring the prophet Muhammed. The cartoons first appeared in a Danish newspaper. Levant reprinted them.

The reprint angered a Muslim living in Canada. So he complained to Alberta’s so-called “Human Rights Commission.” This dishonestly named commission can persecute people for saying anything that might offend somebody else.

Levant appeared before the commission. Closed-door proceedings. No reporters. No lawyer. No rule against bringing a video cam, either. So he did. Go to YouTube and see his defiance for yourself. Plug the words “Ezra Levant” into the search engine. Hundreds of thousands have seen the two-minute video.

Shirlene McGovern, the so-called “human rights office” who questioned him, quit because of the backlash. Levant says that McGovern had started to make small talk and shake his hand, but he “upset her by not being complicit” in what he calls his “own prosecution.”

On camera, Levant tells McGovern she’s a thug for assailing his freedom of speech. He says, “I don’t grant you the right to sit in judgment on whether or not I’m reasonable. . . .” in how he exercises his freedom of speech.

The complaint has now been withdrawn. But Levant is still challenging the abuse in court. A truly inspiring defense of First Amendment rights.

Of course, in Canada “freedom of speech” doesn’t fall under the heading of “First Amendment rights.” We’ll be happy to let them borrow it though.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

Categories
Common Sense

The Official Missouri State Sot

Every state in the union has a state bird. My state’s is the cardinal. Very red. Pretty. We have a state seal, a flag, and a flower. You’d think with these that legislators could let the matter of state symbols go at that.

But no. We also have a state insect, of all things. Our Virginia solons chose well on the latter, the tiger swallowtail butterfly. Beautiful. That nicely rounds out our symbols, no?

No. We also have a state fish and a state shell, as well. I kid you not. Think brook trout and oyster. Yum?

Yes, the state symbol act is pretty ridiculous. But until recently, I’d never thought about what all this is really for: the kids.

In Missouri, anyway, it has been the policy for children to suggest what should be the state bird, rock, composer, whatever. And then the legislature, in its slower working days, would consider the proposals.

Hey, it’s a way for kids to get involved in . . . uh, government. Sort of. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

But what can we make of the recent attempt in the Missouri legislature to make Budweiser the “state beer”?

Don’t worry, folks. Kids didn’t suggest it. This is entirely the work of adults in the legislature. I won’t say they’re drunk on power, but I won’t say they’re exactly sober, either.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.