Natural Origins of Self-Defense

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This is the first in a new series, an expansion of my both my Natural Law column and Second Amendment and related columns.  Here, I briefly examine the ancient and eternal theories behind the basic rights which gave rise to the doctrine enshrined in the Second Amendment.

Legal practitioners and law and political science scholars, along with the general public, many politicians, and the media, often make the common mistake of looking only to the text of the Constitution (State or federal) or recent court cases in order to gain perspective into the meaning and/or application of the Second Amendment (and related State protections).  While government protection of our rights is vital (the only reason for government), rights do not come from government.

My examination here is theoretic in nature and, thus, seeks out existential sources which provide both definition and supporting argumentative and empirical evidence which are fixed throughout history and across all geographic areas.  Of course, as my ultimate view is towards the American experience, I will pay closer attention to sources from Western civilization.

The Bible is replete with approval of self-defense.  “If anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.”  1 Timothy 5:8.  This would seem to encompass the responsibility to keep one’s family safe to the extent possible.  “If a thief is found breaking in and is struck so that he dies, there shall be no bloodguilt for him, but if the sun has risen on him, there shall be bloodguilt for him. He shall surely pay. If he has nothing, then he shall be sold for his theft.”  Exodus 22:2-3.  This provision is the basis for the common-law doctrine against burglary, originally extended to night-time attacks.  The matter of daylight adds an interesting perspective.  Again, this passage addresses a thief, not a would-be murderer of rapist.  It is divine commentary on the value of human life over mere possessions when an opportunity exists to examine the intent of a criminal.  While it is not a prohibition against using force to deter a thief, the provision indicates the Lord’s wish that force not exceed the attendant circumstantial need.

Paul continues this theme of limited aggression in Romans 12:19: “Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.'”  Again, God does not seem opposed to immediate use of force to deter violence but, once danger has passed, he commands that we leave judgment to him.  This is backed by the Old Testament: “Do not say, ‘I will repay evil’; wait for the Lord, and he will deliver you.”  Proverbs 20:22.  Again, for Christians, after the fact of a crime, the matter is God’s to handle.  This is the basis for a general prohibition against vigilante justice.

In Romans 13, often mis-cited as a justification for any and all government action being divine, Paul extolls the virtues of political agencies instituted in God’s Name.  When such an entity exists, then it has God’s authority to pursue prosecution of criminal matters.  I refuse to accept that this concept applies to all governments – I doubt God approved of Hitler’s action, for instance.  Rev. Chuck Baldwin, http://chuckbaldwinlive.com/home/, has extensively commented on this subject – http://www.romans13truth.com/.

Jesus Christ, himself, tacitly endorsed armed defense: “And let the one who has no sword sell his cloak and buy one.”  Luke 22:36.  I say “tacitly” because of the caveats Jesus placed on the use of force, essentially limiting it to only urgent circumstances.  Christ urged us to “turn the other cheek” when possible.  Matthew 5:39.  He also admonished Peter to sheath his sword while repairing the injure Peter had inflicted with his sword.  John 18:11.  Jesus, while defending the 10 Commandments, issued an 11th: “love one another.”  John 13:34.  The Son’s words places strict constraints on the Father’s allowance of the use of force.  It does not foreclose the concept.

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(The ultimate Defender.  Google.)

Jesus only once resorted to the use of force, personally.  When He discovered the money-changers (the banksters of their time) abusing the Holiness of the Temple, Jesus violently drove them away.  John 2:15.  This underscores the possibility of defense as an immediate solution, without resort to formal authority or the eventual actions of the Lord.  The Church has formally detailed both the right to such defense as well as the moral duty of such action in need.  “Legitimate defense can be not only a right but a grave duty for one who is responsible for the lives of others. The defense of the common good requires that an unjust aggressor be rendered unable to cause harm.”  Catechism of the Catholic Church (“CCC”): 2265 (emphasis added)(see also CCC: 1909).

The Church also commands dignity be afforded to the human body, generally: “This dignity entails the demand that he should treat with respect his own body, but also the body of every other person, especially the suffering”  CCC: 1004.  While this backs the general prohibition against unlawfully harming others, it also reminds the Believer to respect even his enemy and attempt to limit his forcible response to criminal activity as far as possible to minimize harm.

“… [I]n the case of legitimate defence, in which the right to protect one’s own life and the duty not to harm someone else’s life are difficult to reconcile in practice. Certainly, the intrinsic value of life and the duty to love oneself no less than others are the basis of a true right to self-defence. The demanding commandment of love of neighbour, set forth in the Old Testament and confirmed by Jesus, itself presupposes love of oneself as the basis of comparison: ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself’ (Mk 12:31). Consequently, no one can renounce the right to self-defence out of lack of love for life or for self.”  Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Evangeliun Vitae (The Gospel of Life), 1995.

The eminent scholar, David Kopel, has documented the general agreement among Eastern Religions along these ideas.  In his review of Confucianism, Taoism, Hinduism, Sikhism, Jainism, and Buddhism, Kopel explodes common myths that these religions do not allow for proper use of self-defense.  David B. Kopel. “Self-Defense in Asian Religions” Liberty Law Review 2 (2007): 79, 80-81 (http://works.bepress.com/david_kopel/20).

Kopel’s expose is excellent.  He also touches on the Eastern version of Baldwin’s critique of Romans 13: “Although Confucianism, like most other religions, has been used by tyrants to claim that revolution is immoral, Confucius himself ordered a revolution against an oppressive regime.”  Id, at 163.  Only the “religion” of the State would decree that the government is above the Natural Law.

Commenting on Exudus 2, above, Saint Thomas Aquinas said, “it is much more lawful to defend one’s life than one’s house. Therefore neither is a man guilty of murder if he kills another in defense of his own life.”  Aquinas, Summa Theologica.

“If a man, in self-defense, uses more than necessary violence, it will be unlawful: whereas if he repel force with moderation his defense will be lawful, because according to the jurists, ‘it is lawful to repel force by force, provided one does not exceed the limits of a blameless defense.’ Nor is it necessary for salvation that a man omit the act of moderate self-defense in order to avoid killing the other man, since one is bound to take more care of one’s life than of another’s.”  Id.

Plato noted that when one acts in true self-defense, taken as a natural right, one may actually do the criminal perpetrator (in addition to the victim and society) a service: if the criminal survives, he may reflect on his wrongdoing positively.  Plato, The Republic, The Problem of Justice.  Plato’s great student, Aristotle, agreed.  Aristotle noted that a true case of self-defense is not necessarily a voluntary action.  Thus, any suffering from the act of defense may be attributed to the aggressor and not the defender.  Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics.

The possession of weapons and their defensive usage, though regulated, was allowed in both the Roman Republic and the Empire. “We grant to all persons the unrestricted power to defend themselves, so that it is proper to subject anyone, whether a private person or a solider … to immediate punishment in accordance with the authority granted to all [up to, and including, death, if warranted].”  Codex Justinianus 3.27.1.  The Romans regarded the right to use weaponry in defense as implicit to the right itself.

The mighty Cicero opined: “There exists a law, not written down anywhere, but inborn in our hearts; a law which comes to us not by training or custom or reading but by derivation and absorption and adoption from nature itself; a law which has come to us not from theory but from practice, not by instruction but by natural intuition. I refer to the law which lays it down that, if our lives are endangered by plots or violence or armed robbers or enemies, any and every method of protecting ourselves is morally right.” Cicero, “In Defence of Titus Annus Milo,” Selected Speeches of Cicero, Michael Grant translation, 1969.  Again, the esteemed David Kopel gives excellent analysis to this ancient Natural Law position in The Sword and the Tome, America’s 1st Freedom, NRA, 2009.

Cicero’s titanic predecessor, the black-robed Cato, made an interesting analogy along the lines of Jesus’s act of retribution noted above (as noted by Cicero himself): Cato was asked by an ambitious Roman, “What is the most profitable about property?”  Cato answered, “To raise cattle with great success.”   The young man then asked, “What is the second most profitable?”  Cato answered, “Raising cattle with moderate success.”  The inquirer pressed again, “The third most profitable?”  “Raising cattle with little success.”  Finally, the young man cut to his presupposed profession, “How about money-lending?”  Cato answered (somewhat in advance of Jesus), “How about murder?”  Cicero, On Duties.

I by no means equate money-lending or banking with murder but it appears the subject was considered by multiple ancient sources.  It seems the evil of the banksters in as eternal as natural law.  Defense against the predation of this wicked class may be something to consider.

Later political theorists expounded the virtue and necessity of self-defense.  John Locke described self-defense as the first among Natural Rights.  Locke, Second Essay on Civil Government.  Hobbes concurred in this assertion, regardless of the state of any society.  Hobbes, Leviathan, 1651.  Even the craven and generally useless United Nations begrudgingly attempted to acknowledge this fundamental truth: “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation.  Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.”  Universal Declaration of Human Rights, U.N. General Assembly, Article 12, December 10, 1948.

In the earliest American tradition, we find acknowledgment of the Natural Law (before the adoption of the Second Amendment).  The Declaration of Independence (1776) begins: “When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.” (Emphasis added).  The Declaration then enumerates the crimes of King George, among them many of which might be defended against under the doctrine explained herein.

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(In case of emergency only.  Google.)

Again, self-defense is a God-given, eternal right.  It is also a duty, one to be exercised only in dire need and with a grave sense of responsibility.  As with all matters of Natural Law, man-made legislation must attempt as closely as humanly possible to approximate the divine purposes of the Law.  In the next installment of this series, I intend to examine more ancient legislation regarding weapons and self-defense, specifically Roman Law.

Gun Rights Survey

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This morning I recived an email from The Second Amendment Foundation, a toothier NRAish organization, for those of you unfamiliar.  You can see the email as a website here: http://smna.conservativecontacts.com/track?t=v&enid=ZWFzPTEmbWlkPTExODA3Jm1zZ2lkPTgzMDAmZGlkPTQwMCZlZGlkPTQwMCZzbj0xNjc4MjMwMCZlaWQ9bG92ZXR0cEBlYXJ0aGxpbmsubmV0JmVlaWQ9bG92ZXR0cEBlYXJ0aGxpbmsubmV0JnVpZD1sb3ZldHRwQGVhcnRobGluay5uZXQmcmlkPTYwMjYxJmVyaWQ9NjAyNjEmZmw9Jm12aWQ9JnRnaWQ9JmV4dHJhPQ==&&&2100&eu=200&&&.  I hope the link works; the site contains a ten question survey, which I decided to turn into a short column.  Read on, friends.

By the way, check out the SAF: http://www.saf.org/.  They produced the video I posted a while back about racism in gun controls.  They do good work on behalf of our freedom.  Sign up for their email updates.

I took the liberty of cutting and pasting the survey whole from the email here, without permission.  I figure they won’t mind as I am promoting them.  Anyway, The questions are “yes” or “no” answerable.  I took the opportunity to show you how I would answer along with further explanation.  Here we go:

QUESTION 1: Do you own a semi-automatic firearm that has a detachable magazine, folding stock, or pistol grip?
YES NO
I would answer Yes, although all of you know I don’t really own any firearms.  I don’t belive in them…

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(Guns, like cigars and tobacco products are very dangerous.  Avoid both…)

QUESTION 2: Do you own a clip or magazine that holds more than ten rounds?
YES NO
 Again, with the above “truthful…” caveat, I answer Yes.
QUESTION 3: Do you think the Feinstein Gun Ban would reduce gun violence?
YES NO
 NO!  Gun control has nothing at all to do with ending violence.  Every country which enacts strict gun control (see Britain, Australia, etc.) experiences a dramatic increase in violent crime.  Gun control is about disarming the people so as to make them helpless in the face of tyranny.
QUESTION 4: Do you think you could need more than 10 rounds in a self-defense situation?
YES NO
 Yes!  Abosolutely!  The other day at the 2A forum at ASU (GRU), someone asked me this question.  I responded with the case of a local gun dealer who was confronted by 4 armed thugs in his shop.  They drove a van through the wall in hopes of a 100% discount on his merchandise.  Fortunately, he was armed with an AR-15 with a 30 round magazine.  It took all 30 rounds to convince the “shoppers” to vacate the premises.  There is no rational reason to limit the capacity of self-defense as the chance of danger is never so limited.
QUESTION 5: Do you oppose all attempts to ban semi-automatic firearms?
YES NO
 Yes!  I oppose all attempts to ban any firearms – semi-automatic, AUTOMATIC, black-powder, or any other kind.  The free People should have available for their protection any and all means of defending their liberty and their lives.
QUESTION 6: Do you oppose regulations that limit the amount of ammunition you may purchase?
YES NO
 Yes!  Like the guns themselves, the only limits on the amount of ammunition one purchases should be desire and ability to pay.  I tend to oppose regulations period.
QUESTION 7: Do you believe gun control laws will only hurt law abiding citizens?
YES NO
 No.  Surprised?  Don’t be.  I think gun control hurts everyone.  Even a convicted felon might find a need for weaponry if attacked in a situation not of his creation.  Gun control only helps ACTIVE criminals – the government, banksters, street thugs, etc.  I don’t want to help any of these types.
QUESTION 8: Would you feel safer if all law-abiding citizens possessed firearms?
YES NO
 No.  Again, hear me out.  While I support the general right of all qualified, responsible individuals to possess firearms, there are a large number of my fellow citizens I do no trust.  I would not fell safer if every Tom, Dick, and Harry had a gun.  Some of these folks can’t operate automobiles or shopping carts without trouble.  They sure as heck aren’t competent to use weapons.  But, I leave this to them, the Lord, and anyone but the government to sort out.  You and I owning guns makes me safer (you too), regardless of how we feeeeeel.
QUESTION 9: Should laws that protect our self-defense such as the Stand Your Ground Law exist?
YES NO
 Yes, although the need for such laws is a sad commentary on our society.  The right to self defense is as natural as the laws of phsyics.  We should not need laws to protect the right, though it seems better to have them and not need them than the alternative.  Overall, I would prefer if people stopped committing crimes thus eliminating the need in the first place.  Again, that’s out of my personal power to control.
QUESTION 10: Do you believe the 2nd Amendment was written to protect U.S Citizens against a tyrannical take over?
YES NO

Yes!  There is no doubt about it.  While hunting, collecting, and sport shooting are all important, as is the right of defense against criminals and dangerous critters, the real purpose of the 2A was to ensure the People would always be able to resist tyranny if necessary.  Thank God we do not face such a situation today.  Such tyranny would only come from a regime that did things like tax our incomes and threaten us with death by drones – unheard of in Amerika.

There you have it!  My answers and views de jure.  Perhaps you have similar or divergent views.  You are entitled to them and, by all means, feel free to list them here in response to mine.  I only ask that, for any opinion you hold, make sure it is the result of reason and not a knee-jerk or parroted position.  Think for yourselves.  Arm yourselves.  Live free and prosper!

Gaining Ground, Moving Forward

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This blog has nearly taken on a life of its own; it has become a ride on which I am not only the driver (author) but I am also a passenger.  In my role as passenger I am delighted every day to see the new places I am taken.  Of course, as the driver, I have a huge degree of input as to where I go.  It’s kind of a circle … kind of … I guess.  I hope you are enjoying the ride too.

Yesterday, I supposed I would expand on my writings concerning the Second Amendment and related topics.  The idea was born during the wonderful Forum on the Second Amendment I participated in at Augusta State University (GRU) and some of the confusion and misinformation I perceived among the audience and my fellow, learned presenters.  I already have a book in draft mode on the subject.  In fact, I’ve been working on it for about 12 years now – I haven’t gotten very far in organizing a huge mass of notes and my thoughts. 

The old blog, I have found, not only allows me to quickly publish articles which, by all indications, are appreciated by a wide range of people; it also gives me a chance to go through certain subjects piece by piece in a somewhat logical order.  I find this beyond refreshing, academically speaking.  Each post is a potential chapter-starter for later, more in-depth publications.  I started this forum with two ideas in mind: 1) entertain people with my mad ravings; 2) use it as a forum to sell the books I have in various stages of publication readiness.  The first part comes naturally to me.  I had no earthly idea how to go about the second.  Now, after several months of plodding through, the concept is just presenting itself to me.

If you have ideas (who doesn’t) and want to communicate those ideas with the world beyond simple posts on Facebook or Tweets, then I highly recommend you start a blog.  Use WordPress like I do or any other forum.  They are numerous, FREE, and easy to use – I’m a Luddite and I get this stuff.  I would love to add you to my “blogs I follow” tab over on the left.  Write about anything or everything.  There are no standards here (except those we create ourselves) and possibilities are limitless.

They really are limitless.  In addition to my initial goals, I have added permanent pages which feature and promote my professional business services, my academic aspirations, businesses I respect, and many other things.  While I’ve received some businesses from the site, I have yet to receive a donation.  Shame on you Scrooges…  Just kidding.  Heck, I don’t even list a way to give even if you wanted to.  May have to fix that…

Okay, enough babbling.  I have outlined eight areas I will cover concerning the Second Amendment and related topics, though the number is subject to change.  That’s one of the great things about blogging – you can change anything at any time without restriction.  The first in the series will focus on the Natural Law origins of self-defense in general, the precursor to the Second Amendment’s right to keep and bear arms.  The theory existed long before man devised physical weapons, when his only defense came from his actually two arms, right and left.  It’s eternal.  That is the main point of my first column which will debut soon.

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(Google.)

Site News:

Today I am pleased to announce the arrival of the site’s fourth sponsor: Createspace!  See their ad on the left (with all other ads and information).  The services they offer are geared towards publishing in the modern world.  I am using them for my books (soon, soon).  Check out all of their unique features, which go beyond books.  This is a gateway to listings on Amazon, Kindle, and other sales avenues – without having to appease a big publishing company or deal with an agent.  Look into it!

I updated my CV (big resume), see above, today with some more current information – much of it the result of this site. 

This evening I get a new column out.  I have several near completion on a variety of topics.  It all depends on work and family considerations and how I feel…  Stay tuned. 

In The News:

Let’s see…war, rumor of war, economic woes worldwide, double-crosses, turmoil, crises … same old stuff.

Here’s something I find fascinating and potentially very useful and educational!  MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology for those of you in Cornfield) did something almost unthinkable a few years ago.  They basically placed their entire curriculum on the internet completely free to all takers!  Check it out: http://ocw.mit.edu/index.htm.  They count some 2500 courses are available – again all for FREE.  Here’s their promo: “Empowering Minds: Through OCW, educators improve courses and curricula, making their schools more effective; students find additional resources to help them succeed; and independent learners enrich their lives and use the content to tackle some of our world’s most difficult challenges…”

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(MIT. Google.)

Essentially, one can now receive a self-guided education from one of the finest universities in the world for free.  I think some courses are limited or exclude – like security sensitive nuclear classes.  Otherwise, just about everything available in Boston is available to you on the same computer you’re looking at now.

I regret that I have not made full use of the program, despite knowing about it for some time.  I vow to change that.  In the future I intend to report on what I learn soon.  They offer programs in history, economics, and political science, among many others.  I need to pick something out and explore it.  You should to.

The Second Amendment at ASU and Tuesday Night News

Thanks to everyone at ASU (GRU) for today’s Second Amendment Forum.  I ended up serving as a backup presenter of sorts and fielded many questions during the Q&A session.  As is my way, I got a little long-winded and once was reminded to speed it up.  The panel and the whole presentation was fantastic.  The older, incorrect interpretations of the 2A were presented, by and large, as such.  The final direct presentation was by Prof. Peter Flanagan on the modern, individual rights interpretation. 

Prof. Hubert van Tuyll presented the “collective rights” argument though his position seemed to incorporate the individual right into the militia aspect correctly.  He did a great job explaining the immediate history of the 2A after the Revolutionary War until 1791.  Prof. William Reese discussed the Miller case of 1939 in vivid detail.  He also made the best point of the day – the Second Amendment is primarily purposed for ousting the federal government if necessary.  I would have loved to have taken that statement and run with it but I’d still be going on right now.

My contribution, if we can call it that, regarded: state and federal laws; militias in all 50 states (especially Georgia) and the fact of the people being the militia; the difference between the militia and the national guard; and the satanic origins of our federal gun laws – I called them out as racist and Nazi.

Several students made excellent opening remarks and the Q&A session featured numerous intelligent questions from other students.  I did detect an air of confusion concerning many of the above topics and the nature of firearms ownership in general.  This was by no means caused by bias or ignorance on the part of these very engaged students (the room was packed, btw – around 100 or so in attendance).  Rather, I think some of these young people were surprised to hear, for once, the truth about guns, law, freedom, and history in America.  I suspect that for most of their adult lives they have been fed a steady diet of misinformation by the media, politicians, and the education establishment (though obviously not at ASU). 

This has given me the idea to expand upon my Second Amendment and related columns, perhaps by doing a series which breaks down small parts of information bit by bit.  I can systematically position the columns in a way that hopefully will provide clarity on the subjects covered today and others not touched on.  I think the first article will deal with the Natural Law rights of defense and self-integrity.  I will then move on to ancient history, English History, the early American experience and work my way forward to the present.

More site stuff:

Yesterday I published The People Appreciate a Benevolent Dictator, https://perrinlovett.wordpress.com/2013/03/18/the-people-appreciate-a-benevolent-dictator/, which recounts my personal experience with the hideous forces of government and eminent domain actions.  It’s both sad and funny and it’s a true story.  Give it a read, if you haven’t.

I have received go-ahead for a new ad, which will either make an appearance tonight or, more likely, tomorrow.  It is an introduction to an awesome modern opportunity for thinking people.  Check back soon!

The news:

Back to guns: Head Senate Slug, Harry Reid, is saying Dianne Feinstink’s “assault weapons” ban will not be part of the UnConstitutional gun control legislation which goes to the Senate floor.  I hope nothing is passed into law; we have too many restrictions on gun ownership right now – they need repealing.  I have heard dark rumors of behind the scenes compromises which may allow for easier passage of some seemingly minor, “common sense” “reforms” such as “universal background checks.”  Sorry for all the “” but there is so much BS here I have to contain it somehow. 

I won’t say what I’ve heard but it seems designed to lure some ticks into voting for the bill in a way that would still allow them to falsely proclaim their support for gun rights.  This is a typical Washington tactic used to slowly, incrementally introduce harsh laws over time.  Don’t think for a second Feinstink and her ilk will give up their quest to disarm the people.  They hate people, especially armed people.  Write your Senate Congresscritters and tell them to vote against any and all gun bills unless someone brings an action to abolish an existing law.

In other gun news, Rep. Leonard Lance of New Jersey has requested SS Secretary Janet “Himmler” Napolitano explain why her brown-shirted thugs are purchasing over 1.5 BILLION rounds of ammunition – enough to fight an Iraq-style war for twenty years.  Don’t expect an honest answer from the Reichsfuhrer.  Instead, allow me to answer the obvious.  Like their German predecessors, the Amerikan SS is tasked with keeping order over the sheeple and brutally punishing dissent and nonconformity.  They are purchasing the ammunition and 2,700 tanks in preparation for war against you.  It’s that simple. 

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(DHS uniform.  Google.)

Don’t forget that Little Barry said in 2008 he wanted a domestic army as powerful as the regular army.  Now he almost has it.  When Herr Feinstink finally succeeds in banning your guns, the domestic army will make sure you turn them over – or kill you.  When the craven thieves of D.C. come for your money as the EU and Cyprus are now, this army will make sure you don’t protest too much.  When the time for boxcars and concentration camps comes, look for all those bullets to provide motivation to participate.  When writing your Congresscritters, suggest that Ron Paul was wise to call for the dissolution of the SS, tell them to do it before it’s too late.  Wake up, America!

The liars in Washington and Tel Aviv now say Bashar Assad is using chemical weapons against the people of Syria.  I bet these are similar to the non-existent WMDs allegedly possessed by Saddam Husein.  This may give the Empire its excuse to start yet another foreign war.  Don’t fall for this crap again.  Even if Assad had and used such weapons, heinous crimes for sure, what business is it of the United States?  I haven’t heard about the Syrian army using gas in Alabama or Massachusetts, have you?  It’s time to mind our own business!

It’s also time to contemplate sleep.  Good night!

The People Appreciate a Benevolent Dictator

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The title here is a quote from a Georgia Power Company lobbyist, made to the Georgia House Judiciary Committee in session, 2003.  The remark resulted in outrage from the audience and the committee.  I was present and among the most taken-aback members of the peanut gallery.

Eminent Domain is the process by which a government forcible condemns a piece of private property in order to make public use thereof.  The usual reasons for the practice include road, bridge, or other infrastructure projects.  The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution states that no such “taking” shall occur without proper compensation.

The subject of the particular committee meeting was a review of Georgia’s unconscionable Constitutional provision allowing for eminent domain actions by private utility companies.  Such companies need not have the government condemn your land for power lines or plants, they can do it directly.  Yes, we actually have that here.  A resolution was before the General Assembly which called for a new Amendment to end the practice.  The hearing was a natural result.

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(Madness under the Gold Dome.  CBS Atlanta.)

The hearing was chaired by the Hon. Tom Bordeaux of Savannah.  Tom is a capable attorney and a good politician though his tenure as chair was short-lived.  I was working as a legal intern at the State Administrative Office of the Courts at the time and covered the issue, one of the biggest of the 2003 session.  Anyway, representatives from various utility companies were on hand to defend the procedure as vitally necessary to the State’s economy and the well-being of the citizens.  Rowdy protesters and opposition speakers voiced other opinions. 

The general mood of the entire committee seemed dead set against the policy.  Tom remarked that if a new Constitution were drafted in 2003, it would certainly not entertain such legalized theft and trespass.  The existing provision dated from the early 20th Century when telephone and electric services were relatively new.  I suppose the ticks of the day deemed it necessary to modernize the Empire State of the South.  The issue in general was receiving major attention nationwide. 

Two years later the U.S. Supreme Court, in the case of Kelo v. The City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005), said it was okay for the City to condemn land via eminent domain solely for the purpose of turning the land over to another private party – a developer.  The theory was that the older houses condemned would not generate as much tax revenue for the City as the proposed redevelopment complex would.  Thus, there existed a “public need” sufficient to justify the takings.  The plan went forward.  The homes were taken and leveled.  Then, fate delivered the City an ironic blow.  The developer failed to find financing for the redevelopment and abandoned the project.  The lots sat empty.  The land is now a dump.  I wonder how much revenue that generates, in addition to lovely odors?

Back in Georgia, the lobbyists gave their best explanations for keeping the Constitutional provision the way it was.  Essentially they said the people did not realize that they actually believed having electricity, etc. (not to mention corporate profits) were more valuable to them than the homes they reside in; silly people.  Their final argument was, “The people appreciate a benevolent dictator.”  When the fellow uttered those words the room grew silent.  Based on the dropped jaws and red faces of the committee members one would have suspected the lobbyist had just tried to rationalize child rape.

A hurricane of angry comments followed, a verbal lynching of the lobbyist.  I thought it was great.  He began to back-peddle immediately in stammering, apologetic fashion.  I have come to realize though his Freudian slip was, in fact, completely accurate.  Most (not all, but most) people DO appreciate a benevolent dictator.  I refer once again to my ancient friend, Sallust: “Only a few prefer Liberty, the majority seek nothing more than fair masters.”

People might get upset if a company or the government tells them to move out of their homes.  But, the odds are tremendous a taking will only happen to someone else.  In that case, the people could care less.  They are more than willing to sit by as their neighbors lose their homes so long as the loss results in more creature comforts in their own homes.  Cables and wires and such power televisions which display football, basketball, Nascar, reality shows, and pornos.  They allow for the refrigeration of cheap beer and processed food – staples of the Amerikan diet.  Air conditioning, internet, blabbing on the phone – the benefits are too numerous to list.

It is interesting to note the great debate over this subject has died down recently.  Not enough people care, not enough prefer Liberty.  In the end, the General Assembly did what it does best – nothing.  The provision is still there ten years later.  Poor Aunt Matilda may be very sympathetic when the bulldozers approach her house but she never contributes to political campaigns.  Arrogant utility companies and their lobbyists give away millions of dollars a year to the ticks.  They put their money where their foul mouths are.  They also get their way.

This is just a little something to consider when contemplating representative republicanism.  Okay, you can go watch March madness now.

Afternoon Updates

Come on out to the ASU (GRU) forum on the Second Amendment!  It’s tomorrow, Tuesday, March 19th at 2:30 p.m., scheduled to last 1.5 hours.  Several of ASU’s finest will discuss competing perspectives on the right to keep and bear arms.  I discussed the pro-freedom perspective with Professor Peter Flanagan, who will present the common-sense angle.  I have volunteered myself as backup if needed.  I am told the discredited and dishonest “collective rights” argument will be a devil’s advocate position, as no-one really believes in its validity today (communists in Congress, the White House, and your State’s capital still do – beware!).

I will likely publish a new column later this evening.  Stay tuned.

I am also in the approval process of adding another quality advertisement to the site: one that will benefit you if you are inclined to publish your thoughts and works the modern way.  I anticipate the ad arriving this week.  Speaking of publishing, I am 90%+ done with The Time Given – in the formating, editing phase now.  Shortly, you will actually be able to Buy Perrin’s Books! by clicking on the link above!  Here’s the rough, subject to change cover:

Time Given cover devlp

(Coming soon!  I promise…)

Also, I am in the beginning stages of investigating the possibility of turning my personal success in transforming from a slob into a sleek, mean, fighting machine into a book or video or something you might see me hawking on late-night TV.  Set aside $19.95 now.

The News:

Does Michael “Soda Jerk” Doomberg have nothing better to do than sit around trying to find ways to make people miserable? Today, the fool announced his next scheme to force retailers to hide evil tobacco products from the sight of little children, nuns, seeing-eye dogs, and busybody nuts.  He says the plan will exempt tobacco and cigar shops.  I’m surprised he just doesn’t order the NYPD to torch such places.  Oops, didn’t mean to give him another idea…

The Cypriot Parliament is currently deciding whether complying with the EU’s demand to steal money from people’s bank accounts would amount to political suicide.  A bank “holiday” is in effect until Thursday.  Somewhere, eventually, this theft will happen and it will spread across the West.  Get ready now.

It seems Barak Obummer made an appearance in the History Channel’s mini-series The Bible.  He plays himself.

More soon.  Save what you can.  Eat your greens.

Sunday Night News – Happy Saint Patrick’s Day!

I managed to publish nothing column-wise this weekend though I have been hard at work on some up-coming articles, my books, and some non-blog potential publications.  There’s some interesting stuff coming, friends.

It has also occurred to me to make good on my threat to produce a TV advertised workout program based on what I’ve been doing for the past few months.  I’m down 47 pounds now – at 191 (about what I weighed when I graduated high school)!!  Does anyone have any advice on how such things are produced????  I have no video/entertainment skills or experience. 

I had a bad night, last night, and awoke at 4:30 this morning feeling like a zombie.  However, after a good exercise session at the old EFC I felt energized and ready for a good Sunday’s loafing.  Again, I’ve noticed some of my readers here locally are getting on the bandwagon with visible results.  Keep it up!

Mark that calendar for Tuesday at 2:30, Augusta State U., for the gun control forum.  I’m still working on a last-minute panel position but I will be present nonetheless.  Come on out.

The news:

The EU has told Cyprus to seize 10% of people’s bank accounts as part of Cyprus’s bailout deal.  A bank holiday is in effect and panic is in the streets.  A central banker openly called this “uncivilized socialism” concluding there is no other way to describe it.  I call it theft.  Do not think for a minute this will not cross the Atlantic in the (near) future and involve you and your money.  If it is, the government wants it!

From the little I know right now about the man, I like the new Pope.  He just issued a warning against “demonic worldliness.”  I hope he includes government theft and oppression in this warning.  Given the clashes he suffered with the Argentine government over the years, he just might.

Plumbing the depths of ignorance about stupidity (or is it stupidity about ignorance??), Speaker of the House John “rollover” Boehner says he “absolutely” trusts President Obummer.  The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican, or visa versa.

A little history for today:

saint-patrick

(The man of the day.  Google.)

Saint Patrick was born a Roman citizen in Britain.  At age 16 he was kidnapped and enslaved in Ireland.  He suffered his bondage for six years before escaping back to his home.  Later, as a priest and a bishop, he returned to Ireland as a missionary of the Church.  This in itself is a miracle I think.  How many men would return to the land of their forced servitude in order to save perhaps the very same people who had oppressed them?  I think he was a bigger man than I.

Completely unrelated – I am currently enjoying a Duck-Rabbit Scottish Ale with my evening cigar.  It’s Scottish (American) not Irish, but it does have a green label.  Cheers, God bless, and good night!

It Depends…

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On any given day I receive requests for legal advice – from clients, friends, and strangers.  Half of the time I am not truly familiar with the subject and usually not that interested.  Lawyers are trained to qualify any response they give to such questions as to their lack of specific knowledge.  They can be sanctioned for malpractice for giving advice which is incompetent.  Thus, I usually make it known that any answer is largely my off the cuff opinion, that I am not giving official advice unless retained to do so, and that any further explanation will require research.  This generally gets rid of most inquirers.  Usually their questions aren’t important enough to spend money answering.

My civil procedure professor in law school told us the answer to any legal question, initially, is always, “it depends.”  As a first year student, in a class that doesn’t begin to make sense until the end of the semester, this statement was perplexing.  It is entirely correct though.

confused

(Uhhhhh…weeeellll.  Google Images.)

“It depends” is a fancy, professional way of saying, “I don’t know.”  Most attorneys don’t know the answer to most legal questions, even in areas they specialize in.  To begin with, the law is such a vast, confusing, and constantly changing field, it is completely impossible to know everything about anything.  That senior lawyer with the “encyclopedic knowledge” of the law from the Tom Hanks’ movie, Philadelphia, resides on the silver screen and nowhere else.  Next, the facts presented by a particular person’s circumstances may differ from any other set of facts conceivable.  Think of laws as wrenches and facts as pipes; a lawyer is like a plumber, applying different wrenches to different pipes.  Most importantly, cases in court will ultimately have conclusions which cannot be foreseen, let alone guaranteed.  Any lawyer who guarantees an outcome is a liar and should be avoided. 

I have won cases I knew I was going to loss.  I have lost cases when I should, by all rights, have won.  Judges are as fallible as any other human beings and juries are like living roulette wheels.  Jurors are often influenced in their decisions by things completely unrelated to the case they’re reviewing.  As a prosecutor I once lost a DUI case just because the jury did not like the way my arresting officer presented himself on the witness stand.  They agreed the law applied to the defendant and the defendant’s actions qualified under the law as clear indications of guilt.  However, the officer kept yawning on the stand and the jury felt he wasn’t interested in the case and didn’t try to convince them of the State’s position.

Jury-Images-1

(Not a good day in court.  Google Images.)

That particular officer was well-seasoned and knew his job.  Unfortunately for me, he had just come straight into court from the night shift and was focusing most of his energy on staying awake.  I did not foresee that and there was nothing I could do about it.  As a consolation prize, I did win on the related minor parking charge.  The judge informed the very happy defendant he had dodged a bullet.  Chance leads to many dodged bullets in the law, and bullets that sometimes find innocent victims.

Usually an experienced attorney, once familiarized with the case in full, has a pretty good idea as to what will happen.  The attorney can relay this confidence to his client.  However, for the reasons I just gave, no attorney should ever declare even the most trivial matter a slam dunk.

In my article Legal Education I noted that law schools primarily teach worship of court decisions and legal research methods.  While it’s impossible to know all the law, it is quite easy for a skilled practitioner to look up and educate himself on any given subject.  I’ve had clients call, upset about “research” charges on their bill.  I always stand by these fees, so long as they are reasonable for the given case.  Doctors do extensive research before they cut a patient in surgery.  Lawyers are no different.

Like doctors, lawyers sometimes feel the need to associate expert counsel to assist with a really complicated area of the law.  Once a client came to me in a tizzy over a copyright infringement case which had been filed against him in federal court.  As the case was in a district where I do not normally practice, and after a cursory review of the maze of intellectual property laws, I concluded justice required me to hire another attorney from a giant Atlanta firm for assistance.  This was a very costly decision for the client.  In the end, though, the money was well spent.  I would draft the responsive pleadings to the best of my ability and with the client’s in-person co-operation.  Then I would email the drafts to the expert for touch-up and filing. 

As a result we were able to re-open the case and have a default judgment set aside as unjust.  Then, we removed the case to my area (where the client lives and operates his business).  There’s something to be said for home-field advantage.  We even got the “foreign” district judge to issue a scathing censure against the opposing counsel for his obnoxious behavior in the case!  That had the dual effect of making me and my expert look good and it took the slimy steam out of the other guy.  He was fired shortly thereafter.  In the end, we wrangled out a terrific settlement for pennies on the dollar out of the whole ordeal.  It was good work of which I am still proud.

Don’t be taken aback if your attorney reveals she isn’t familiar with the topic you present.  Such revelation is the mark of honesty.  Be ready to spend time and money on an investigation which may end up disappointing you.  It’s better to be told your case does not have merit or is unwinnable in the beginning, rather to discover such at a trial.

Remember, the advice I’ve given here is merely legal education for the lay audience, not exact legal advice.  If you have a specific case, you should consult a specific attorney.  Based on the subject and how your facts fit the law the outcome may be difficult to predict and will require some degree of research and work to resolve.  As for what I could tell you right now?  It depends.

Friday Night News

TGIF, America!  What a great week!  It appears likely a cat may soon take up residence at my house; I may have to move into my truck…..Anyway, that’s my furry cross to bear (cat…)…  Today I posted a great article on fine cigars, A Good Cigar Is A Smoke!, https://perrinlovett.wordpress.com/2013/03/15/a-good-cigar-is-a-smoke/.  Take a gander if you appreciate the finer things.  I polished it up and published it from the lounge at Top Shelf Cigars, my home away from home.

Don’t forget, the ASU poly sci department will host a forum on the Second Amendment this coming Tuesday at 2:30 p.m.  See, https://perrinlovett.wordpress.com/2013/03/11/second-amendent-debate/, for details.  Call the school for parking info.  I will be there ARMED with the law and the facts should things get out of hand.

The news:

The wat drums are beating hard today for and in North Korea.  Kim Jong Unbalanced even slammed the “reptile” media.  i hope he wasn’t talking about this site.

nkorea0116

(The little goofball in black called me a “reptile.”  Drudge Report.)

Drones, drones, drones…  The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has ordered the CIA to reveal information about its drone fleet.  i bet they don’t.  National “security.”  The debased U.N. says the U.S. violated Pakistani sovereignty with its drones (CIA???).  Obviously, the tax vacuum on the East River doesn’t know the U.S. is the world sovereign.  A Oregon company says it will start selling anti-drone defense systems to the American people.  Preview of the news tomorrow: Oregon company destroyed by drone attack!

The Hollywood crowd seems mystified as to the popularity of the History Channel’s The Bible mini-series.  In related news, God says he does not get Hollywood.

Until next time, enjoy the weekend!