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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: government

Don’t Make A Federal Case Out Of It!

23 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

13th Amendment, America, Amerika, appeal, Article I, Articles of Confederation, Congress, Constitution, conviction, counterfeiting, crimes, faith, federal court, firearms, government, illegal, jury, justice, laws, laws of nations, Liberty, lobster, Lysander Spooner, narcotics, oath, pardon, piracy, politics, President, Ron Paul, slavery, strict construction, Supreme Court, terrorism, treason, trial, truth, U.S. Code

The title of this column is a common phrase, the equivalent of “don’t make a mountain out of a mole-hill.”  It is an admonishment to not blow things out of proportion.  I use it, here, as a legitiment plea.  Too many cases, particularly criminal cases, go through the federal court system.  “The more laws, the less justice!” remarked, Cicero, perhaps ancient Rome’s ultimate statesman.  I echo his sentiment as one of my favorite quotes of all time.

In general, in Amerika today, too many things are against the law.  In the old days you have to harm someone or actually threaten them with harm to find yourself in court.  Now, any excuse will do for a persecution .. prosecution, rather.   Owning certain plants is illegal, and not only the ones some people smoke to get high.  “Short” lobsters are illegal.  Not reading a contract in full is illegal.  Everything is illegal.  By the way, I write “Amerika (with a “K”),” like many commentators, to lament the decline of my country, America.  I have watched it change completely during my life, I’m sure you’ve noticed it too.

Back to federal criminal laws.  There are somewhere on the order of 10,000 criminal laws inside and outside of Title 18 of the U.S. Code.  Add to that the innumerable regulations which carry criminal-like penalties and the ways to criminally control and extort the people are almost limitless.

Remember that old rag called the Constitution?  It seems most people have forgotten it, especially those charged with defending and upholding it.  I am one such sworn defender who keeps it in mind more than most. 

Stock Photo of the Consitution of the United States and Feather Quill

(Birth of a government… Source: Google Images).

Oddly, I am not the greatest fan of the Constitution.  This shocks many people who know me as an ardent proponent of the document.  The Constitution was drafted for one reason – to create a new government.  Not being a fan of government, and not being able to find sufficient fault with the previous version under the Articles of Confederation, I view the Constitution and its child as unnecessary, dangerous even.  However, since we have it, one would assume we should use it.  The problem is we don’t.  “We” is misplaced.  The problem is the government’s complete abdication of the limits placed on it by the Constitution.

Lysander Spooner observed, over 100 years ago, “whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain – that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it.  In either case, it is unfit to exist.”  And, that was before the exponential growth of the present government. 

As is, I have sworn several oaths to support and defend the Constitution; therefore, I do so.  I read the Constitution literally (adhering to the “strict construction” view) and only put credence in what is actually listed therein, no more.

Back to federal criminal laws, again.  Do you know how many crimes are designated for federal prosecution?  The number is a little less than 10,000.  The Constitution authorized congress to make and allow prosecution of THREE crimes!  Those, all found under Article I, are: 1) counterfeiting money; 2) piracy and; 3) treason.  Most of these are almost exclusively committed by the government these days. They obviously don’t prosecute themselves absent exigent circumstances (political payback, etc.). 

Actually, there are other crimes acceptable as federal crimes.  The great Ron Paul, speaking in the House Floor, noted four federal crimes.  I would not dare dispute the Honorable Doctor.  Thus, I defer to his number, though I will question exactly what the fourth crime is.  There are a few possibilities.  I do not read expansively, as some do, that the other legitimate functions of the government authorized in the Constitution might lead to hypothetical or extrapolated crimes.  That reading is how we got to our present state of insanity.

The Constitution authorizes punishment for violation of the “law of nations.”  I’m not sure what that means but it is written.  The 13th Amendment outlawed slavery (I have a new series coming on the subject!) and provides for punishment.  That would be a federal crime.  It’s possible there are others but the number thereof is very short.

All other crimes, legitimate crimes, are left for state or local prosecution.  That’s what the Constitution says.  You can read the whole thing here and I recommend you do, frequently: http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/constitution.html.

The federal government was never intended to be all-powerful, though it has assumed that god-like position.  Blasphemy, I say!  I have never thought of any easy way to reverse the course of tragedy in our laws.  Therefore, I have resolved myself to faithfully do what I can, individually, to maintain true allegiance to the Constitution, flawed though it may be.  I have met with little success.

Over my professional legal career I have undertaking criminal defense matters with great enthusiasm.  I have worked and tried many cases, including many in federal courts.  During my tenure I have never defended anyone charged with piracy, counterfeiting, treason, or slavery.  One client was close to counterfeiting – accused of identity theft which robbed people and banks of money, kind of like printing the stuff from scratch – like the Federal Reserve does with Congress’s illegal blessing.

Most of my clients were charged with any and everything else, though usually the cases involved firearms and narcotics.  Most of these defendants chose to enter pleas in exchange for reduced sentences.  Most (like 97%) of federal defendants do this.  This is a sad statistic.  Very few cases go to trial and the government wins most of those by a similar margin.  I have successfully had cases dismissed outright.  That is rare in any court system.  I also negotiated better than most attorneys for my clients and any reduction in punishment they might receive.  I am not really proud of that last part and I have found it difficult to accept.  The lesser of two evils is still evil.  I don’t like evil.

The last case I tried to a jury involved charges of terroristic threats against a government agency.  Such vague “threats” as they were probably would not have supported a prosecution had they been leveled at me or you.  Directed towards the government they were unforgivable.  The nefarious methods employed by the government to obtain an indictment and a conviction were similarly outrageous. 

The jury did not hesitate to convict my client, a truly helpless man who had done harm to no-one.  He was released with “time served” with the government’s blessing.  Frequently, they just like to remind people they are in charge, and no more.  I must admit most of the local officials I deal with are more honest and compassionate than the average.  Still, that does not change the system.  My client declined my suggestion of an appeal and even my offer to seek a Presidential pardon (those of usually reserved for “buddies” and campaign contributors).  My guy just wanted to get back to life as normal.  I understand his plight and decisions.

During the trial, before the jury was sent to deliberate the case, I made a legal motion to have the case dismissed for purely legal reasons.  Juries consider all facts in conjunction with the law.  Judges consider matter purely legal in nature.  My motion was three parts, the last being reference to the lack of Constitutional authorization for the charged offense.  The motion was denied completely.  The denial would have survived appellate review.  The courts have consented to Congress’s massive expansion of the criminal laws and the President’s prosecution thereof.  So much for separation of powers.

I have made the same argument before.  To my knowledge I am the only attorney in the area (maybe the nation) who still dares to do so.  I care not for erroneous appellate decisions.  Recall, if you will, that once the Supreme Court said slavery was a-ok.  It never was.  Likewise, honesty and justice compel me to recite the legal truth about law, Natural and statutory, over and over regardless of the ultimate outcome.  When I make such arguments the Courtroom usually goes dead silent and I have gotten used to icy stares.  I have also learned not to push my luck and that these arguments do not work.  Making a simple point is enough, I never argue to the point of being held in contempt.  I have heard others have done that.  I am too much of a coward to risk jail over moot points.   

Some have told me these concerns are better taken up with Congress.  All things being equal, that is correct.  Congress is supposed to be there to hear grievances.  Have you tried communicating with Congress lately?  It was largely a pointless endeavor in days past; almost no members of the assembly cared for truth.  With the departure of Dr. Paul, there is no point now. 

We have lost the greatest champion of Liberty since the passing of the Founders.  We have lost truth and justice.  At least we have 10,000 criminal laws to comfort us.  Enjoy!

Don’t Lie For The Other Guy

16 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Academy Sport, BATFE (ATF), Brian Terry, D.C., Don't Lie, evil, false flag, Fast and Furious, FBI, freedom, government, guns, Jesus, John Lott, Michael Bllomberg, MK Ultra, New York, Operation Northwoods, police, rap, rats, The Empire

The title of this story comes from another stupid and annoying government scheme to beat the daylights out of what little freedom is left in Amerika.  Actually, it’s from a private organization, http://www.dontlie.org/.  They appear to have the support of some gun manufactures and more than a few retail outlets, like Academy (Blowing In The Wind) Sports.  I still suspect government involvement.  This slogan sounds like it should have been rapped (poorly) as part of some  hysterical campaign aimed at Saturday morning, cartoon-watching children in the mid-1980’s. 

don't lie atf

(This clever poster shows what can happen if you lie.  Source: Google Images, atf.gov?  Suspicion justified?)

The stated goal of “Don’t Lie” is to stop “straw purchases” of firearms.  To a degree this is a good idea – thus, it should probably be left to common sense.  Jesus reminded us not to lie, as lies are evil, and to simply tell the truth.  Mathew 5:33-37 (see also Commandment No. 9). 

A straw purchase is where a convicted felon or some other person prohibited by law from buying a gun (an ever-expanding group) pays a “normal” person to buy a gun and then give it to the prohibited person.  The website above has all the horrible statistics about this practice.  For the average person such a crime can carry severe penalties.

You’ve probably heard about the biggest case of straw purchasing in recent history, the BATFE’s Operation Fast and Furious.  The AFT had various agents and other individuals buy guns and then gave those guns to Mexican drug cartels.  When not enough purchases were made the ATF started directly shipping out guns, some fully automatic, along with grenades and other weapons of war.  The stated reason for this criminal activity was to “see what happens.”  A lot happened, including many deaths.  U.S. Border Patrol agent Brian Terry was killed by one or more of the subject guns.  I suspect the real reason behind this nonsense was to create a scary sounding situation which could only be remedied by more gun control.  See: http://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/7-31-12-FF-Part-I-FINAL-REPORT.pdf (Part I of III).

Fast and Furious was a failure (officially and morally) and has faded away to the dark place where projects like Operation Northwoods and MK Ultra go to die.  Those who should have been hanged for treason have been promoted.  All is well, except for the friends and families of the deceased and the Amerikan public.

Considering the most corrupt entity in the USSA and the biggest liar in all of history is government, I wish to pass along a warning in the spirit of “Don’t Lie.”  Guns are the weapons of choice for some murders, although hammers are used to kill more people ever year than rifles.  See: http://nation.foxnews.com/gun-rights/2013/01/03/fbi-more-people-killed-hammers-clubs-each-year-rifles.  Despite the fact that guns save over 2 Million lives every year (see John Lott’s excellent research: http://johnrlott.blogspot.com/), the media and its masters in government tend to focus on highly isolated and infrequent mass murders involving guns.

Recently the politicians have been in a tizzy over a few shootings – one at a school, one at a theater.  I, by no means, trivialize the death of innocents in these and other cases but, statistically speaking, they are distant outliers.  There are also eerie connections here and there that may suggest some of these incidents were false flag operations, as Fast was intended.  The Empire has held hearings in the matter and elected dictators from coast to coast are calling for more civilian disarmament.  Having vanquished the super-sized soda pop from New York City, Mayor Michael Gloomberg has shifted his focus back to eliminating your ability to defend yourself.

Something unusual is happening though.  As the governments of the land call for and implement more freedom control, some gun manufacturers are fighting back.  They are increasingly refusing to sell their wares to the police forces of governments evil enough to ban or control private gun ownership.  See: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/15/group-of-second-amendment-supporting-gun-makers-now-refusing-to-sell-arms-to-law-enforcement-in-new-york-and-other-gun-restricting-states/.  Where am I going with all of this, you ask?  It’s about to make sense.

Without access to weapons to arm their mercenary forces, the politicians may become desperate.  Sure, they could give their officers the money for the guns and send them out looking like average, ordinary civilians to make the purchases.  But they can’t!  They’ve banned average, ordinary people from buying guns.  As a result the freedom haters may become extremely desperate.  Here follows a possible scenario which might affect you:

Imagine you’re one of the lucky Americans who still lives in a free state or city (I pray you are).  One evening after work you are walking home enjoying the night air.  You duck down a dark alley to take a shortcut.  Suddenly a scruffy, greasy, shiftless-looking bum of a politician in a trenchcoat comes slithering out of the shadows towards you.  He’s of the desperate variety from New York or D.C. or somewhere.  Instinctively, you assume a fighting stance and drop the safety on your pistol.  But, for once, you are baffled to discover this is a politician who wants to give you money rather than steal it from you.  He offers forth from beneath his smelly, stained coat a paper sack stuffed full of $100 bills.  With all the charm of a diseased wharf rat he tries to entice you to purchase some AR-15s on behalf of his storm-trooper corps. 

Once the shock of the situation wears off you may, for a moment, be sorely tempted to take his money, shoot him, and say he was trying to mug you.  Don’t do it!  For one thing, leave evil to the evil.  And, for God’s sake, do not lie for this slimy degenerate!  Have nothing else to do with him!  Rodent-like beings such as our hypothetical politician are often under investigation for corruption by some larger criminal organization.  Loudly and clearly tell the creep you are not interested in breaking the law on his behalf.  Say it several times in different directions so the FBI’s cameras and microphones record definitively that you are not a participant in his conspiracy.  Then tell the rat where to go and continue on your way.  You may have to take a long shower and burn your clothes as a result of the encounter, but at least you won’t end up in prison like the dude in the above picture. 

Don’t Lie For The Political Guy!

Natural Law

15 Friday Feb 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Alexis de Tocqueville, American, Anglo-American, Artcles of Confederation, Atistotle, Benjamin Franklin, Bill of Rights, Blackstone, California, Catholic Church, Christian, Christians, Cicero, civil disobedience, Constitution, Creator, David Miller, Declaration of Independence, Dr. Martin Luther King, due process, Dwight Eisenhower, Edmund Randolf, freedom, George Washington, Georgia, God, Gospel of John, government, graft, greedy banksters, Hobbs, Jesus, justice, Juvenal, King George, law, law school, Leo Strauss, libertarians, Locke, Natural Law, Natural Rights, oppression, Patrick Henry, Plato, Pope Leo XIII, rights, Robinson Crusoe, Saint Augustine, Saint Thomas Aquinas, schemes, secession, Socrates, Solon, sovereignty, Summa Theologica, theft, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, Treastis on Law, tyranny, Voltaire, Walden

Ninety-Nine percent of lawyers in the United States graduate from law school and practice their profession without much if any consideration of the ultimate underpinnings of the laws, regulations, and processes with which they work.  I mean something deeper and more eternal that a mere constitution or the tradition of Anglo-American law.  This lack of knowledge is not necessarily their fault.  Law schools rarely teach or even mention said underpinnings.  Legislatures, executive officers, and courts now operate without the slightest acknowledgment of that from whence they derive their just authority.  Most citizens seemed confused about the nature and base concepts of law, rights, and justice generally.  This is all forgivable to a fault (especially for the lay audience).  Let me tell you briefly about where “law” comes from.

Long ago, policy makers and attorneys such as Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, and Patrick Henry did understand and acknowledge the source of their governmental efforts and the results thereof.  This deeper sense of purpose was never limited to American statesmen.  Pre-Americans and even pre-Christians such as William Blackstone, Cicero, Aristotle, and Solon also were aware of the greater power behind their actions.

That power and influence is called “Natural Law,” sometimes referred to as “Natural Rights” and similar names.  These are fundamental concepts which are imbued into each human spirit by their Creator.  Made-man law is or is supposed to be an expression of the natural law.  David Miller, et al., eds, The Blackwell Encyclopedia of political Thought (Oxford 1987).  Some argue that the individual rights associated with natural law must be or may be curtailed to a degree in a complex society.  Miller, et al, supra.  I, like many libertarians, disagree with this notion insofar as one person’s rights do not become an infringement on the rights of another.

So, where did natural law come from?  To answer that question let us journey back in time – way back, to the beginning of time, if fact.  Natural law along with all principles of science, measure, and understanding were created by God, the Almighty, as a product of His grand universal creation.

The concepts of natural law are, thus, as eternal and fixed as the laws or rules of physics or mathematics.  Regarding those rules of “hard” science, humans are on a continuing mission to explore, understand, master, and apply the same.  So it is with natural law.  Being imperfect and tainted by original sin, it is unlikely that we shall ever have complete mastery of any of these ideas.  Therein lies another agony resulting from the original disobedience and the ensuing free will dominated “knowledge” with which mortals outside the garden must grapple.  As natural law relates to human behavior and society – “soft” sciences, academically speaking, it is much more difficult to grasp, let alone use than some other universal truths.  Four plus four equals eight and gravity almost always attracts separate bodies together.  Whether people should have a king or a board of selectmen is a wholly different and subjective problem.

As a note, one need not be a Christian or a believer in any specific faith in order to respect natural law.  For those so inclined, just consider it another facet or force of the universe we happen to inhabit.  As alluded to above, many, many philosophers and legal scholars and practitioners observed natural law millenia before the founding of the United States and centuries before Christ.

In describing the “visible world” the Catechism of the Catholic Church (“CCC”) (No. 341) describes man’s progressive discovery of the laws of nature as he observes the interaction and beauty of the universe.  “The natural law is written and engraved in the soul of each and every man, because it is human reason ordaining him to do good and forbidding him to sin…”  Pope Leo XIII, Libertas, 597; CCC, 1954.

God originally, long after the expulsion from paradise, gave us ten simple Commandments by which to live – they are a direct and further exemplification of natural law.  Jesus gave us the most simple explanation possible of natural law with his Law of the Gospel, “new commandment:” “love one another.”  John 13:34; CCC, 1970.  People, it seems, are unwilling or simply unable to follow clear, simple admonishment.  The history of the past twenty centuries bears this out.

As a result of our collective incompetence, we are now subject to laws, regulations, and rules both innumerable and incomprehensible (and mostly unnecessary).  However, at their core, if these human statutes are valid, they are based on some interpretation of natural law.

“The natural law is immutable, permanent throughout history.  The rules that express it remain substantially valid.  It is a necessary foundation for the erection of moral rules and civil law.” CCC, 1979 (entirety).  The question for us, is how to interpret and apply these immutable principles as we create civil law.  Rest assured that nothing we do will ever be perfect.  The best we can strive for is an approximation.  Harken though and remember that this whole body of law is contained in our souls; we only need to tap into it when necessary.  This never-ending task has been the study of great men throughout history.

In Natural Right and History, Leo Strauss explored the origins and ideas of natural law.  He noted  Plato’s theory that freedom from and doubt of human law is the “indispensable” beginning of the search for natural law.  Strauss, Natural Right and History, pg. 84, U. Chicago Press, 1953.  This means “thinking outside the box” about law, rather than civil disobedience – although that may come later.  Strauss goes on to differentiate between the “classical” view of the law as espoused by Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Saint Thomas Aquinas and the “modern” (17th century and on) views held by Locke, Hobbs, and more contemporary thinkers.

Some of these differences are obviously products of their time and the accumulation and interpretation of previous work.  Others are matters of opinion, albeit well-reasoned opinion.  St. Thomas’s observations along with those of other Christian theologians are influenced by Biblical and Church teachings; however, this concept would not be wholly lost on ancient Greek or Roman philosophers.  In their time, those ancients usually attributed the law to nature itself, with perhaps a whimsical nod to Olympus.  As Juvenal quipped: “The wrath of the gods may be great, but it certainly is slow.”  Satirae, XIII, 100.

I will go no further, directly, with Strauss’s differentiation.  This is the interpretation of Perrin Lovett and is mostly concentrated towards a modern, American view of the law and how it applies to our societal relations.

Before we get back to our America we still need a bit more history.  An exhaustive examination of natural law was one of the central themes of St. Thomas Aquinas’s great Treatise on Law, part of his larger Summa Theologica.  Expanding upon Plato and Aristotle’s “outside the box” approach, Thomas concludes, with reference assistance of Saint Augustine that law “which is not just seems to be no law at all.  Hence a law has as much force as it has justice.”  St. Thomas, Treatise on Law, R.J. Henle, S.J., editor, pg. 287, U. Notre Dame Press, 1993.  St. Thomas goes on to say that a civil or earthly law with conflicts with natural law is a perversion rather than a law.  Thus, did Walden and others, claim a basis for civil disobedience to repugnant laws.

Saint Thomas notes that natural law may be divined directly from principle (i.e. a law against murder would be based on God’s commandment not to kill or the principle that each human has a right to live).  The other more subjective method is through examination of generalities.  Enter, here,  the fuzziness of the human brain.  A natural law-compliant statute which prohibits murder may also prescribe punishment for murder; what the punishment should be and how it is applied is a matter of determination based on assessment of the factors of the case, with natural law as a field guide.  See: St. Thomas, Treatise, supra, pg 288.

Seemingly, most of the core laws of our nation and our states derive (or did derive)from Biblical or other ancient sources.  Most are straightforward in definition.  Murder is prohibited in Georgia the same as it is in California (and just about every jurisdiction worldwide).  The procedure governing a murder case and punishment following a conviction are also dictated by law.  In keeping with natural law, a criminal defendant should be accorded all protections of Due Process, else his conviction, if any, is tainted with perversion.  In name and theory at least, American laws and courts have erected elaborate barriers to protect an accused citizen from state malfeasance.  Consideration of possible punishments, as well as any type of considerable sub-crime (manslaughter, for example) have been designed (again in theory) to assess the factors and circumstances of each particular case.

Often voices arise in a society, particularly regarding emotionally charged cases, crying for “justice” at all costs.  These voices essentially call for lynchings based on such novel theories as: “Everyone knows so and so is guilty!” and “Some people just need killing!”  On our quest for natural law, we must put aside emotion and observe the larger picture.  That picture encompasses the possibility that even a seemingly guilty criminal may still be innocent; our procedures of justice are the mechanisms for definitive (though imperfect [humans again]) adjudication.  “It is better that ten guilty persons escape, than that one innocent suffer.”  Sir. William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, 1783 (this sentiment has been echoed by Benjamin Franklin and Voltaire to name a few).

Blackstone commented that nothing is more essential to the “common good” than the protection of individual liberties.  Blackstone, Commentaries, supra.  This reasoning was shared by Thomas Jefferson and John Locke, etc.

Jefferson, of course penned the Declaration of Independence.  In its first paragraph our great severing/founding document based the authority of the American people on the “Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.”  The second paragraph is (was) well known: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights…”  (italicized emphasis added).  Those rights are the natural rights enjoyed by every human, which need not be necessarily acknowledged by any document and can never be legitimately infringed upon by any government.  The rest of the Declaration was dedicated to addressing King George’s abuse of those rights and the implementation of the natural law recourse – secession.

Those were core values on display to the whole world in perhaps the most stunning social experiment in human history.  Natural law gave life to the Articles of Confederation, an entity devoted to mutual aid and protection for the betterment of all member states and their respective citizens.  Shortly thereafter, the Constitution came into being.  Again, some attempted to forge a stronger union with the steel of natural law.  Certain of nature’s rights were expressly set forth in the Bill of Rights.  This was a case of core values mingling with the fire of powerful government – a dangerous combination.  As the two plus centuries have made clear, one government is as capable as another is usurping power for its own ends while concurrently infringing on the rights of its people.

It is when we consider statutes and rules outside of the “core” of our natural human experience that real problems are confronted.  Imagine, if you will, a man alone on an island.  He is his own society and, if he wishes, his own government.  His natural rights are as intact in the middle of the uncharted Pacific as they would be in mid-town Manhattan.  He has, for instance, that right to live or for self-preservation.  Absent some new addition to his little society, a rule against murder would prove difficult to adhere to; murder is the unlawful, unreasonable, and voluntary killing of a human being by another human being.  Absent another person our Islander need not fear murder.  He might find himself facing suicide or starvation though and then his rights to his own person would become his chief concern.

This simple Robinson Crusoe example should translate form a desert isle to any more complex society.  However, some laws deal with issues not conducive to reason in any circumstance.  A bill or statute proposing farm aid to certain large corporations based on their stated financial needs, the aid to come from either taking directly from the rest of society or by decreasing the value of that society’s currency (if the currency be fiat in nature) is a completely different, non-core matter.  However, politics, financial tricks, and smoke and mirrors aside, such a dilemma may still be decided along natural lines.  Governments today generally do not have legitimate money to give away nor are they capable of productively earning such monies.  A giveaway scheme necessarily involves taking from someone else.  Is this not theft?  Is theft not forbidden by the Creator’s Law?  Heaven aside, the earthly consideration here is one of justice.

“All virtue is summed up in dealing justly.”  Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, 325 B.C.  Justice would seem to forbid stealing from one group to pay off another, no matter how well-connected the recieving class might be.  You, the reader, must know that our government has long since abandoned this rational debate.  As a result we have those laws innumerable.  Sadly, this has been a long-standing problem.  “The more laws, the less justice.”  Cicero, De Officies, 44 B.C.

As mentioned earlier, the wisdom of the ancients was once of common knowledge and practice in our Western world.  George Washington wrote, “The administration of justice is the firmest pillar of Government.”  Geo. Washington, Letter to Edmond Randolph, 1789.  After his visit to America, Alexis Comte de Tocqueville stated: “When I refuse to obey an unjust law, I do not contest the right of the majority to command, but I simply appeal from the sovereignty of the people to the sovereignty of mankind.”  de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 1835.

Common sense even protruded into the Twentieth Century.  One who knew best, Dwight Eisenhower said, “Peace and justice are two sides of the same coin.”  Eisenhower, radio address, 1957.  Universally speaking: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from the Birmingham, AL Jail, 1963.

Unfortunately for us, the voices of justice and reason have been growing steadily fewer and father between.  Today our American government bears almost no resemblance to that which was established long ago while memories of tyranny were still fresh.  Rather than engage in justice, let alone its quest, our politicians constantly engage in vote-buying schemes of unimaginable proportions.  Solon’s observation has never been truer: “Laws are like spider’s webs which, if anything small falls into them they ensnare it, but large things break through and escape.”  Quoted by Diogenes Laertius, Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, 3rd Cent. A.D.

For a final example, this analogy to a spider web is demonstrated time and again in the new Amerika.  When greedy bankers make horrible, criminal (but foreseeable) mistakes and risk the financial ruin of the world, they are bailed out and pass freely through our laws.  The poor, middle class, and average citizens are caught, seemingly forever, in a legal cesspool of debt and oppression.

treewater

(Natural law is as common as the beauty of Nature itself)

I will not end on a sour note.  Rather, I offer a humble solution.  If we are to be free as God’s children are supposed to be, we must cast off the burdensome trappings of our current governments.  For that process to begin our citizens must each commence their individual quests throughout their spirits for natural law and justice.  In particular, our lawyers and law students need to demand formal classical education, or else, they must take it upon themselves to learn what has been lost.  While all of you have great deal of research and reflection to do and I may follow-up with more reasoning and explanations, I hope this article starts the process.

That’s A Stop Sign

11 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on That’s A Stop Sign

Tags

driving, Eric Peters, George Carlin, government, idiots, Lew Rockwell, police, radar, robots, speed humps, stop sign

I read a lot of Eric Peters’s columns on the death of automotive freedom in the USSA.  He’s one of the great commentators at http://lewrockwell.com/, the wonderful anti-state web powerhouse.  Maybe, someday when Lew lowers his standards a bit, you might find yours truly ramblin away there.

Eric spends a good bit of time writing about the stupidity of Amerikan traffic laws.  I think he did a piece recently on mobile radar/speed trailers.  The police put these idiotic contraptions in odd places in an effort to harass the driving public.

stupid trailer

(You’ve seen this thing.)

I was on my way home from liquor stor…er…candy shop one fine afternoon when I encountered another of these radar RoboCops.  It was placed at the entrance of a lovely residential neighborhood I enjoy cutting through occasionally on my way home.   I actually stopped in the road to take the above picture. Thus, the machine had the effect of causing me to cease speeding and start blocking traffic – dumb robot.  Usually, if I am fairly confident no actual officers are around I hit the accelerator and make the machine stroke out (as best I can driving a 10,000 lb anvil).  Some models have blue lights that flash angrily when you hit a certain illegal speed.

As a conditional word, I almost always drive as safely and efficiently as possible.  My number one goal is to get where I going, number two is getting there without endangering anyone.  You’ll recall that George Carlin once said something to the effect: “Have you ever noticed that anyone who drives slower than you is an idiot, and anyone driving faster is a maniac?”  This is really true.  I’ve driven all over the good old USSA and can make the following observation.  Nearly all drivers may be classified into three categories (about equal thirds, too): 1) those of us who are competent and courteous; 2) those who are completely unqualified to drive and struggle to control their vehicles; and 3) those who just don’t give a damn.  Where do you fall?

Stop sign, stop sign.

Oh yes, about 30 seconds after I passed the radar R2D2 I came upon a deserted intersection and proceeded to turn right.  As there were no other cars anywhere around and visibility was excellent I confidently did a California role.  As I made the turn I saw a County Marshall standing in someone’s yard (likely there to harass them for violating some ridiculous, cookie-cutter ordinance).  He looked at me and pointed and said, “That’s a stop sign.”  My title is now explained.  Had I been a smarted person I could have made some witty remark.  As is, I just rolled my eyes and waved him off dismissively.  After 3 seconds of quick reflection I drove away speedily.  He had a badge and a gun after all.  I generally have, as a result of my profession, a good relationship with many area law officers, many of whom are decent people.  I did not recognize this dude and I did not like his lecturing attitude.  Sensitive me.

My escape was successful but hindered by the one blemish in this quaint, out of place, New England-feeling subdivision (other than the cops and their robots) – speed humps – lots of them.  A speed hump, for those you fortunate enough not to know is a speed bump which has been stretched out about six feet.  Like the robots they are intended to slow a vehicle by causing the driver and passengers discomfort.  Torture, really.  And, totally unneeded in this particular place.  The streets curve constantly, back and forth, and the terrain is all hills.  Physics dictate that all but the most foolhardy will obey the posted speed limit out of necessity. 

Speed bumps and humps kill numerous people ever year – mainly because they slow responding ambulances and cost precious, life-saving seconds.  That’s a rant for another day.  Speed humps, robots, and stop signs.  Oh my!

Anti-Family Law

09 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

About the Children, anarchy, anti-family law, attorneys, chaos, divorce, Frank C. Mills, government, human rights, insanity, Jesus, LLC, lying, Ninth Commandment, truth

By training and trade I are an attorney.  That’s fancy talk for a lawyer.  That’s a nice word for a “scummy, lying, used car selling, dirtbag.”  Sorry, my lawyering friends, we all know it’s true. 

More specifically, I am (or was) (or still kinda am) a litigation attorney.  That means a lawyer who specializes in lying in court.  I am proud to say that I never ever lied to any court or anyone else I dealt with intentionally.  The problem is that attorneys have clients for whom they work.  And, occasionally, such a client will lie to his attorney.  The hapless attorney, believing in his lying client’s veracity, will repeat the lie(s) to others – the other “side,” the judge, etc.  The attorney usually becomes aware of the lie when it is exposed in Court when someone identifies it as a lie and proceeds to use the lie as a basis to destroy the hapless attorney’s case.  At this point the attorney feels like mud.

Why do I write this, you ask?  This is common knowledge to everyone except attorneys fresh from law school and perhaps some of the professors they left behind.  Jesus admonished us to simply let what we say be the truth, echoing His Father’s ninth commandment.  If everyone would follow this simple rule, the world  would be a better place.  Obviously though, people have a hard time with simple instructions.  My point is coming soon I think…

The attorney repeating the lie scenario unfolds in all types of cases: criminal, civil, administrative, and family law.  It seems to me family law litigants are a little more prone to this self-defeating propensity.  Or, it could be that I feel that way because I disliked family law more than other type of practice.  I think that was my point.

Anyway, what is family law?  It occurs to me that some folks are lucky enough to have lived their lives without resort to “domestic” litigation.  Blessed they are.  “Family law” merely means that branch of our sacred profession which deals with the family unit or what’s left of it.  You may be more familiar with the individual case types: divorce, child custody, adoption, etc.  Of all these, adoptions are the happiest occasions for an honest attorney.  This is mainly due to the fact that rather than destroying a family, an adoption enlarges and enriches a family.  Absent very unusual circumstances, everyone leaves an adoption final hearing happy. 

As a law clerk I was in charge of the adoption docket for my judge (Frank C. Mills was probably the best trial judge in Georgia until he retired).  It was my job to make sure each case was within the somewhat rigorous statutory guidelines.  Every once in a while I had to inform the adopting party that they needed to modify something.  Then the case sailed smoothly through.  Out of dozens or scores of these cases I only remember one or two that were contested for any reason.  I especially loved cases involving the adoption of one or more small babies.  Everyone loves babies.  It was great to think I played a part in making a child’s life a little happier.

This joyous feeling carried over into my private general practice.  Sadly, I only had the honor of presenting a few such harmonious cases.  I recall several clients I had to inform that they did not have standing to bring an adoption.  Those were rare and odd cases.  Somehow, my practice degenerated into one of mostly rare, odd cases.  What did come my way in large volume were the other types of “family law.”

At some point I began to refer to these cases as “anti-family law.”  The reason being that in almost all of them, a family was destroyed.  As a libertarian who really wants to be a full blown anachist (or visa versa) I do not think the government has any business meddling in family affairs – no marriage licences, no court divorces, no government interference of any kind.  According to the Catholic Church and some protesting denominations, marriage is a sacrament and not merely a right or a privilege.  Thus, domestic affairs are divine in nature and transcend the authority of any earthly power to regulate (in theory).  People began marrying (and divorcing) many millenia before any of the 50 states came into being let alone when they suddenly decided to commence issuing licenses for the procedure.  The history of this state-i-fication is as nefarious as any other state scheme. 

My statist-minded detractors counter that without government ordination and oversight family affairs would soon fall into pure chaos.  Most of these clovers have obviously never practiced anti-family law.  The remainder must be hardened divorce attorneys whose livelihoods depends on the destruction of other people’s lives.  WE HAVE PURE, MISERABLE CHAOS NOW!!!!!!!!!!!

Where was I, my blood pressure spiked and I lost my train of thought…  Oh yes, I wrote a post yesterday which partly addressed the safety of children.  I suppose this drew the attention of About the Children, LLC, an advocacy center dedicated to improving family relations ( and child welfare) post divorce.  I was pleased they liked my mad ramblings and so I commented positively on their website.  I am a generously reciprocal rambler. 

Such advocacy groups are desperately needed given the chaos of the modern Amerikan family.  I suppose you, the well educated reader, do not need to be bombarded with the statistics about divorce, out of wedlock births, deadbeat everyones, etc.  Someone must stand up for the innocent in these cases – usually minor children.  Children are the biggest losers in anti-family law cases and, sadly, there are no winners.

I only ever had one “uncontested” divorce case which actually was.  The young happy couple came in hand in hand.  I thought they wanted a will or something.  In less than two hours a divorce petition was off to court.  Thirty days later they were happily divorced best friends.  I had never seen such.  And, it did not last.  It turns out one of them had an ulterior motive and the friendship was lost.  I think the blame fell on their hapless attorney. 

As my best case ended poorly I decided that I was not suited for anti-family law.  I did not decide after that case but after many, many more less-than-best scenarios unfolded.  Lying in court and the general shenanigans which go with these cases are far from the worst problems I saw.  People in these situations get very irrational and I remember more than a few death threats flying around.  Fortunately, none were carried out.  Several suicides were though.  Children who are not otherwise scarred for life thanks to their parents selfish stupidity don’t seem to do well in the aftermath of the death of one of those parents.  One suicide sometimes leads to another.

I had enough of the madness and bowed out, sad for the part I played in the system.  I supposed I did some service for a few folks.  Some people need to be divorced.  Sometimes children are better off with only one parent.  And, so on.  I still have some of the mud on me.  What suggestions do I offer to correct this insane abuse of human rights and dignity.  None.  Except that I urge all who read these words to use a little more common sense (free from emotion and greed) in dealing with their spouse, baby-daddy, children, or whoever.  Even in my ideal, government-free paradise I suspect these problems would still exist.  History says they always have existed.  I ask you, dear readers, to be the change for a brighter future.

And Another Thing!

08 Friday Feb 2013

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on And Another Thing!

Tags

cigars, crime, government, higher education, justice, Natural Law

Whoa, I’m on fire.  After I published the last post I remembered something else I wanted to blab about.  I have now forgotten what that was.  Anyway, I want to plug for my buddy Russell Wilder at Top Shelf Cigars (http://www.topshelfcigarshoppe.com/) and JFR cigars (http://www.casadefernandez.com/).  In particular I write in praise of the JFR 770:

0208131212

“770” refers to 7 inches by a 70 ring gauge.  That means this joker is a huge cigar.  A note: just as I own no guns (only for police and the military), I do not partake of dangerous, death-dealing tobacco products.  I also do not drink or lie…

Anyway, I think the JFR emanates from Nicaragua, where all the best (non-Cuban) tobacco comes from.  Just ask my friend, Nick Perdomo.  No, Nick, I’m not a tratior – well, today I am.  Anyway, again, I am told this little beauty draws remarkably well for such a stout cigar with no sidewiding or need for retouching.  It has a lovely dark brown wrapper and delicious taste, so I’m told.  I would say, based on the infomation I’ve been given, that the effect is mild to medium body (more medium).  Again, not the ass-kicking one would expect from a stick of this magnitude. 

0208131211

Witness the JFR 770 in action, immediatley above.  In the Augusta area you can get this delightful monstrocity at Top Shelf, see the link herein.  The rest of ya’ll check with your local tobacconist. 

Oh, THE THING I FORGOT!  Some of you know I tried and lost 😦 a federal jury trial last fall.  My guy was charged with the most erroneous terrorism charges immaginable.  I truly thought we had the case in the bag until the Jury came back with a guilty verdict.  In short, the defendant was the most sympathetic individual I have encountered in my legal travels.  He was a highly decorated U.S. Army veteran who was horribly injured by the government’s never-ending wars of aggression and profit.  When he sought help from the only source available, he was arrested and railroaded in spite of my efforts.  Of course, at sentencing, the government came in “on my guy’s side” due to his horrible condition (which they caused).  He got time served.  Unbeleivable, except we live in the USSA, the new Amerika.

I am slowly working with several nationaly syndicated heavyweights about making this sad story public.  I don’t know yet if we’re going to do a generic story to protect identities or if we’ll actually be able to state the case in detail.  Either way it will be a compelling piece about the “Just-Us” system in Amerika.  Stay tuned.

ALSO, I am currently seeking a new career in higher education.  This is due in part at my disillusionment following my last jury trial (God willing, my last), my general dissatisfaction with the local legal racket, and my desire to serve society by producing lawyers and other citizens with a greater sense of what Natural Law is and how it affects us all.  Then again, this is why I started ths little blog.  More to come!

The Shared Responsibility TAX: ObamaCare a hit with the Supremes…

28 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by perrinlovett in Uncategorized

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

Constitution, government, Lysander Spooner, tax

On this scalding, 100 degree plus day, with wildfires burning ominously across the land, our friends at the U.S. Supreme Court have upheld the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 20101 (a.k.a., It’s Just Another Tax Act).   Mind that they did not uphold it, Constitutionality speaking; they just upheld it.  It’s a hold-up, with real guns and all.  I reread the Constitution this morning and could not find any authority regarding patients or affordable care.  Maybe I missed something.

The case is National Federation of Something vs. Cerberus, Dark Lord of the Ministry of Health and Human Taxes.2  It’s a 193-page doozie and not worth reading.  If you must, skip to the final two pages wherein Justice Thomas throws up his dissenting hands and screams, “WTF?!”  Allow me to save you some time and tears.  The Court’s legal reasoning [SIC] goes like this – Congress can do whatever it likes and you have to pay for it.

Just the other day I predicted the individual mandate portion would be stricken.  I was right except I did not foresee the Court’s revenue generation angle.  I should have.  Since the time of Charlemagne the Court has (mis)interpreted the Constitution’s “commerce clause” to justify damn near any action undertaken by Congress no matter how idiotic or dangerous.  A few years back the Court tapped the brakes in a case called Lopez.3  Today’s ruling puts us right back on track to statist oblivion.  Hooray!  The Court decided that while the commerce clause can be used to regulate activity, it cannot be used to compel activity (or non-activity).  In other words Congress cannot force you to go out and purchase health insurance.  However, none of this matters anymore.  The Health Care Tax Act had an alternative provision: buy insurance or pay a penalty.  The Court held that the penalty for inaction is just a plain old tax and that Congress has all the authority it needs to levy taxes.  Thus, the individual mandate stands, alternatively, indirectly, at the point of an IRS gun.

The commerce clause has given way to or merged with the “tax clause”.  From now on Congress can pass any law and require anything of its subjects or, alternatively, just tax them for non-compliance.  Unfortunately, I did find Constitutional authority for taxes – potentially unlimited taxes.

The fallout today.  The intrepid Republicans have vowed to repeal the law.  They won’t.  Mittens has vowed to repeal the law and replace it.  Replace it with what I wonder.  A higher tax?  Lower tax?  A more Massachusetts friendly alternative tax care scheme?   Speaking of the Mittster, several of my “conservative” friends have tried to scare me into joining team Mitt on the premise that Little Barry’s re-election would lead to the appointment of liberal, Constitution-trashing Supreme Court justices.  Only Mitt will give us original intent guided, conservative judges –  you know, like when W gave us John Roberts.  Oops….

Seriously, the old Republic has at long last reached the point where the name and nature of the political parties (if there is more than one) just doesn’t matter.  It should now be painfully obvious to all but the dullest television watchers that the federal government wields unlimited power. As Lysander Spooner prophesied long ago: “[W]hether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain – that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it.  In either case, it is unfit to exist.”  And, in a sense, the Constitution now no longer exists.  This is unimaginably confounding to one who has sworn to support and defend the Constitution; it’s like a veterinarian swearing to care for dinosaurs, only to discover them long extinct.

Time will certainly cure the injustice done today.  In 500 or 1,000 years the Unaffordable TaxCare Act will be but a lousy footnote in history.  While there would appear no legal or political solutions left to those of us in the here and now, we may have a few options left.  Options with names like interposition, nullification, and secession.   More on those later.

1. 26 U.S.C. § 5000(B)(S), et seq.

2. Slip Opinion 11-393, June 28, 2012.

3. 514 U.S. 549 (1995).

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Perrin Lovett

From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

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