Saturday, October 21, 2023

A Letter to the Pope



21 October 2023
Your Holiness:

Yourself, Patriarch Bartholomew, Patriarch Kirill, Archbishop Justin Welby, all bishops of the Church and all leaders of Christian Denominations must unanimously and unequivocally condemn the State of Israel's disproportionate and genocidal response to the Hamas act of terror on October 7th.

If you fail to do so, then never again presume to criticise his Holiness Pope Pius XII.

I am an insignificant nobody without the least influence over my corrupt and corrupted leaders or the swill of our mainstream media. But it is intolerable to sit at my computer and watch the mass destruction and slaughter of a ghetto on live-stream. "Never again" Really?

Your condemnations must not be equivocal or hedged with false balance. The Israeli defence minister called the Palestinians "animals." Indeed, a cornered animal will act irrationally. But who did the cornering? A disproportionate response to a criminal act is itself a war crime and when that disproportionality destroys, displaces and degrades an entire population with willfully indiscriminate intent that is genocide.

Those of you who presume to speak in Christ's name, must speak out now. Only your united veto can put a stop to the barbarism of our secular leaders.

Respectfully,



©

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Biden Anchors America to Israel


The United States is run by insane imbeciles.

Biden flies to Israel and like a dog to its master does huggies and kissie poo's with the most thuggish, corrupt and polarizing figure in the region. Bibi is even loathed by one half of his own country. Huggies from POTUS should be doled out like mana. But, I guess punks have an instinctive affinity for one another.

As if the optics weren't bad enough, the sonics were even worse. "As long as the United States stands -- and it will stand forever -- we will not let you ever be alone" intoned Biden. And to wrap up: "...the United States stands with you. We'll walk beside you in those dark days, we'll walk beside you in those good days to come."

The United States will stand forever? Really? To a people who have outlasted the Egyptian, Babylonian, Roman and Holy Roman empires, that must have sounded like a childish brag. It is certainly hubristic. It is one thing to say that, with God's help, may we last forever. It is quite another to announce point blank that we will. Compared to Biden's "forever," Hitler's One Thousand Year Reich almost sounds humble. At any rate, hubris is a form of insanity and when our leaders give the slip that they have lost grip on reality, we ought to at least take note.

But back to the point, has an American president ever given an unconditional commitment to stand by a foreign nation forever? For that was the unmistakable import of Biden's foolish palaver.

There are some, who thinking they are savy realists will cynically say that Biden's commitment was "just rhetoric." Actually... diplomacy is the art of evasion. The whole point of diplomacy is NOT to commit one's nation to any one course of action and certainly not to another nation. The last time that rule was flaunted with lock-step commitments, the result was a Great War.

If Biden was playing to a home-grown audience, he was downright derelict in his duty to represent the country to the audience of other nations.

In fact, Biden proved himself to be nothing but a minion. It was nauseating to watch him regurgitate the Likud's narrative.

What is fundamentally at issue here is the implementation of a "two-state solution." That was the basis for the original partition of Palestine in 1948. That basis was reaffirmed in 1974 by UN Resolution 194. That is official United States policy. So what did Biden say?

Speaking of a "resolution" to the crisis, he said, "for me that means a two state solution."

For me????? For me????? He speaks for the fucking United States, not for himself. He couldn't even manage to read the riot act to a state that is dependent on U.S. financial largesse and military assistance.

Other than stating his personal preference, the only thing he called for was (a) the destruction of Hamas (which was duly elected) and (b) for Palestinians to live in conditions of peace and dignity. Say what?

The issue is statehood. In calling for conditions of peace and dignity, Biden was in fact accepting Israel's current apratheid policy of denying statehood to Palestinians. Biden just prefers that the conditions in the apartheid enclaves be secure, peaceable and provide enough goodies to the inhabitants as will keep them quiescent.

That is not going to work; and that means that the only other solutions are: (a) continued repressive occupation or (b) forcible relocation (aka ethnic cleansing). At best, if we are all lucky, that will only push another generation of Palestinians into unquenchable rage and push Israeli's into a war-induced state of permanent psychosis.

I do not place all the blame on Israel for the impasse. The Palestinians have been equally intransigent. But in 1982 and then in 2017 the PLO and then Hamas accepted in principle the idea of a Palestinian state within 1967 borders. THAT is the goal of U.S. policy and THAT is what Biden should have seized the occasion to insist upon.

Instead Biden seized the occasion to let out more of his inner punk. Oh yes. Democrats might want to ignore it, but his constant snaps and snarls are there for all to see. As when during a 2020 town meeting he called a questioner a "damned liar" and challenged him to a push-up contest. Or when, denouncing the defund-the-police movement, he shouted into the mic, "there's NO PLACE!! in this country NO PLACE!!! for endangering the lives of law enforcement NO PLACE, NONE, NEVER, PERIOD!!!!! This supposedly avuncular Joe has a pronounced tendency to punch his message through. This punctuated yelling at you, is a form of threat and intimidation. So, when it came to Hezbollah, it was hardly surprising that Biden's message was a pounding "DON'T!... DON'T... DON'T."

Biden may get away badgering Anita Hill, challenging overweight blue collar workers and shouting down reporters, but if he thinks this display of gerontological toughness impresses Hezbollah, he is gerontologically deranged.

But perhaps this too was just another rhetorical display designed to make Lindsay Graham happy. Alas, we are not on Capitol Hill but rather in a region that is on the edge of a possible conflagration.

Having just announced that two carriers groups were heading to the region, Biden was clearly threatening Hezbollah with American military retaliation. In other words, he was committing the United States to involvement if and when Hezbollah should decide to do whatever Biden didn't want it to do.

Brilliant! Hand the trigger to Hezbollah which now gets to call the shot on whether U.S. troops get involved. That is the stupidest thing a nation can do. Should Hezbollah act against Israel then the U.S. can (a) humiliatingly retreat from Biden's "DON'T DON'T DON'T" or (b) venture into the maelstrom.

Biden's DON'Ts would have better been directed against Israel, which only hours before his arrival had bombed an airport and Syria and various border locations in Lebanon. Why is Israel poking a hornets nest? Hezbolla had nothing to do with the massacre on Oct 5th. Biden might recall, that contrary to MSM's propaganda, the last time the IDF took on Hezbollah, the IDF got creamed.

As it will if it undertakes a ground assault into Gaza. There are 300 miles of tunnels in Gaza. Let's do a Biden. 300!!! 300!!!! 300!!! So we'are talking about a two-tiered Stalingrad. Urban warfare on the surface and urban warfare in 300 miles of underground tunnels.

That is one bloody clusterfuck waiting to happen. Israel's only "solution" is to create a desert of rubble and call it victory. Suppose that "works" and that it works without provoking Hezbolah. Then what?

Assuming that the approximately 1 million youth of Gaza accept occupation quiescently, Israel has NO plans for administering, controlling, feeding, and taking care of the 2.5 million huddled into half the space. No plans for preventing starvation, or controlling outbreaks of disease or insuring that the sewage system works.

Genocide is not limited to the drama of gas chambers. Engineering conditions that will result in mass deaths qualifies just as well.

So the most the "Most Powerful Country on Urth" can wrangle out of Israel is an agreement not to prevent humanitarian assistance (paid for and provided by others) from crossing into Gaza from a single point on the Egyptian border?

Whatever side one wants to take in this matter, Israel's retaliatory rage is not a winning policy. It avenges an appalling act of murderous terror but it fails to address the underlying problem which being underlying will perist. And so, Israel's policy ends up being no more than murderous madness. And it is to this madness that our punk-imbecile president has committed the United States "forever."

As Israel cuts the electricity to Gaza, so the U.S. mass media apparatus cuts the light of information to the dumbed down American public. Gaza is not a separate country. Israel has prevented it from becoming a sovereign state. So then, what is Gaza's status? It is occupied territory and under long established international law Israel and Israel alone is responsible for the welfare of the inhabitants of the occupied territory. Allowing truckloads of water bottles, band-aids, and powdered milk to cross the border does not qualify as insuring the welfare of the population. And yet the craven American press treats Biden's "gaining" this pathetic "concession" as some great diplomatic feat on our part and humanitarian gesture by Israel. Shameful.

Equally nauseating was Biden's blather about a "pathway" and "framework" for peace. The one offer the Likud can't bear to accept is the peace of a two-state solution. They have resorted to every artifice to avoid building on Hamas' acceptance of 1967 borders. It is a gross distortion say that Biden is "standing by" Israel. He is supporting an extremist party within Israel -- a party that calls Palestinians "animals."

What is truly dismal, is that U.S. political class is so utterly brainwashed by the narrative of an extremist party in Israel that no one in any position of authority thinks of dancing to other than Bibi's tune. Oh, I am sure there are some wonky people in the State Department or in think tanks that will point out how disastrous all this is, but they have no influence. Unfortunately, mainstream Jewish organizations in the United States are not using their influence to read some sanity into U.S. policy.

It will be a bloody miracle if this does not blow up in our faces, at which point the U.S., which has already lost its proxy war in the Ukraine will be faced with another unwinable war in the Middle East. Oh joy.

©

Sunday, August 20, 2023

In Defence of the Court

 


There is circulating a meme picture of the Supreme Court that depicts six of its conservative members in KKK hoods. This is obviously part of the Democrat Party's ongoing attempt to delegitimize the Court. The KKK was a vicious, sadistic organization that lynched Negroes and burned them alive or dragged them to their death while terrorizing whole neighbourhoods. The picture is a slur too far.

But even apart from such demagogic excesses, the Democrat assault on the Supreme Court is a greater threat to our system of government than any, assumedly bad, decision of the Court. It is time for the Demorats to stop it.

I would never deny that politics is not involved in Supreme Court decisions; of course it is. But it is a kind of politics that is restrained by precedent; that is to to say by the fair meaning of words within custom and usage. A judge or justice can get to the result he wants but he has to rationalize it in a certain manner. That manner does not include advertising, electoral hoopla, dramatic rhetoric snatched of out thin air or riding on some popular meme. It is rhetoric and reasoning according to the manner judicial decisions have been arrived at.

To give an example. The Fifth Amendment provides “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” Implicit in that provision is the recognized power of government to take property. Two conditions are imposed: (1) compensation and (2) “public use.” But what does “public use” mean? Does it include a municipality taking your property in order to allow Walmart to build a Super Store in your town?

One would think that “public use” meant precisely that: some publicly owned use, such an a highway, a dam, an airport, a municipal park. Indeed, long standing Supreme Court precedent had always interpreted “public use” to mean just that sort of thing. But in Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005), the Court held otherwise. Public use included taking your property and giving it to Walmart, sub nom “comprehensive development plan.” A better fascist marriage between government and corporations could hardly be imagined.

So the question in this case boiled down to: what to we mean by “use”? Does “use” include “indirect use” or “benefits” ? After all the land was not being given to the owners of Walmart et al. for their private residence but for shopping centers open to and used by the public. Plus (and this is the part to salivate over) the “redevelopment plan” would provide “tax revenues” to the city which is a public entity.

Arguably “use” includes “benefit” and, in the abstract the only “answer” is how many vote yes or no on the question. But the issue raised more than an abstraction or (in legal usage)more than an “issue of first impression.” There was precedent: how have the collective we (“the saints assembled”) interpreted “use” in the past? Well... their verdict was unequivocal: use meant “use by the public under government auspices.”

So what does “auspices” mean....? And so on.

But one gets the point. Judicial law is politics but one in which the results depend on grammar, the fair meaning of words, the soundness of reasoning, (with a dash of rhetoric), and ...in the end... what you can or cannot get away with... within reason. What one cannot do, is substitute one's own tabula raza ideas about things.

This is the distinction that Hamilton draws in Federalist Paper No. 78. The Legislature, he says, acts on the basis of WILL. The judiciary exercises JUDGEMENT. Congress can pass any law it pleases, whatever the bee that enters it bonnet. The Supreme Court is required to compare the fair meaning of words within our custom and usage. That is “politics” but one requiring a certain knowledge, training and above all, restraint.

So what about Kelo? The majority departed from previous understandings concerning the meaning of “public use” in order to expand the term according to their own notions of what it should mean. While it was not an illogical interpretation, it was not one that was restrained by prior usage.

According to the dissent: “Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party, but the fallout from this decision will not be random. The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms. ... Something has gone seriously awry with this Court's interpretation of the Constitution. Though citizens are safe from the government in their homes, the homes themselves are not

Go RBG!!! Go Girl!!! Read those Federalist Society / Heritage Foundation justices the riot act!!!!

Uh.....Justice John Paul Stevens wrote the majority opinion, joined by Justices Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Stephen Breyer.

Justice O'Connor, joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justices Scalia and Thomas. dissented.

All of which brings me to my next point which is that the division of the Court between “conservatives” and “liberals” is so haphazard and riddled with exceptions as to be meaningless... at least the way it is presented. There is a distinction in the reasoning processes judges follow in analyzing a question and working toward a conclusion, but even this is often nuanced. What I can say very broadly is that the difference is between those who espouse a sociologically infused “analysis” and those who espouse legal formalism; i.e. adhering to the text of what has been written.

I will return to the question of judicial methodology shortly. But first we might very well ask why have a Court at all? Isn't it just an oligarchical device to thwart the will of the all knowing all beneficent democratic majority? You bet it is. And with good reason. The Court is our tribunicia potestas.

From history we will recall that, as a result of a plebian revolt, Rome established a college of five tribunes any one of which had the power to veto any act of the Senate or Assembly. The person of the tribune was sacred and his word was final.

Well, what sense did that make? Why have an Assembly at all, if some clown in a special toga can simply nullify whatever it does? How can you trust these “tribunes”? To which I ask: how can you trust the Assembly? Has the majority always ruled well and wisely? It was the majority in the Athenian assembly who voted to send ships out to slaughter every Melian man woman and child. Only when they sobered up the next morning did they realize what a vile thing it was and sent out ships to recall the ones they had sent the day before ... And row hard, by Jove, row!!! A tribune might have helped.

The simple and philosophical fact is that all society is always a balance between “the one and the many” and we have to trust both because we can trust neither. Can you prove in some sort of Cartesian way that the tribunician power is a good thing? Not really, but it served the Romans well enough for 700 years.

The thing that needs to be borne in mind is that the tribunician power is negative. It can stop but it cannot initiate. This distinction is what saves it from being tyrannical. As Voltaire wrote, “a tyrant is the sovereign who knows no law but his own caprice.” In our system the sovereign is Congress; and Congress, which has the power to make and unmake law, knows no law but its own caprice. The fact that our tyrant is democratically elected doesn't solve the problem of bad laws. We may, like the regretful Athenians, recall bad legislation by electing different representatives or parties to power; but sometimes it may be too late.

So this is Hamilton's argument: In America “We The People” are the true and only sovereign. But “We the People” spoke only once, and that was when we ordained the Constitution. So the Constitution (and by understood inclusion the Bill of Rights) is the one true expression of the will of truly direct popular sovereignty. Congress is only a derivative sovereign. The Judiciary exists, then, to protect the original design of what “We the People” did ordain and establish.... Of course, the Court also interprets various laws and statutes, but it's main constitutional purpose is to exercise a negative judgement on laws or actions which transgress constitutional bounds.

Hamilton's argument somewhat involves a slight of hand; one that ends up saying (with a certain amount of cheek) that an oligarchical mechanism exists to protect the popular will. The simple fact is that by establishing the Constitution, the sovereign people delegated their law-making power to Congress which thenceforth represents the sovereign will of the people. But this simple description does not take into account the difference between an axiom and a theorem.

Axioms establish absolute fundamentals without which and outside of which nothing is possible. Theorems are specific propositions existing under and operative only within that conceptual universe established by axioms. In 1789, We the People did not simply delegate our collective power to three branches of government. We certainly did not, as the English did in 1688, decree simply and without more that “Parliament was supreme.” We delegated our powers within a prescribed constitutional order of doing things and subject, most importantly, to the fundamentals of the Bill of Rights. That was an act of axiomatic legislation. From this constitutional perspective, Hamilton's argument is more than a trick. The Court exists to protect the axiomatic will of the People as against subsequent propositions ensuing, supposedly, thereunder.

This explains why the Court is essentially a conservative beast. It does not exist to initiate changes. It does not look forward but back; and, most importantly back to our axioms. This is why FDR complained that the Court was “taking us back to horse and buggy days.” Yeah, so perhaps we should give horses and buggies a second look.

And taking a second look, we can notice that our Constitution and Bill of Rights presuppose a Liberal political philosophy; that is, one that, in the balance between the One and the Many, inclines toward the individual and his freedom of action. This may sound nice, but it has to be remembered that “individual” includes Very Big Individuals who Have a Disportionate Amount of Political and Economic Power. For better and for worse in no other nation was the “liberal idea” given such free reign as in the United States.

I'm not saying that the Constitution prohibits government initiative or regulation, or that it demands unfettered capitalism. Although principles may be stated in pristine simplicity, in actual practice there is always a near infinite amount of variation. But given the essential role of the Court and given our foundational documents it is not surprising that the Court's rulings should have a “conservative” (i.e. Liberal) tilt.

It was precisely for this reason that beginning in the 20th century some jurists began a movement to revamp jurisprudence, so as to make it make amenable to achieving socio-economic change. Thus arose the division between formal (veto prone) jurisprudence and sociological jurisprudence, or as it is often called, “legal realism.” The Big Battle arose, of course, over FDR's New Deal.

Sniffed Justice Mc ReynoldsI readily and, I trust, feelingly acknowledge the duty incumbent on us all as men and citizens, and as among the highest and holiest of our duties, to provide for those who, in the mysterious order of Providence, are subject to want and to disease of body or mind; but I cannot find any authority in the Constitution for making the Federal Government the great almoner of public charity throughout the United States.

Whatever might be said about the mysterious order of Providence, there is no authority in the Constitution for the government to run a Social Security Administration. And proof of that fact is that when the Court (under pressure) got around to approving Social Security it did so under the “general welfare” preamble of the Constitution. But if that is the logic to be used then “general welfare” becomes an infinitely malleable variable and we might as well have no restrictions at all on what Congress can do.

The most egregious example of “sociological” jurisprudence that I can think of is the Case of Wickard v. Filburn (1941) in which the Court held that a backwoods Ohio farmer who lived miles from anywhere and who grew his own wheat entirely for home consumption was “in” interstate commerce (and therefore could be regulated by the government) because by NOT buying bread produced in interstate commerce he affected interstate commerce as much as if he sold his wheat in interstate commerce.

Although I am very glad for Social Security and think we need more government regulation of private enterprise, the problem with this kind of Alice-in-Wonderland sophistry is that it basically destroys the very idea of law. If words and ideas can be abused in this way, we are left with brute will and that, imo, is not a good thing.

This is why, at least as much as the achieved result of any case, I am concerned about how the “ratio decidendi” -- how the case was reasoned to its conclusion. If the reasoning is honest and fair, then even if I would have reasoned otherwise, I feel I got as good as any of us can expect to get. Verbal thuggery, is another matter.

So... to summarize. In the ever ongoing balance between the One and the Many, or between the Settled and the Needed, the Supreme Court, as it is, serves a very necessary function. Its decisions have never been perfect, and since there are always at least two sides to any issue, they will always offend at least one party. From day to day, I find myself being delighted or outraged. But at the end of the day, I have to ask whether I would prefer an imperfect restraint on popular will or none at all.

No one who is even tepidly social democratic could possible support the Republican agenda, but what the Democrats are doing is reprehensible. Knowing that they will not be able to force court-packing legislation through Congress, they are attempting the next worser thing: witch-hunt conservative justices off the Court so that a Democratic administration can re-pack it with legal realists more amenable to their will. Oh, yes, they may get the rulings they want but they will have completely politicised the Court by making it a steppinfechit for the caprice of the majority. And once the Democrats succeed, the Republicans will follow suit. I would vote for any Republican in order to estop this destructive petulance.

Tuesday, July 04, 2023

Sumbagging the Second Amendment


The Supreme Court has granted certiorari in United States v. Rahimi, after a ruling by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal (Texas), setting aside Rahimi's conviction, under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(8), for possessing a firearm in violation of a civil restraining order based on a judicial finding that he represented “a credible threat to the physical safety of” his domestic partner.

Rahimi asserted that his conviction was invalid because he had a constitutional right to possess the weapon in question. He argues that § 922(g)(8) is unconstitutional on its face.

That Mr. Rahimi is a poster boy for the type of scumbag no one in their right mind would want possessing a firearm is beyond dispute. His record includes a lengthy criminal history the most recent episodes of which included drug dealing, burglary, two assaults on women with a firearm, the latter of which was accompanied by brandishing a gun, and firing it into the air while arguing with a potential witness. For these accomplishments Rahimi was convicted and sentenced in a Texas state court. When he gets out, he will never be allowed to possess a firearm. Nevertheless, the Department of Justice decided to pursue Mr. Rahimi on federal charges.

On the first appeal from his federal conviction, the Fifth Circuit rejected Rahimi's constitutional claim. The court ruled, that under the “two-part balancing test” in use at the time, Rahimi's rights were “outweighed” by the compelling state interest in maintaining the peace, tranquility and safety of the realm.

After Rahimi was packed off to prison but, before his judgement was final, the Supreme Court decided N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. Bruen, (2022), __U.S.__, 142 S. Ct. 2111, which changed the Second Amendment legal landscape. Under Bruen a person has a presumptive right to posssess weapons in “common use” among the public, and it is the government's burden to prove that the restriction or deprivation of the right is justified by some analogue in the “history and tradition” of the Second Amendment. Rahimi thereupon mounted a second challenge to § 922(g)(8) and, this time, “in light of Bruen” the Fifth Circuit reversed.

Needless to say, the anti-gun lobby -- which has finally stopped making a secret of its desire to abrogate the Second Amendment -- has raised a hutesium et clamor against a ruling that will cruelly subject the country and its millions of innocent children to the bloody rack and ruin of gun violence. Not only is Rahimi's scumbaggery the main ballast of their argument, but in a perverse way he has become the anti-hero of their cause.

However, a facial challenge to a statute considers only the text of the statute itself, not its application to the particular circumstances of an individual. The question properly before the Fifth Circuit was whether, § 922(g)(8), as written and in abstract principle passes constitutional muster. Of course, the law would not be the law without there being a wrinkle and, as written, § 922(g)(8) is something of a clunker.

That statute prohibits possessing a firearm in violation of a civil protective order. The order must have prohibited stalking or threatening a domestic partner (1) based on a finding that the person “represents a credible threat to the physical safety” to said partner OR (2) “explicitly prohibits the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against such” said partner. In other words, § 922(g)(8) can be violated without there having been any finding of “dangerousness.”

This second condition was so obviously flawed that the Fifth Circuit had previously held that it contained an “implied” finding of dangerousness. (United States v. Emerson, 270 F.3d 203 (5th Cir. 2001), cert. denied, 536 U.S. 907 (2002).)   As thus patched up, section §922 (g)(8) rests on a civil judicial finding of that the subject of the order represents a danger to a particular person.

A well regulated militia... the right of the people to keep and bear arms...

Interestingly enough, instead of asking whether such a finding constituted a sufficient predicate for depriving Rahimi of his right to bear arms, the Court of Appeal began by asking whether Mr. Rahimi was part of the “people” to whom the Second Amendment refers. At this point my ears started to burn. Yes indeed: who and on what basis gets to decide whether a person is part of the national community?

By phrasing the question in that manner the Fifth Circuit transubstantiated the issue of “my rights” into the more primary existential question of whether “I” am part of “Us.” That it seems to me is a rather important question, especially when we recall the lamentable history of regimes that have excluded categories of people from their national community.

There is no question that a member of “we the people” can disenfranchise himself by his conduct. The concept is known as “civil death.” But our Constitution provides specific means and limitations on how that is done; namely, after conviction by jury trial with assistance of counsel. It is not the conviction that causes a man to forfeit his membership in the the community but rather the decision of his fellow people. In civilian countries like France or Germany, it suffices for agents of the State, professionally trained judges, to make the decision as to whether someone should incur civil death and thereby be excluded -- for a time or forever -- from walking freely among fellow citizens.

But neither England nor the United States have ever followed the civil law. In our tradition a man's right as “one of a people” can only be taken away by the people, and the Sixth Amendment specifies that this is to be taken literally. As Justice Scalia put it, “Judges, it is sometimes necessary to remind ourselves, are part of the State -- and an increasingly bureaucratic part of it, at that” (Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) 530 U.S. 466, 498.) It is the jury that functions as circuit-breaker in the State’s machinery of justice (Blakely v. Washington (2004) 542 U. S. 296, 307.)

Now, it is true that the overwhelming majority of cases are disposed of by plea. But that does derogate from the principle at issue. Every plea must be based on a voluntary and knowing waiver of the process accorded. Anyone who wants to be judged by his peers, face to face, has the absolute right to appeal to the circuit breaker.

This is yet another example of the ways in which the Bill of Rights enshrines not only individual rights but the right and power of popular control over government and over our own destinies. No judge, magistrate, agent, bureaucrat, or lackey can exclude you; only the people can say that you are no longer part of the people. You can't get more fundamentally democratic than that.

Of course, a popular decision while a necessary condition is not a sufficient one. In addition to a determination by jury, the decision must accord with substantive standards and due process of law. In a word, there must be good cause and reason for finding someone unworthy to participate in the community of the free. The shorthand for all of this is the well known truism that a person may loose his rights through and upon conviction for a crime or for a certain class of crime. Nevertheless, it is important to bear in mind what lies behind the shorthand.

The Department of Justice would have it that a person can be excluded from the national community and the rights shared therethrough, by the say-so of a civil order made by an agent of the state, pursuant to no specified criteria or standard of proof. The only contingency is that the subject of the order receive “actual notice” and be given the opportunity “to participate.” What this boils downs to in practice is a showing that notice was mailed to him at his last known address.

To justify this sort of regime, the Government pointed to various historical analogues in English and Colonial law. The first of these was the Statute of Northampton, 2 Edw. 3, (1328), and various copy-cat statutes, which prohibited “riding about armed to the terror of the King's subjects” (ne de chivaucher ne de daler arme). As I have written elsewhere, what the statute actually prohibited was using arms to terrify the people. The statutes in question invariably resort to phrases such “with force and arms,” or “affrayers,” or “breakers of the peace,” or “go armed offensively.” As such, these statutes (English and Colonial) presupposed a primary right to lawfully bear arms, and the universal acceptance of this right cannot in good faith be doubted by anyone familiar with the historical and legal record from King Alfred (850) to James Madison (1791). As stated by the Fifth Circuit,

“In substance, the early “going armed” laws that led to weapons forfeiture are not relevantly similar to § 922(g)(8). First, those laws only disarmed an offender after criminal proceedings and conviction. By contrast, § 922(g)(8) disarms people who have merely been civilly adjudicated to be a threat to another person.”

The Government's second argument relied on various English and Colonial laws which had authorized the seizure of weapons from “dangerous” classes of people. Or, as the Government summarized it, “persons and disaffected persons perceived as threatening to the crown.” The difficulty with this line of argument is that the persons deemed “dangerous” were either Protestants (under Charles II and James II), or Irish and Catholics (after the Glorious Revolution) or slaves and Indians (in the Colonies). The perversity of the Government's argument is truly astonishing. If anything, the Second Amendment was designed to forestall precisely those kinds of status-based forfeitures.

Lastly, the Government sought to rely on various surety laws by means of which an individual who could show that he had “just cause to fear” that another would injure him or destroy his property could “demand surety of the peace against such person.” If the party of whom surety was demanded refused to post surety, he would be forbidden from carrying a weapon in public absent special need. The similarity between § 922(g)(8) and surety laws is obvious. Where the analogy breaks down is that surety laws did not confiscate or prohibit possession of the weapon itself. The Government's argument that the right to possess arms can be based on a civil finding of dangerousness; and, therefore, if a finding of dangerousness is sufficient to condition your right it ought to be sufficient to abrogate it as well.

The Justice Department is hoping that the outrageousness of Rahimi's conduct will distract and obscure the pernicious principle being asserted. In seeking Supreme Court review, the Government has sought to portray the Fifth Circuit's ruling as one that would hog tie the authorities from taking any reasonable measures to counteract a patently dangerous and, indeed, deranged person from committing further gun violence. Needless to say, the Anti-Gun activists and media followed up with the appropriate rhetoric qua reportage. Since it makes for such salacious reading we might as well quote the Government's brief in full:

“... Zackey Rahimi was a drug dealer who mostly sold marijuana and occasionally sold cocaine. In December 2019, Rahimi and his girlfriend C.M. had an argument in a parking lot in Arlington, Texas. C.M. tried to leave, but Rahimi grabbed her wrist, knocking her to the ground. He then dragged her back to his car, picked her up, and pushed her inside, causing her to hit her head on the dashboard. Realizing that a bystander had seen him, he retrieved a gun and fired a shot. In the meantime, C.M. escaped the car and fled the scene. Rahimi later called her and threatened to shoot her if she told anyone about the assault.

“In February 2020, after giving Rahimi notice and an opportunity for a hearing, a Texas state court granted C.M. a restraining order, which was valid for two years. C.A. ROA 12-18. The court found that Rahimi had “committed family violence” and that such violence was “likely to occur again in the future.” . The court accordingly prohibited Rahimi from committing family violence and from threatening, harassing, or approach ing C.M. or her family. . The order also suspended Rahimi’s handgun license, prohibited him from possessing a firearm, and warned him that possessing a firearm while the order remained in effect may be a federal felony. Rahimi signed an acknowledgement that he had 'received a copy of this protective order in open court at the close of the hearing in this matter.'

“Rahimi, however, defied the restraining order. In August 2020, he tried to communicate with C.M. on social media and approached her house in the middle of the night, prompting state police to arrest him for violating the order. C.A. ROA 218. And in November 2020, he threatened another woman with a gun, leading the State of Texas to charge him with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

“Rahimi then participated in a series of five shootings in December 2020 and January 2021. First, after someone who had bought drugs from him “started talking ‘trash’ ” on social media, he went to the man’s home and fired bullets into it using an AR-15 rifle. The next day, after colliding with another vehicle, he alighted from his car, shot at the other driver, fled, re- turned to the scene, fired more shots at the other car, and fled again. Three days later, Rahimi fired a gun in the air in a residential neighborhood in the presence of young children. . A few weeks after that, a truck flashed its headlights at Rahimi when he sped past it on a highway; in response, Rahimi slammed his brakes, cut across the highway, followed the truck off an exit, and fired multiple shots at another car that had been traveling behind the truck. Finally, in early January, Rahimi pulled out a gun and fired multi- ple shots in the air after a friend’s credit card was declined at a fast-food restaurant.”

“Police officers identified Rahimi as a suspect in those shootings and secured a search warrant for his home. A search of his room uncovered a .45- caliber pistol, a .308-caliber rifle, pistol and rifle magazines, ammunition, approximately $20,000 in cash, and a copy of the restraining order. [ as a result of which he was indicted for violating 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(8]”

What this stunning narration glides over is the fact that prior to be charged with the federal offence, Rahimi had been convicted on state charges of “terroristic threat of a family/household member, discharge of a firearm in certain municipalities, and family violence assault causing bodily injury.” (see United States v. Rahimi (5th Cir., June 8, 2022, No. 21-11001) [pp. 3 fn. 2].) After conviction and sentence on these state charges, Rahimi admitted and pleaded guilty to the federal charges, reserving the right to appeal the constitutionality of the federal statute. The federal district court then imposed a prison term to run consecutive to the state sentence.

In his first federal appeal (the June 8, 2022 case, cited above), Rahimi argued that the state and federal sentences should run concurrently because, after all, it was all part of his singlular deranged and dangerous propensity. The supposedly reactionary Fifth Circuit rejected this claim on the ground that “the pending state charges are not a part of the same course of conduct as Rahimi's possession of a firearm in violation of a restraining order”  inasmuch as federal offence arose two and 12 months after the state prior state charges. (United States v. Rahimi (5th Cir., June 8, 2022, No. 21-11001) [pp. 4].) At the same time the Fifth Circuit rejected Rahimi's constitutional challenge.

What the Government elides gracefully is that there was plenty of time for the Texas courts to issue an order restraining Rahimi from possessing a firearm. In fact, they had done so and if Texas did not do so again it was because Rahimi was being packed off to prison in any case. Despite all the tears and rending of garments, this was not a case where the authorities were rendered helpless in their attempts to control an armed, violent and dangerous lunatic. The good and peaceable citizens of the United States and the Great State of Texas can sleep tight at night knowing that Rahimi's dangerous are under lock and key.

What remains then is a facial challenged to a criminal statute that is based on the deprivation of a constititional right issued by a civil magistrate who decides that a person represents a danger to another. That's it. No further requirement or qualification. In defending 922(g)(8), the Government is arguing for the deprivation of a constitutional under a totally undefined standard of determination.

As Judge Hoo, noted in his concurring opinion, “civil protective orders are too often misused as a tactical device in divorce proceedings—and issued without any actual threat of danger. ... Judges may face enormous pressure to grant civil protective orders—and no incentive to deny them.” That is true enough, but the situation is far worse.

Because, by definition, a "danger" is a possible or, to some degree, a probable harm, a "danger" can always be said to presently exist and is impossible to deny. Authorities intuitively understand this which is why they speak of "potential dangers," which sounds like it is saying something more when, in fact, it is saying less. Unless tethered to enumerated and specific objective criteria, a finding of dangerousness is not only easily made but, worse yet, is no more than a self-certifying excoriation. The inherent capriciousness of such findings make them the favourite tool of tyrants. It is precisely for that reason that the Government and gun control activists wish to mesmerize people with “dangers.” This is the same Administration that has a track record of exerting government pressure to censor “dangerous” or “hateful” speech by gagging or cancelling social media accounts. Once they establish the principle that constitutional rights can be taken away through such vague and facile “findings” liberty ceases to be guaranteed. This is not the beginning of a slippery slope, it is the end of it. It is nothing a true and honest liberal in the mold of justice Douglas, Brennan or Black would have countenanced.

Although the Fifth Circuit opinion did not mention Apprendi or Blakely the way it initially framed the question indicates that it clearly had those cases in mind. The Bill of Rights presupposes the loss of the rights it protects, but it does so by the means it prescribes.

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Thursday, June 29, 2023

Supreme Court rules on Affirmative Delusions


The Supreme Court's decision in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College (29 June 2023) No. 20-1199 has simplified a proposition which liberals have made very "theoretic and complex" in order to avoid facing the fundamental deficiencies in our economic and cultural life.

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Needless to say, the usual suspects are venting about how the Court's "overruling" of affirmative action fails to address "historic racism." This is yet another example of nonsensical Orwellian memes that do nothing but paralyze thought.

I honestly don't know what it means to say that we need to address historic racism. The one thing I am certain of is that history is dead and gone. Affirmative action will do nothing to save the black man lynched on a tree or the black slave torn from her child and raped... and on and on. Addressing history is like talking into the grave.

If, on the other hand, one means that we have to address the LEGACY of our history then at least we are focusing correctly on the issue that needs to be addressed. The legacy -- that is, the "what-are-we-left-with-NOW" -- is that blacks are (for the most part) economically deprived and being poor are culturally deprived and being culturally deprived are personally disabled. Punto y final.

Ohhh but we're not supposed to say that. That is somehow insensitive and ignores the richness of jazz, blues, hominy and grits. Bunk. The "richness" of the human response to oppression isn't going to help you cut it in med school.

Anyone who knows anything about child development knows that affirmative action begins at home and at about age two. In all spheres, a middle or upper middle class child is presented with worlds of opportunity, wonderment and challenge through which and with which he develops his interests and abilities. For the child who grows up in poverty -- or worse yet, in an urban "ghetto"-- the situation is the reverse. The action is all unaffirming and negative. The idea that giving such a person a "leg up" into college was a cruel deceit.

I saw it myself in law school where Blacks and Hispanics were admitted on condition they undertake remedial reading. HUH??? Really? Law is nothing if not the science of words. As Aristotle put it succinctly millenia ago; "for it is words that give us the ability to decide between the just and unjust...." (Politiks Bk 1. ch.1) If you are struggling with the syllables to make out the word, to put together a sentence, you're just not going to make it. Worse yet, you just can't DO it. And it's the same thing in physics, mathematics, medicine or any other discipline. A mid-century German politician put it this way:

"I perceived very clearly that the aim of all social activity must never be merely charitable relief, which is ridiculous and useless, but it must rather be a means to find a way of eliminating the fundamental deficiencies in our economic and cultural life - deficiencies which necessarily bring about the degradation of the individual...."

So indeed affirmative action was and is a band-aid. But it is band-aid that deceives everyone from addressing the real underlying problem: "eliminating the fundamental deficiencies in our economic and cultural life."

And that does indeed begin with medicare for all, with a affordable housing, with guaranteed livable pensions, and with a "wage that enables a man to provide for himself, to raise and family and to set aside savings." (Pope Leo XIII (1891) in case anyone was wondering.) Most of all it requires an education that allows the young person to test himself against the full range of challenges that exist from mechanics to quantum mechanics, so that he can discover what he likes and what he is good at. For, developing one's "individual potential" is not a question of becoming a doctor or lawyer, but rather of becoming a responsible and respected contributor to society.

In Germany for example, it is not a dishonor to be a "master baker." Everybody gets respect for what they bring to society's table. But,along with depressing wages, America cheapens everything.

This whole affirmative action stuff began when the Detroit and Watts riots put the fear of the Caesars into our ruling class. The slaves were revolting. Buy peace! Buy peace! Bump a few of them up into the professional classes and call it a day. But along the entire trajectory of affirmative action the condition of most Blacks has flatlined.

It was worse yet; for along with bumping up a few minorities, the ruling class set out to degrade and destroy the working class whose real incomes progressively declined for 40 years until they too have flatlined.

The liberals cab bitch and whine all they want about how the "reactionary" court has "set us back" to the Jim Crow era and blah blah blah. The Supreme Court has actually done us a favor by removing a bewitching panacea.

One has to read between the lines. C.J. Roberts wrote that the Court had never accepted affirmative action as a permanent solution. Correct. Since the Bakkee decision in 1978, it has always said that affirmative action would have to end "at sometime." In other words, the Court was willing to accept what everyone understood was a violation of Equal Protection, as temporary measure to jump start some kind of Black "middle class."

Most of what Americans call "liberalism" is a blindfold that allows liberals to forget the material sacrifices THEY as a class must make in order to achieve the society they say they want. In removing the blinder, the Court has actually forced us to look elsewhere than at college admissions offices for solutions.

In so far as admissions offices are concerned, I would recommend reading the dissent of Justice Douglas in DeFunis v. Odegaard (1974) 416 U.S. 312, No one -- absolutely no one --- can accuse Douglas of being a toady to reactionaries...and yet this is what he wrote:

"The Equal Protection Clause commands the elimination of racial barriers, not their creation in order to satisfy our theory as to how society ought to be organized. .... A segregated admissions process creates suggestions of stigma and caste no less than a segregated classroom, and in the end it may produce that result despite its contrary intentions. One other assumption must be clearly disapproved: that blacks or browns cannot make it on their individual merit. That is a stamp of inferiority that a State is not permitted to place on any lawyer. ... So far as race is concerned, any state-sponsored preference to one race over another in that competition is in my view "invidious" and violative of the Equal Protection Clause.” (Id., at pp. 343-44.)

Douglas also makes good reading in comparison to the dissents of justices Jackson and Sotomayor; for, way before woke, Douglas was very aware of the cultural discrimination in so-called "objective" measurements like the SAT/LSAT. But, he was also prophetically aware of the problem in creating a cascade of conflicting preferences based on race, national origin and other "cognized" categories. At the end of the day, when it comes to any technique, cultural values and perspectives have nothing to do with it: either you know how to tune a V-8 engine, or you don't.

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Saturday, May 13, 2023

Weaponizing Ignorance


Invoking the "Cleopatra Issue," the New York Slime has opened yet another front in its ongoing corporate-imperialist, woke culture war.

Barfo has to confess that he backslid on his New Year's resolve to no longer pollute his mind with poisons from the pages of the New York Slime. But I couldn't resist.

Through the tube-vine, I heard that the Slime was proclaiming that Cleopatra was black (or as the Slime would have it "Black"). You kiddin me??? Nope.

Cleopatra was black because there is a possibility that maybe some slave or Persian [sic] got mixed into her bloodline somehow, sometimes, AND BESIDES "black" isn't a question of skin colour anyways but has to do with the experience of oppression. .... Cleopatra was "oppressed"???

And because culturally "oppressed" therefore it is legitimate to portray her skin tone as black (or "Black") or "black" or at any rate as a slimmer version of the later versions of Aunt Jemima....

What is rally deplorable about all of this is that USA's cultural hegemenony has now turned into a Black Hole of Ignorance and Insanity which is sucking in the rest of the world.

I renew my resolve.

©

Sunday, April 09, 2023

UPDATE -- Democrats Trying to Smear Thomas off the Court


In writing Friday's article on the Demorats' “gunning” for Justice Thomas, we we cited a letter from Rosylnn R. Mauskopf, Director of the Administrative Office of the United States Court's to Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, explaining the “personal hospitality exception” to 5 U.S.C. ¶ 7573.


We thought it suspiciously curious that Mauskopf's letter referred to an inquiry from Senator Whitehouse, dated 21 February 2023, concerning the same “personal hospitality” exception. That inquiry meant that prior to the “bombshell” Pro Publica report on Thomas' vacations, somebody on Capitol Hill was nosing about the Supreme Court's regulations concerning “gifts”.

In our mind, the inference was plain: the Democrats on the Hill and their scribblings in the media were out to get Thomas and, once he fell, Alito. The only problem was that two dots do not a connection make.

What I mean by this is simple. Two dots make a correlation, but something more is needed to flesh out either a cause or a conspiracy. In my case, that “cause” was my general historical knowledge of how humans behave in the political arena. Simply put, read enough and you get good a smelling shit.

But convincing others requires more than bragging “I am good at this stuff.” Well, as fate would have it the third point was published just this weekend, Truthout, a progressive on line source, which ran a headline entitled:

Lawmakers Urge Chief Justice Roberts to Probe Clarence Thomas’s Secret Trips

calls mount for Thomas to be investigated after accepting millions in undisclosed gifts from billionaire Harlan Crow.

HERE

Ho, ho, ho, ho ho-ooh. And who might those “lawmakers” be perchance?

“In a letter led by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (...)

Breathlessly, Truthout reports that: “In a letter led [sic] by” Whitehouse... the Democrats ... cited Thrusday's BOMBSHELL REPORT by Pro Publica....” etc.

Cunningly omitted was the fact that Whitehouse had been sniffing at the base of this bomb, at least, since February. The utterly fake narrative thus presented was that intrepid journalists from Pro Publica had uncovered a scandal, and now, the stunned and surprised Democrats were indignantly calling for an investigation.

Not, not and NOT. Not only does the letter “led” by Whitehouse confirm that he was looking for indignation back in February, it reveals without doubt that the Demorats and their scribblings in the media began circling their prey in June of 2011 (see links on page 2 of the letter.)

In that month Think Progress ran a story entitled:

Second Harlan Crow Connected Group Has a Perfect Litigation Record Before Justice Thomas

Ah yes... the ubiquitous “linked to” so favoured by cops lying in their search warrant affidavits.... The essence of this scurrilous report was:

Harlan Crow ... donates the American Enterprise Institute.

The American Enterprise Institute filed briefs in the Supreme Court.

Crow gave gifts to Thomas.

Q.E.D.

It was worse. What Think Progress actually wrote was: “AEI filed at least three briefs in the Supreme Court after giving Thomas this very expensive gift.”

Other than this flagrant misstatement of fact, nothing in the article supports an inference that the American Enterprise Institute gave anything of value to Thomas.

Then, after falsely stating that it had, Think Progress back pedaled, with “To be clear, there is no direct evidence that Crow lavished gifts on Thomas in order to switch his vote in any of these cases."

What Think Progress can't stand is that think-alike conservatives associate with one another and, in doing so, inform and support one another's outlooks. That is true but exactly the same might be said of the Democrats, of any one, and even of Marxists!!!

What it all boils down and stacks up to is that the Demorats are now embarked on a contrived and coordinated campaign to smear Thomas off the bench.

We have never argued that the Supreme Court should be “above politics.” The Supreme Court is eminently a political institution. To think or argue otherwise is just plain stupid. But it is a politics grounded in the constraints of grammar and logic as distinct from that other politics which is grounded in number and power.

The Democrats are degrading both. In consistently, resorting to trumped up scandals and repeated calls for the impeachment of their opponents, the Democrats are turning the politics of compromise and consensus into political bloodletting. They will rue the day; and, if they don't, then we will.



©

Friday, April 07, 2023

Anti-Gunners Gunning for Thomas


Anti-Gun Fanatics know that their efforts to erradicate guns from American society are ultimately doomed to failure when the measures they have undertaken finally reach the Supreme Court. Accordingly, they are determined to unpack the Court by running Justice Thomas from the bench by means of a vicious, vile smear campaign based on false charges and innuendo.

Legal Backgound

Thomas wrote the majority opinion in New York Rifle and Pistol Assoc. v. Bruen, which insulated the Second Amendment from so-called “balancing tests” designed to weasel around and readjust inconvenient legal provisions that are considered outmoded or inexpedient. These “tests” -- which are not “tests” in any scientific way -- are simply a form of rhetorical triangulation through which a law's alleged “social purpose” (given as point “C”) is used to move the law from point “A” to point “B”.

For example, the Sixth Amendment affirms the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses, in the flesh. Alas, a certain key witness may have died. Can the prosecution introduce a hearsay statement the witness gave to a neighbour shortly after the incident in question? Not unless a corpse can be cross-examined. But no problem, the requirement can be “balanced” away: The real purpose of the right to cross-examination is to insure the “reliability” of testimony. But that's not the only way to insure “reliability.” The “trustworthiness” of a statement can be ascertained by other means; namely, by judges taking into account various factors and the totality of the circumstances in which the hearsay statement was made. Voilá. No need to cross-examine the corpse. Justices Scalia and Thomas debunked this “test” for what it was, and restored the right of cross-examination to its constitutional prominence.

Liberals have hated Scalia and Thomas ever since. Liberals don't much care about cross-examination; what really exercises them is taking away a “test” that allows them to read rights into and out of the Constitution, au gout. The debate on how to “interpret” law has been going on since the very beginning of the Court and it is interesting to see which justices fall on which side of the issue in any given case. But, as for the present, Liberals hate the fact that Scalia and Thomas opposed reading gay rights into the Constitution and prevented reading gun rights out of it.

Let's be clear about one thing. The majority of gun-control legislation being enacted by liberal bastion states is patently unconstitutional under Bruen and the liberal democrats know it. They don't care; they are throwing down the gauntlet. This was made abundantly -- indeed flagrantly -- clear by Governor Hochul who took to the podium to denounce the Bruen decision and then vowed to re-enact the very same law that the Court had just declared unconstitutional. The only changes Hochul made was to make the “new” law even more flagrantly unconstitutional.

The day the Bruen decision was handed down, Hochul took to the podium to denounce this “shocking absolutely shocking decision” that had “ taken away our rights to have reasonable restrictions” on guns. [Watch]

Hochul was followed by a parade of activists:
“With this action, New York has sent a message to the rest of the country that we will not stand idly by and let the Supreme Court reverse years of sensible gun regulations." (Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado.)

What the Supreme Court didn’t take into account when they ruled on Bruen is that New Yorkers are tough, and this fight is far from over, (Mom's for Action)

“If NRA leaders thought New Yorkers would roll over when the Supreme Court recklessly struck down a portion of a hundred-year-old gun safety law, they don’t know New Yorkers very well,” (Everytown for Gun Safety)

Our elected leaders in New York have accomplished a remarkable feat today — fixing, in just a few days, a problem the Court has created with their dangerous decision-making, (Mom's for Action)

“The Bruen decision made by extremist, unelected judges was wrong and dangerous, and now our grassroots army is working with our elected officials to make it right. (Mom's for Action.)

Not only was the “revised” legislation cast in the teeth of the Court. Hochul knows it is unconstitutional. Under the “balancing test,” she said, the question was “do the means justify the infringement” And it is precisely that infringement that New York and copy cat legislation in Illinois, California and Washington seeks to effect.

The Smear

But it cannot be effected so long as Thomas, the hated lynchpin, remains on the Court, and so the Liberals have now raised a new storm of outrage over what they say is Thomas' “corruption.” As is always the case with these sorts of smears, the proof lies in the salaciousness. Pro Publica's hit piece starts off with the allegation:
“For more than two decades, Thomas has accepted luxury trips virtually every year from the Dallas businessman [Harlan Crow] without disclosing them. ... The extent and frequency of Crow’s apparent gifts to Thomas have no known precedent in the modern history of the U.S. Supreme Court.”

Apparent? That one word betrays the shabbiness of the work. Ah... but there was not one betrayal but two.
"[Thomas'] failure to report the flights appears to violate a law passed after Watergate that requires justices, judges, members of Congress and federal officials to disclose most gifts, two ethics law experts said. He also should have disclosed his trips on the yacht, these experts said."

Needless to say, Pro Publica did not bother to mention which law Thomas “apparently” violated. 28 U.S.C. § 455 requires a judge to disqualify himself if he has a financial interest in the case or previously represented a party in the case or had personal knowledge of facts in dispute. That was not within the gist of Pro Publica's allegations.

More to the point was 5 U.S.C § 7353 which prohibits “gifts” to federal employees. Under the act, no person “shall solicit or accept anything of value from a person— whose interests may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of the individual’s official duties.” However, a supervising ethics office “is authorized to issue rules or regulations implementing the provisions of this section and providing for such reasonable exceptions as may be appropriate.”

As regards the Supreme Court, the supervision ethics office is the Judicial Conference of the United States Committee on Financial Disclosure. That committee previously carved out an exception for personal hospitality extended for a non business purpose. In other words, having dinner at a friend's house, or spending an afternoon on his yacht, or vacationing with him at a dude ranch he owns, is not considered a “gift” under Section 7353.

From that empty point of departure, Pro Publica went on to list all the non gifts Thomas had received from Harlan Crow. Crow, we are told:
is an influential figure in pro-business conservative politics, [!]

was an early patron of the powerful anti-tax group Club for Growth and has been on the board of AEI for over 25 years. [!]

sits on the board of the Hoover Institution, another conservative think tank. [!]

has donated to the Federalist Society and given millions of dollars to groups dedicated to tort reform and conservative jurisprudence. AEI and the Hoover Institution publish scholarship advancing conservative legal theories [!]
Thomas
boarded a large private jet headed to Indonesia. If he had hired a private jet it would have cost $500,000.00 [!]

Thomas typically spends about a week every summer at Crow’s private resort in the Adirondacks. [!]

gone with Crow to the Bohemian Grove, [!]
and so on...]
And this proves, what exactly?
Through his largesse, Crow has gained a unique form of access, spending days in private with one of the most powerful people in the country.

The extent and frequency of Crow’s apparent gifts to Thomas have no known precedent in the modern history of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Nothing in this crescendo of indecencies shows that Crow or Thomas did anything illegal. Pro Publica admits that “[t]he pair have become genuine friends, according to people who know both men.” What outrages the liberal rag is that two conservatives meet, socialize and talk about stuff. Oh the corruption!!!

Oh the Bullshit

In case Pro Publica hasn't heard, the United States is an oligarchy. It is ruled by a numerically small caste of ultra-wealthy individuals and families, who are interconnected by school ties, business ties, political orientation, cultural interests, inter-marriages and inter-divorces. Take any prominent person, go Wiki and follow the links on who their parents were, who their spouses are, whom they clerked for, campaigned for, worked for and were recommended by.... Within clicks you will enter into the vast incestuous network that is the United States' ruling class.

This network divides into sub-networks according to region (East, West, South, Midwest...) and nature of activity (defence, finance, health, environment, law, social causes). But they are all networks nonetheless and this means that they involve people meeting one another, talking to one another, scratching each other's backs and sucking each other off... literally and metaphorically. If this were to stop, the country would cease to function.

What about George Soros or Bill Gates? Do they not meet up with their acolytes and fund their causes? The billionaire Pritzker family has been actively funding trans-gender causes (in tandem with vested medical interests). Governor Pritzker made two half million dollar donations to the successful campaigns of two sitting state Supreme Court justices. Does Pritzker not have business before the court? What does Pro Publica have to say about that? Nothing, because Pro Publica likes Pritzker's political orientation and is offended by Thomas's.

Bribe versus Gift

Ruling caste networks are noting unique to the United States. All countries at all times are so ruled, and this caste, by whatever name it may be known, always operates on the basis of unwritten (“secret”) understandings and favours. 18 U.S.C. § 201 outlaws bribery -- the giving or offering of anything of value for the purpose of influencing an official act. This is colloquially known as the quid pro quo statute, and it outlaws the tip of the iceberg.

Section 7353 slides down a little further. It prohibits federal employees from accepting “anything of value” from a person “doing business with, or conducting activities regulated by, the [recipient's] employing entity.” Thus, even if there is no express or even tacitly understood qui pro quo, if you have business before the E.P.A you cannot make a gift to an employee of the E.P.A. On its face, this is a form of strict liability.

However, subdivision (a)(2) goes further. It prohibits gifts from a person “whose interests may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of the individual’s official duties.” On its face, this provision would make it impossible for any Supreme Court justice to accept anything of value from anyone, because the very nature of the Supreme Court is to issue rulings which substantially affect either all of our interests or those of large chunks of people.

Congress was aware of the fact that it had legislated overbroadly and for that very reason Section (b)(1) set up a “supervising ethics office...to issue rules or regulations implementing the provisions of this section and providing for such reasonable exceptions as may be appropriate.” In other words, let some committee figure it out.

Not surprisingly the Judicial Conference on [ ] Financial Disclosure, determined that accepting a trip on a billionaire oil-man's yacht was not a prohibited type of gift. This is known as the “personal hospitality” exception to Section 7353. Judge Thomas states that he asked the committee for its advice ands followed its advice on whether his trips and visits with Crowe were required to be reported.

In March of this year, the Judicial Conference revised its rule so as to disallow the “personal hospitality” exception for anything more than being taken out to dinner or visiting a person's home for “non business” purposes. The Conference explicitly affirmed the “substantially affected” clause of subdivision (a)(2). How, the justices of the Supreme Court will abide this rule, remains to be seen. Perhaps they will all have to follow the example of Justice Van Devanter (loathed by liberals because he struck most the New Deal) who lived alone in a hotel room for the entirety of his tenure on the Court and associated with no one except his Presbyterian church and a childrens charity.

But whatever the case, Justice Thomas did nothing wrong and as for appearances, they were no different than those of any other justice on the Court, none of whom have the decency to follow Van Devanter's monkish example.

What is truly choice in all of this is that Ruth Bader Ginzburg, icon and idol of the left, got her position on the Court of Appeal and then on the Supreme Court only on account of intense “personal hospitality” efforts of her husband, a major donor to the Democratic Party. Not a peep from the left on that.

As for the liberal base of Pro Publica, the FemGuardian and the New York Slime , they will live to rue the vicious and vile smear game they have begun with such feigned outrage and fake tears of piety.

 ©

Thursday, April 06, 2023

The Rights of Recruits to be issued Arms....


As viewable on Colion Noire's blog,  some Anti-Gun Jihadist was constitution thumping and declaiming (in an angry tone of voice to be sure) that “The Congress shall have Power. . . To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions; . . . “ and “to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia. “ (Art. I, § 8.) This supposedly proved that there was no such thing as an individual right to possess arms but rather that the Second Amendment did no more than refer to various enumerated powers in Section 8. Barking straight into the camera: “that means you get your militia arms from the government. You don't get to buy them by yourself.

In other words, the Bill of Rights guarantees the "right" of a recruit to be issued arms upon being drafted. Brilliant!

If emphasis won arguments, this crusader certainly won the day. But informed reason and logic are seldom found in noise. What this anti-gunner, who goes by the name of Adrian Fontes, seems to have forgot the Militia Act of 1792, which provided for the enrollment of “every free able-bodied white male citizen” between the ages of 18 and 45 into a militia company...." Section 1 of the Act specified,
That every citizen so enrolled and notified, shall, within six months thereafter, provide himself with a good musket or firelock, a sufficient bayonet and belt, two spare flints, and a knapsack, a pouch with a box therein to contain not less than twenty-four cartridges, suited to the bore of his musket or firelock, each cartridge to contain a proper quantity of powder and ball: or with a good rifle, knapsack, shot-pouch and powder-horn, twenty balls suited to the bore of his rifle, and a quarter of a pound of powder; and shall appear, so armed, accoutred and provided, when called out to exercise, or into service, except, that when called out on company days to exercise only, he may appear without a knapsack.”
So yes, Instructor Fontes, you do get to buy them by yourself. In fact, you were required to.

You also don't get to understand things simply by pounding the literal text of a document. Sola Scriptura may work in mathematics and certain branches of abstract philosophy but in literature and law the meaning of words has to be derived from their social and historical context. Americans have a strong tradition of pounding the plain meaning of words from a sorely-beaten text. Alas, the true meaning of something tends to be more nuanced; and, in our present case, nuance originates in medieval England.


  The Assize of Arms - Hen. 2 (1181)
Whoever possesses one knight's fee shall have a shirt of mail, a helmet, a shield, and a lance; and every knight shall have as many shirts of mail, helmets, shields, and lances as he possesses knight's fees in demesne.

Moreover, every free layman who possesses chattels or rents to the value of 16m. shall have a shirt of mail, a helmet, a shield, and a lance; and every free layman possessing chattels or rents to the value of 10 marks shall have a hauberk, an iron cap, and a lance.

Item. All burgesses and the whole community of freemen shall have a gambeson, [padded doublet] an iron cap and a lance;

If anyone having these arms die, his arms shall remain to his heir. If, however, the heir is not of age to use arms in time of need, that person who has wardship over him shall also have custody of the arms and shall find a man who can use the arms in the service of the lord king until the heir is of age to bear arms, and then he shall have them

Item, no Jew shall keep in his possession a shirt of mail or a hauberk, but he shall sell it or give it away or alienate it in some other way so that it shall remain in the king's service.
In early Anglo-Saxon days, common defence was based on the fyrd -- an army mobilised from freemen to defend the local area or to join in a royal expedition. The idea was simple: a freeman was expected to be armed and to respond to a summons with whatever he had of use in the cause. King Henry's statute was designed to impose some regularity as to what kind of arms a free man should possess. And it might be noted that they were all weapons of war! designed to kill!!!!

(And lest anyone think that a sword was just a silly pokey type of thing. Not. It was a highly crafted very lethal, forged steel razor blade that could clear cut through a limb as through butter. )

The straight line from statute of 1181 to the act of 1792 ran through the entire course of English history. That history shows that the English were an armed people and that collective defence, whether local or national, depended on calling forth men who were armed and trained in arms.

A decree of Edward III in 1363 provided that:
“Whereas the people of our realm, rich and poor alike, were accustomed formerly in their games to practise archery – whence by God's help, it is well known that high honour and profit came to our realm, and no small advantage to ourselves in our warlike enterprises...[be it decreed] that every man in the same country, if he be able-bodied, shall, upon holidays, make use, in his games, of bows and arrows... and so learn and practise archery.” (Morgan, R.B., ed. Readings in English Social History: From Pre-Roman Days to AD 1837. Cambridge University Press. (2014) [1st pub. 1923] p. 150.)
Likewise, a decree of Henry VIII ordered that every village was to maintain targets on its green on which local men were to practice shooting “in holy days and other times convenient.”

This long-standing tradition of the fyrd was accepted as a matter of course by the Colonists. They hardly needed to legislate on the matter for it was simply the custom and usage of the land.

There is a deleterious tendency among Americans to think that upon crossing the pond, the Colonists started a “new” society and forgot the old. On the contrary, the baggage they brought over as much included English law as it did English.

That said, a kind of reverse historical dynamic arose. As one might imagine, medieval England was something of a wild place. There were multiple invasions by or battles with Danes, Normans, Scots and Irish. There were vast solitary areas of forest, heath and bog. As of the early 17th century, England became more settled and urbanized. Even the protracted Civil War from 1649, (when Charles I was beheaded) to 1688 (when James II was run out of town), had more of a modern than medieval quality.

But as 1607 and 1619, the situation in America went backward, toward a more primitive wildness. The only difference was that Danes, Normans, Scots and Irish got replaced with Iroquois, Mohicans, Cherokee and so on. Of necessity, the tradition of the fyrd acquired a new vitality. Thus, it is hardly surprising then that Connecticut, Maryland, Virginia South Carolina, and Georgia all required men to carry arms at church.
No man able to bear arms to go to church or Chappell ... without fixed gun and 1 charge at least of powder and shot."(Maryland)
AND
"All persons whatsoever upon the Sabaoth daye [who] frequente divine service and sermons ... [to] beare armes [and] bring their pieces swordes, poulder and shot (Virginia)
At least two colonies required carrying arms to other public public gatherings. For example a ordinance in Rhode Island provided: "It is ordered, that no man ... shall come to any public Meeting without his weapon." Virginia, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Maryland all enacted some requirements for travellers to carry arms.

Doubtless, as things settled down, some of these expedients fell into disuse. Nevertheless, the fyrd now called a militia remained the principal way in which the Colonists provided for their defence, and no one questioned the right and the duty of able-bodied men to keep arms.

What was open to question, both in England and in the newly independent United States was the relationship between a “militia” and a regular “army;” between local authority (whether called a state, a “county,” “duchy,” or “baronage” ) and the central authority (whether called the “king” or the “federal government.”)

At this point, we have to mention that at no time did the King not maintain a core army. In fact, the whole purpose of “knights” was to serve as a professional “officer” corps, which freemen would support and by whom they would be directed.

When freemen were actively enrolled in the King's army for a campaign, they undoubtedly fell under what we would call military discipline. It could hardly be otherwise. But they were not a standing army.

As of the 17th century, with Cromwell's establishment of a “Model Army” the concept of a true standing army began to gain hold. But precisely because England was at war with itself at the time who controlled the army and “what about the militia?” became unclear. When the monarchy was restored, Charles II's first concern was to disband the army which was almost exclusively Protestant. When these rebanded as “militia,” he went after those. Thus, after James II was exiled, the 1688 Bill of Rights guaranteed the right of Protestants to keep arms for their defence (while at the same time the Crown went about disarming the Irish and taking their horses, to boot).

Things were a little more harmonious in the colonies, but equally ambiguous. Each colony had its own militia system. But, very nicely and free of charge, the Crown also provided regular army contingents to defend the colonies as a whole against the French, Indians and Spanish. The colonists were very happy with this arrangement... perhaps precisely because it provided the flexibility of ambiguity. They only became displeased with the regular army when it was used to confiscate illegal rum, enforce limitations on commerce or -- horror of horrors -- actually protect the Indians!!!

(Oh yes! If Americans actually read beyond the preamble of the Declaration of Independence, which the likes of Obama never tired of reciting ad nauseam, they might discover a thing of two.)

This ambiguous colonial situation replicated itself in the Constitutional Convention of 1787-1789. As is well known, the core tug of war at the convention was the power-relationship between sovereign states and the new national government. This was a repeat, under modern labels, of the old medieval tug-of-war between the barons and the king; at any rate: central authority versus local autonomy. This tugging and its fudging are at the heart of American Liberalism (as opposed to the French varietal which is much more logical but, in my view, less satisfactory).

As respects the army and the militia, there were basically three viewpoints: (1) that of the “radical Whigs” who wanted nothing but State run, popular, local militias and were hostile to any standing army; (2) that of the “moderate Whigs” who agreed but saw the necessity for some kind of standing army or core of trained professionals, and (3) Hamiltonians, who admired the French model, wanted a strong national Army and Navy and (by the way) saw no need for a Bill of Rights, on the ground that since “the People” were now sovereign how could they possibly reserve rights against themselves. (Logique, n'est ce pas?)

In true British fashion, the newly minted Americans fudged. The First Fudge was found in Enumerated Powers of Section 8, which granted Congress the power to:
(a) To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;

(b) To provide and maintain a Navy [note: no two year limitation];

(c) To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

(d) To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress.
Clearly, these enumerations were a balancing act. It must be asked, if Congress has the power to “raise and support” an Army and to “provide and maintain” a Navy, why bother with militias at all? Just raise such armies and navies as Congress sees fit. That's the way Frederick the Great did it! But ...oh no... something called “the Militia” is distinctly preserved. If you didn't know the history you might be excused from wondering what the difference between and “army” and a “militia” was. The text itself doesn't tell you.

But what historical tradition tells us is that those state-based popular armies, based on an armed citizenry, were implicitly preserved. What the Constitution granted was the power “to provide for the calling forth” of them. Huh?

Why the pussy-footing? If Congress has the power to raise an army why doesn't it simply have the power to “call forth” the militia? Clearly, the Framers were ill-at-ease here, so they gave Congress the power to make preparations for that day when Congress might call forth the militias. The last clause gave some indication as to what this might entail; namely, to provide for arming and disciplining the Militia and governing that part of them as may be employed in national service. In other words, actual “active duty” federal control over the Militia only applied when and to the extent the militia were called forth and employed in federal service. Otherwise, what Congress has the power to do is to provide uniformity of regulations and, if desired, funding. In other words, the state militias were preserved, but since the Framers didn't want this to end up as a useless hodgepodge of different arms and regulations, Section 8 allowed Congress to provide uniform standards for such time as they might be employed by the federal government. (Think of the effort to “coordinate” the national armies within NATO.) However, none of this gave Congress the power to take over the militia or even to issue arms to the militia, as a general propostion.

As is well known, Madison and others remained ill-at-ease with the powers accorded to the federal government, and in order to counter-balance Section 8's grant of powers, they insisted on a Bill of Rights making explicit what powers were not granted. It is within this context that the Second Amendment must be understood.

That Amendment killed two birds with one stone. It made clear, albeit obliquely, that the militias of a “free state” were preserved. But it also made clear that the fyrd too is preserved. The medieval and colonial system of a militia that is drawn from a pre-existing armed population was expressly confirmed by “the right to keep and bear arms.”

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I have never been hostile to the argument that “to bear arms” might refer to bearing them “in service.” I think it clearly has that meaning. But within the thousand year arc of English and Colonial history, it also meant to bear them as individuals for general purposes. Issuing from and calling upon English tradition, the Framers expected men to render military service but that did not mean that they were otherwise unarmed; on the contrary, they were armed in expectation of military service and for other purposes. Nothing in legal text or history or social conditions supports such a contrary contention.

Adrian Fontes makes the anachronistic mistake of thinking that Section 8 modifies the Second Amendment. Nope. The Second Amendment was designed to clarify Section 8.

Further clarification was provided by the Militia Act of 1792 which, as stated, went the other way, giving Congress general oversight of the militia. In the original act, the president's power to “call forth” (or “activate” in modern usage) the militia was made contingent on his obtaining a judicial warrant for that purpose. In light of “disturbances” in the West which required swift action, this embarrassment was removed in 1795; henceforth, the president had summary authority to call forth the militia as needed for federal purposes.

Unfortunately, the propensity to use words carelessly confuses things. Many summaries on Google state that the Militia Act (1792) provided for the "conscription" of adult age males. The word conscription implies a standing militia of men on active duty. That was not the case. The Act required the enrollment of males aged 18 to 45. What this meant, in modern language, was that men were registered for the militia, akin in modern times to registering for the draft. The States might prescribe when the militias were “called out to exercise” and/or what discipline should be followed when called “into service;” but otherwise men were free to go about their business.

The popular and haphazard nature of the militias in the early nineteenth century cannot be stressed enough. The language of the statutes are much more “imposing” than the reality. When Abraham Lincoln was a young man, the militia in his district was called forth by the governor to suppress some disturbance up-river. The men gathered together on the green with whatever guns and knives they had and wondered what to do. Well... first thing was they needed a leader and so they elected Lincoln (who was the tallest of the bunch and good at wrestling) to be their captain. Lincoln himself had little idea of what to do and so he ordered his men to march up-river. After marching up and around, pitching camp, and telling stories around the campfire, they marched around and back down, and then disbanded. Mission accomplished. Doubtless, there were other better regulated militias, but what I wish to stress is the popular nature of the militia as free men assembled with arms.

In my opinion, the core theme of the Bill of Rights is to preserve three main popular assemblies of citizens: (1) assembling to peaceably petition; (2) assembling with arms and (3) assembling as juries. In the Hamiltonian scheme there is no need for any of these. Once legislators are duly elected by free citizens, there is no need for the demos to meet and petition (i.e. raise a ruckus). Write to your congressman or vote him out. As for trials, what an absurdity to allow a bunch of untrained and probably half literate yahoos to investigate the facts and apply the law! Law is a matter for professionally trained judges, as in France. As for assembling with arms, if you want to do that enlist in the King of Prussia's army. But this was not the English or the American way. If anyone thinks that juries were much different from Lincoln's militia band, think again.
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A jury of peers

But as Justice Scalia wrote, the jury was preserved as a circuit breaker against judges too much in the employ of the Government. So too the other two rights.

No government can provide for its own dissolution; and, indeed, one of the impetuses for calling the constitutional convention was the need to put down rebellions that had broken out. Government must oppress, otherwise anarchy prevails. At the same, time the Framers did not want it to have unlimited powers of oppression. The original Constitution established a system of split sovereignty coupled with republican "checks and balances." The Bill of Rights added specific limitations coupled to the further bulwark of popular circuit breakers.

Make no mistake, the jury has the power to “return a verdict in the teeth of the law and the facts.” We don't encourage them to do so, but they retain the power so to do. Similarly, the Framers retained to the people the power of popular protest and the power to resist tyranny. In Federalist Paper 10, Madison discussed the risks and dangers of free speech; and yet to abolish it, he wrote, would make as little sense as abolishing air simply because oxygen imparts force to fire. Again, in Federalist Paper 78, Madison specifically notes that the popular retention of arms is a bulwark against tyranny. Is there any child that does not understand that "tyranny" as often as not operates under colour of law and is imposed by those who legitimately acquired power?

To some, the constitutional edifice may seem a ridiculous muddle and hodgepodge. But as Justice Holmes famously said, “the life of the law is not logic but experience.” (N'est ce pas?)

The experience of the colonists was such that while establishing a stronger central government, they nevertheless retained the limited sovereignty of the states, popular powers and the autonomy of the individual as both a responsible and participating member of society. Unlike Justice Breyer's “bureaucratic world of perfect equity” and safety, the system may be theoretically muddled but it preserves the ability to remain free.

In the nineteenth century numerous issues arose concerning what was a “federal purpose” and in what manners concurrent state-federal jurisdiction operated with respect to the militias. 

What can be said briefly, is that over the course of a century, the militias gradually metamorphosed into the National Guard and the Army, which started out in 1790 as a regiment of 700, grew into a standing, professional military, the very thing the Founders had feared. Worse, during reconstruction and industrialization, the Army itself was used to put down “insurrections,” “disturbances” and labour strikes, culminating in General MacArthur's outrageous suppression of the veteran Bonus Marchers.

But all of this is policy. The principle of the matter remains the Second Amendment which stands before and above all else. Attempts to reduce the Bill of Rights to a mere iteration of expediencies reflects a profoundly subversive misunderstanding of the American political concept.


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