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Archive for June, 2005

Making money on the Internet

Posted by Richard on June 30, 2005

Sometimes I’m amazed at how clever students and other people who want to avoid real work can be. The newest member of the Life, Liberty, Property community, Jacqueline Passey, reports that she’s made a tidy little profit at the expense of online casinos competing for new customers:

…  One way they attract new customers is by literally giving away money.  They must figure that most people will lose this money back to them and then some.  Since most people are stupid and lack self control, they’re right.  However, clever players can profit from these free money bonuses by choosing games with a low house advantage (like blackjack or video poker), playing perfectly (with a strategy card) and limiting their play to the minimum required to qualify for the bonus offer.

Personally, over the past six weeks I’ve made $1636.54 at $22.66 per hour doing this.  Not an exciting amount of money for those of you with real jobs, but it’s much better than the wages, schedules, and working conditions of the employment opportunities available to me as a full time student in Bellingham. 

If you’re interested, she provides detailed — boy, are they detailed! — step-by-step instructions. And note that she thinks time is of the essence:

… unfortunately we are nearing the end of the window of opportunity between when the casinos decided, “Hey!  Let’s attract new customers by giving away money!” and realized, “Oh, shit!  People have figured out how to exploit this promotion and we’re losing money on it!”  So the terms and conditions of the bonus offers are changing to make them unprofitable.  Also, most bonus offers are for first deposits only, and eventually you will run out of casinos.  So, get in on this now while the getting is good, but don’t count on it to last for much longer.

So how detailed are those instructions? There are 14 steps, some of which have lengthy substeps. Here is Step 13:

13. Keep some sort of record of your results.  I have an Excel spreadsheet on which I record:
Casino: Name of the casino
Start: Date I opened my casino account and deposited
Cleared: Date I finished clearing the wagering requirement for the bonus
C. Out: Date I initiated cashing out my winnings
Rcvd: Date I received my cash out in my Neteller account
URL: URL of the casino website
Software: Software the casino is running
Group: If the casino belongs to a group of casinos, the name of the group is here
C: Currency I played in (dollars or pounds)
FX In: The foreign exchange rate on my casino deposit
Deposit: The deposit amount in the currency I played in
Dep in $: The deposit amount in dollars
Bonus: The bonus amount in the currency I played in
Bon in $: The bonus amount in dollars
Type: Whether it is a cashable or sticky bonus (right now I am only playing cashable bonuses, but eventually I will play stickies too and want to keep track of which is which)
WR: Wagering requirement in the currency I played in
Game: Which game I played
HA: House advantage of that game
EV: Expected value of profit in the currency I played in
EV in $: Expected value of profit in dollars
Bet: Amount I bet per hand
Hands: How many hands I played
Hours: How many hours I played
W/L: How much I won or lost playing
AV: Actual value of profit (or loss) in the currency I played in
AV in $: Actual value of profit (or loss) in dollars
FX Out: The foreign exchange rate on my casino withdrawal.
Cash: How much I cashed out back to Neteller
Profit: How much profit (or loss) I made at this casino
$/Hour: How much profit (or loss) I made per hour at this casino
Hands/Hr: How many hands I played per hour at this casino
R Profit: Running profit
R Time: Running hours
R $/Hr: Running hourly rate
R EV: Running expected profit
% of EV: What percentage of the expected profit is my actual profit?

But I am an obsessive data freak.  You can probably get by with a lot less information.

Yowsa! Jacqueline, my dear, you are an obsessive data freak’s obsessive data freak.

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Iraqis in Mexico

Posted by Richard on June 30, 2005

Two Iraqis were arrested in Mexico near the U.S. border yesterday. The Washington Times has a long story:

  The Mexican Attorney General’s Office said Samir Yousif Shana and Munir Yousif Shana were taken into custody by Mexican federal agents, along with two suspected alien smugglers, in the Paso del Aguila district of Tecate, some 30 miles east of San Diego.

    Mexican authorities said investigators were told the Iraqis had been advised by an unidentified person in Baghdad that he could arrange for them to be smuggled across the U.S. border once they got to Mexico.
    The Baghdad smuggler demonstrates that the porousness of the U.S.-Mexico border is becoming "common knowledge" on the Arab street, one U.S. law-enforcement official said yesterday.

That’s fairly sobering to those of us who actually worry about terrorism (i.e., don’t live in Howard Dean’s "reality-based" pre-9/11 world). But before you get too worked up about these guys, there’s a detail that neither the rather breathless Washington Times story nor the much shorter AP story (at least as presented here and here) dug up (or bothered to mention). But local reporter Sandra Dibble of the San Diego Union-Tribune thought it was important:

The two Iraqis claim to be members of the Chaldean Christian minority, said Liza Davis, spokeswoman for the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana. Mexican immigration officials have flown the pair to Mexico City for eventual deportation to Iraq, she said.

Just five years ago, Baja California was a major transit point for Iraqi Chaldeans trying to join their family members across the border. But the once-steady flow has dwindled to a trickle, say U.S. officials and members of the Chaldean community in San Diego.

So, relax for now. As far as anyone can tell, there is no Chaldeafascist terrorist movement.

Nevertheless, there is reason for concern, as The Washington Times documents:

    But Adm. James Loy, former Department of Homeland Security deputy secretary, told the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in February that "recent information from ongoing investigations, detentions and emerging threat streams strongly suggests that al Qaeda has considered using the southwestern border to infiltrate the United States."
    Adm. Loy testified that al Qaeda operatives believe they can pay to get into the country through Mexico and that entering illegally was "more advantageous than legal entry."
    He also said the international street gang Mara Salvatrucha, also known as MS-13, was an emerging national security threat and suggested that al Qaeda terrorists may have targeted the gang’s illegal-alien smuggling operations to gain entry to this country. 
    In September, The Washington Times reported that a top al Qaeda lieutenant had met with MS-13 to seek help infiltrating the U.S.-Mexico border. Authorities said at the time that Adnan G. El Shukrijumah, a key al Qaeda cell leader for whom the U.S. government has offered a $5 million reward, was spotted in July in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, with MS-13 leaders.
    MS-13 is thought to have established a major smuggling center in Matamoros, Mexico, just south of Brownsville, Texas, from where it has arranged to bring illegal aliens from countries other than Mexico into the United States. In August, an FBI alert described El Shukrijumah as "armed and dangerous" and a major threat to homeland security.

This is a topic that’s troubling to me as a Libertarian (one of several related to these perilous times and this unconventional war being waged against us). I’m in favor of "open borders" and the right to immigrate — that is, the right to come to the U.S. and live here as a peaceful, productive member of society.

Of course, there is no right to come here and demand that others provide for you. And there’s no right to come here in order to violate the rights of others, i.e., pursue a career as a criminal or terrorist.

Thus, I find myself uncomfortable with the immigrant advocates, who seem most interested in increasing the number of "undocumented workers" who rely on government benefits, not work, and who illegally vote Democratic. And I find myself equally uncomfortable with the nativist, Tancredo-types who seem to want to cut legal immigration to nothing, station soldiers shoulder-to-shoulder along the Mexican border, and deport anyone who isn’t fluent in English.

I’d like to see some kind of rational, reasonable accommodation of the conflicting demands of liberty and security. Given the growing evidence of Islamofascist activity in Latin America, it’s reckless and foolish not to address the illegal crossings of the Mexican border.

How about a serious, highly effective effort to stop the flow of illegals (I’m open to suggestions) coupled with major easing of legal immigration? Make it relatively fast and simple for the kind of people we want (honest, hard-working, productive) to come here (perhaps on condition of no government dependency, i.e., ineligible for welfare, Medicaid, etc.), while making it much more difficult to get here illegally.

If those steps are taken, I think many people will be much more willing to entertain some kind of amnesty / guest worker program for those already here illegally, especially if they must go through the same screening/qualification process to be used for legal immigrants.

Of course, the "I hate furriners" mouth-breathers won’t be satisfied. Nor will the leftists who see dependency as a virtue and sneer at the self-reliant. Good.

If you’re a Libertarian bothered by even my proposed restrictions on the freedom to travel, I understand. But I don’t think you can just wish away the legitimate safety and security concerns in this day and age. I’m not a big fan of the aforementioned Rep. Tancredo, but he made sobering point:

    Mr. Tancredo recently said government reports show a 50 percent increase in the foreign nationals identified as other than Mexican crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. He said some illegals from nations identified as state sponsors of terrorism were paying as much as $50,000 to be smuggled into the United States.
    "They’re not paying that kind of money simply to work at a 7-11," he said.

You also have to wonder who has $50k available — not likely the unemployed Huahacan laborer looking for a job in the lettuce fields.

Update: Submitting this as a supper special at basil’s blog. Check out the other fine fare.

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Mammalian! Mammalian!

Posted by Richard on June 30, 2005

A milestone! I’ve finally become a warm-blooded animal in the TTLB Ecosystem (see right sidebar; and isn’t "Adorable Little Rodent" just a PC way of calling you a rat?). Thanks, readers!

Of course, there are folks who’ll insist that I’m still rather cold-blooded. 😉

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The core problem

Posted by Richard on June 30, 2005

Hugh Hewitt put it as clearly and succinctly as I’ve seen it put:

This is the core problem:  A horrific disfigurement of religious belief into a killing frenzy. It was the motivation behind 9/11, Bali, Madrid, and Beslan, and it is the motivation behind the terror is Iraq today.  The only solution –the only solution– is the creation of societies committed to religious pluralism. It takes a long, long time for such societies to develop, but a beginning has been made in Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan.  The president’s speech was an argument about why perseverance is not only necessary but in fact indispensable to survival of the West.  The cut-and-run caucus led by Ted and MoveOn and Howard et al simply refuses to look the evil in its face and deal with it.  Their dodge is to claim that our troops’ presence is the cause of the evil.  This laughable argument is at its heart a suicide note. 

If you still disagree — did you follow Hugh’s link and read Time’s "Inside the Mind of an Iraqi Suicide Bomber" ? You didn’t, did you? Go read it. Then spend some time at DanielPipes.org and at the Center for Islamic Pluralism. Read the material at MEMRI’s Jihad and Terrorism Studies Project.

Finally, when you really know something about Islamofascism and the fanatics who fuel it, you’re welcome to propose an alternative realistic plan for dealing with the problem.

Realistic. That eliminates "let the UN fix things" and "they’ll leave us alone if we leave them alone."

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Carnival of Liberty announced

Posted by Richard on June 29, 2005

Oops, I meant to post this yesterday:

The first ever Carnival of Liberty will be presented by the Life, Liberty and Property Community of bloggers. The announcement is on the LLP group blog.

The group’s goal is to promote the ideals of life, liberty and property as inherent rights of all humans throughout the world.

The Carnival of Liberty will promote blogging and thinking about liberty and freedom. How to advance the cause, where there are problems, what we can do, who’s saying what, historical trends and ideas, liberty in the news, and much more.

Appropriately enough, it will be presented on the weekend of July 4th, the anniversary of the United States Declaration of Independence 229 years ago.

Please link to the Carnival announcement, submit posts, get your fellow bloggers excited. Entries are not limited to LLP bloggers.

Thank you,

Life, Liberty and Property Community of Bloggers

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Developer seeks Souter home

Posted by Richard on June 28, 2005

This is just priceless! The finest idea I’ve heard in a long time! A developer has announced plans to build a hotel on the site of Justice David Souter’s home in Weare, NH. He’s contacted the local government to begin the process of requesting an eminent domain seizure of the property:

Logan Darrow Clements faxed a request to Chip Meany, the code enforcement officer of the town of Weare, N.H., seeking to start the application process to build a hotel on 34 Cilley Hill Road, the present location of Souter’s home.

Wrote Clements: "Although this property is owned by an individual, David H. Souter, a recent Supreme Court decision, Kelo v. City of New London, clears the way for this land to be taken by the government of Weare through eminent domain and given to my LLC for the purposes of building a hotel. The justification for such an eminent domain action is that our hotel will better serve the public interest as it will bring in economic development and higher tax revenue to Weare."

According to a statement from Clements, the proposed development, called "The Lost Liberty Hotel" will feature the "Just Desserts Café" and include a museum, open to the public, "featuring a permanent exhibit on the loss of freedom in America." Instead of a Gideon’s Bible in each room, guests will receive a free copy of Ayn Rand’s novel "Atlas Shrugged," the statement said.

In case the above doesn’t make Clements’ political leanings clear, there’s this:

Clements is the CEO of Freestar Media, LLC, which is dedicated to fighting "the most deadly and destructive force on the planet: abusive governments," the website states.

The activist says he is aware of the apparent conflict of someone who is strongly opposed to the Kelo decision using it to purposely oust an American from his property.

"I realize there is a contradiction, but we’re only going to use it against people who advocated" the Kelo decision, Clements told WND. "Therefore, it’s a case of retaliation, not initiation."

If he builds it, I will come! I’m sure Weare, NH, makes a nice vacation spot in the fall when the leaves turn.

UPDATE: The Jawa Report is having a do-it-yourself fatwa festival, so of course I’m submitting this post. Follow the link and check out the other fatwa-worthy stuff.

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The difference between us and them, part 3

Posted by Richard on June 28, 2005

In this episode, we revisit our Islamofascist enemy. Courtesy of LGF, we’re treated to Lt. Col. Gordon Cucullu’s account of what he learned on a recent visit to Guantanamo:

Our group went to GITMO to check out tales that the military was being too tough on these terrorist detainees. We left convinced that America is being extraordinarily lenient – far too lenient.

After speaking with soldiers, sailors, and civilians who collectively staff Gitmo, I left convinced that abuse definitely exists at the detention facilities, and it typically fails to receive the press attention it deserves: it’s the relentless, merciless attacks on American servicemen and women by these terrorist thugs. Many of the orange jumpsuit-clad detainees fight their captors at every opportunity, openly bragging of their desire to kill Americans. One has promised that, if released, he would find MPs in their homes through the internet, break into their houses at night, and “cut the throats of them and their families like sheep.” Others claim authority and vindication to kill women, children, and other innocents who oppose their jihadist mission authorized by the Koran (the same one that hangs in every cell from a specially-designed holder intended to protect it from a touching the cell floor – all provided at U.S. taxpayer expense). One detainee was heard to tell another: “One day I will enjoy sucking American blood, although their blood is bitter, undrinkable….” These recalcitrant detainees are known euphemistically as being “non-compliant.” They attack guards whenever the soldiers enter their cells, trying to reach up under protective facemasks to gouge eyes and tear mouths. They make weapons and try to stab the guards or grab and break limbs as the guards pass them food.

Lt. Col. Cucullu reminds us that the Gitmo detainees are a select group:

Of the estimated 70,000 battlefield captures that were made in Afghanistan, only a tiny percentage, something on the order of 800-plus, were eventually evacuated to GITMO. These were the worst of the worst. More than 200 have been released back to their home country – if the U.S. is assured that the detainees would not be tortured by local authorities upon return. These men were freed because they were deemed by ongoing official military review processes to no longer pose a threat, or to possess no useful intelligence. And this process has proven too generous at times: more than 10 released GITMO detainees have been killed or recaptured fighting Americans or have been identified as resuming terrorist activities.

The top commanders at Gitmo seem to be fans of gentle treatment and "establishing rapport" with the prisoners:

Some questioned whether it were wise to give these radical Islamic fundamentalists the religious supplies that ended up landing them in Gitmo in the first place. “Giving them the Koran is simply something that we think we ought to do as a humane gesture,” said second-in-command Brigadier General Gong. “We’re Americans. That’s how we operate.”

… JTF-GITMO commanding officer Brigadier General Jay Hood radiated confidence and determination when fielding challenges from our group about his overly lenient treatment. “It works,” he says simply. … As proof that “establishing rapport” with the detainees is far more effective than coercive techniques, General Hood refers skeptics to the massive amount of usable intelligence information JTF-GITMO continues to produce even three years into the program.

Lt. Col. Cucullu concludes that concern over Gitmo is warranted, but not the kind that Sen. Durbin expressed:

You are right to worry about inhumane treatment taking place at GITMO. But your concern should be for the dedicated, well-trained, highly professional American men and women who are subjected to a daily barrage of feces, urine, semen, and spit hurled at them along with vile invective as they implement a humane, enlightened system of confinement on men who want nothing more than to kill Americans. These quiet professional Americans, who live under the motto “Honor Bound for Defense of Freedom,” deserve our utmost respect and concern. Shame on anyone who slanders or disrespects them for short-term and short-sighted political advantage.

And double shame on those who believe without evidence every accusation made by murderous jihadists, but are immediately suspicious of statements by members of this administration and American men and women in uniform.

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The difference between us and them, part 2

Posted by Richard on June 28, 2005

Last week in part 1 of this topic, I noted that "People like Nancy Pelosi and Dick Durbin are convinced that U.S. detention centers are cesspools of evil, as bad as the worst detention facilities anywhere, anywhen." To further disabuse such people of that absurd notion, Captain Ed offers a look at this story of the ten years of torture endured by a Tibetan nun at the hands of the Chinese:

Ngawang Sangdrol was just 13 when she was first imprisoned by China in Tibet. She was so small her prison guards found it easy to pick her up by the legs and drop her, head first, on to the stone floor of her cell.

They beat her with iron rods, placed electric shock batons in her mouth and left her standing in the baking heat until she collapsed of exhaustion. They called her the "ballerina", because when the pain became too much for her, she would stand on the tips of her toes like a dancer. "The more we cried out in pain," she said, "the more they laughed."

Captain Ed explains:

I point this out just in case anyone still doesn’t understand the difference between systemic torture as policy and genocide as a state goal on one hand, and isolated cases of abuse by rogue personnel who get prosecuted for their actions on the other.

I’m sure quite a few people still don’t understand, Captain. Fortunately, according to this poll, it’s only about 20% of the American people.

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Don’t count on conservatives

Posted by Richard on June 27, 2005

Carl Frank, in a comment to my earlier post about Kelo and at greater length on his own blog, defends the Kelo decision as being properly decided and a victory for conservatism. Regarding the latter, he may have a point — but that’s just further evidence that you shouldn’t entrust defense of your rights to conservatives.

Frank breaks his Kelo defense into three reasons — Text, Precedent, and Federalism — and a conclusion.

The first reason, "Text," contains three arguments. The first argument strikes me as essentially, "I’m not persuaded that ‘use’ and ‘purpose’ have different meanings. And if you insist on a strict definition for ‘use,’ I can posit some silly-ass ways to ‘strictly’ define ‘public’ that will cause the weak-willed among you to give up entirely on the idea that the words of the Constitution have fixed and discernible meanings."

Thomas, IMHO, provides a wealth of evidence for his narrower interpretation of "public use" — definitions and common usage from the time, other instances of "use" in the Constitution, the contrast with "general Welfare" (which could have been employed were a broader meaning intended), the common law background, the superfluity of "public use" if it means nothing more than "Necessary and Proper" — but if you’re not persuaded, you’re not persuaded.

The second argument says that Thomas’ historical citations are "inapposite" because they predate the modern corporation. Huh? Is this a suggestion that, for purpose of determining what’s "public use," it matters whether the government gives your property to another individual or to a corporation? Surely not, so maybe I’m just missing the point. In any case, Frank ignores the point Thomas was making. Thomas cites those early cases specifically because "several early state constitutions at the time of the founding likewise limited the power of eminent domain to ‘public uses.’ Their practices therefore shed light on the original meaning of the same words contained in the Public Use Clause." (emphasis added)

And the third argument within the "Text" reason? Thomas "departs from essentially all prior takings decisions" — um, doesn’t that belong under reason #2, "Precedent"?

Which brings us to "Precedent." Frank begins with examples involving zoning and regulations. These involve use of the police power, and Thomas did a nice job of arguing that "Berman and Midkiff erred by equating the eminent domain power with the police power of States. … In Berman, for example, if the slums at issue were truly ‘blighted,’ then state nuisance law, not the power of eminent domain, would provide the appropriate remedy. To construe the Public Use Clause to overlap with the States’ police power conflates these two categories."

Frank is correct that Kelo is consistent with previous takings cases. But, Thomas makes the argument that those cases were poorly reasoned and "wholly divorced from the text, history, and structure of our founding document," and therefore ought to be reconsidered. Frank apparently thinks stare decisis trumps everything, so those previous rulings cannot be reconsidered, no matter how strong the case against them. I disagree.

Yes, precedent should matter, and we need some stability and predictability. But, no, it’s not more important than restoring the limits on government power that the founders intended and the plain meaning requires. I guess that’s one reason I’m not a conservative — I’ll be damned if I want to "conserve" what should never have been permitted to begin with.

Frank’s "conservatism" regarding precedent forces the proponents of liberty to play only defense in the courts. We can try to prevent losses of liberty and expansions of government power, but once we lose on an issue, it’s lost for good. We can never regain lost liberties or undo government encroachments. No part of the Constitution, once ignored, can ever be restored. I don’t accept that. I’m not content to "stand fast" in a rising tide of statism; I want to move back toward shore.

Reason #3, "Federalism," begins with the declaration that "Kelo upholds states rights." A quibble: states don’t have rights, they have powers; only people have rights. That distinction is important. Yes, federalism promotes the worthy goals Frank ticks off, but that’s not the point. And to dismiss Thomas’ argument as nothing more than "anti-majoritarian judicial whim" is to adopt the post-modern leftist view that the Constitution has no meaning beyond the preferences, prejudices, and whims of a majority of justices.

The purpose of the 10th Amendment is not to grant powers to the states, but to deny them to the federal government. The former is merely an incidental consequence and limited to those powers that don’t abrogate the rights of the people. Hawaii and Connecticut cannot legitimately experiment with socialism. If you want to give them the power to do so, then, for starters, repeal the 14th Amendment. Until then, the protections of the Bill of Rights apply.

[Note: Don’t get me wrong; I’m not saying that repeal of the 14th Amendment would legitimize state abrogation of individual rights, except in a narrow legalistic sense. The Constitution doesn’t grant us rights, it merely recognizes and protects rights we already have. In its absence, we still have those rights, and their abrogation is still wrong.]

Frank writes approvingly of "Midkiff’s refusal to ‘substitute its judgment for a legislature’s judgment as to what constitutes a public use’ and its reminder that ‘debates over the wisdom of . . . socioeconomic legislation . . . are not to be carried out in the federal courts.’" So, this conservative "deference to state authority" endorses the view that the words of the Constitution have no fixed meaning, that the Constitution imposes no restrictions on what the legislature may do in the "socioeconomic" sphere, and that "public use" means whatever the legislature says it means. Thomas dismissed this line of argument with the contempt it deserves:

There is no justification, however, for affording almost insurmountable deference to legislative conclusions that a use serves a “public use.” To begin with, a court owes no deference to a legislature’s judgment concerning the quintessentially legal question of whether the government owns, or the public has a legal right to use, the taken property. Even under the “public purpose” interpretation, moreover, it is most implausible that the Framers intended to defer to legislatures as to what satisfies the Public Use Clause, uniquely among all the express provisions of the Bill of Rights. …

… The Court has elsewhere recognized “the overriding respect for the sanctity of the home that has been embedded in our traditions since the origins of the Republic” when the issue is only whether the government may search a home. Yet today the Court tells us that we are not to “second-guess the City’s considered judgments” when the issue is, instead, whether the government may take the infinitely more intrusive step of tearing down petitioners’ homes. 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. Once one accepts, as the Court at least nominally does, that the Public Use Clause is a limit on the eminent domain power of the Federal Government and the States, there is no justification for the almost complete deference it grants to legislatures as to what satisfies it.

Frank states,  "The Constitution’s already too ‘living’ to waste Berman’s insistence that ‘the legislature, not the judiciary, is the main guardian of the public needs to be served by social legislation.’" I find this perverse. It’s Berman that makes the Constitution far more "living" by arguing that its meanings can’t be fixed, that the limits of government power are for the legislature to determine, case by case. I defy any advocate of limited, Constitutional government to read Berman without gagging; here’s a sample:

… We deal, in other words, with what traditionally has been known as the police power. An attempt to define its reach or trace its outer limits is fruitless, for each case must turn on its own facts. The definition is essentially the product of legislative determinations addressed to the purposes of government, purposes neither abstractly nor historically capable of complete definition. …
… 
We do not sit to determine whether a particular housing project is or is not desirable. The concept of the public welfare is broad and inclusive. The values it represents are spiritual as well as physical, aesthetic as well as monetary. It is within the power of the legislature to determine that the community should be beautiful as well as healthy, spacious as well as clean, well-balanced as well as carefully patrolled. … If those who govern the District of Columbia decide that the Nation’s Capital should be beautiful as well as sanitary, there is nothing in the Fifth Amendment that stands in the way.

Once the object is within the authority of Congress, the right to realize it through the exercise of eminent domain is clear. For the power of eminent domain is merely the means to the end. Once the object is within the authority of Congress, the means by which it will be attained is also for Congress to determine.

That, I contend, is your "living" Constitution — not Thomas. Under Berman, the legislature may define away any limitation imposed on it by the Constitution. Making the community beautiful becomes "Necessary and Proper" if lawmakers say it is, and "public use" means whatever they wish it to mean. When the legislature renders provisions of the Constitution meaningless by redefining them contrary to their original meaning and intent, how is that better than when a court does the same?

Frank’s defense of decisions like Berman amounts to an endorsement of the Roosevelt-era wholesale voiding of economic rights and a complete abandonment of the idea that the Constitution imposes specific, firm limits on the power of government. Are "judicial restraint" and respect for precedence worth that?

In his conclusion, Frank states, "Unrestricted eminent domain would be unconstitutional. But Kelo demands no such thing." Kelo concludes as follows:

This Court’s authority, however, extends only to determining whether the City’s proposed condemnations are for a “public use” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. Because over a century of our case law interpreting that provision dictates an affirmative answer to that question, we may not grant petitioners the relief that they seek.

So, (1) Kelo says the only legitimate question is whether there is a "public use," (2) the precedents on which it’s based say that "public use" means "public purpose," and (3) those precedents also say that "public purpose" means pretty much whatever the legislature says it means. How, exactly, do I distinguish that in any meaningful way from "unrestricted eminent domain"?

BTW, I find it ironic that Frank approvingly cites Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A., given his strong feelings about precedence and judicial restraint, since this opinion explicitly rejects the takings test established by Agins v. City of Tiburon:

Twenty-five years ago, the Court posited that a regulation of private property “effects a taking if [it] does not substantially advance [a] legitimate state interes[t].” The lower courts in this case took that statement to its logical conclusion, and in so doing, revealed its imprecision. Today we correct course. We hold that the “substantially advances” formula is not a valid takings test, and indeed conclude that it has no proper place in our takings jurisprudence.

So, Frank objects to Thomas’ well-reasoned argument for reconsidering the sweeping redefinitions of Berman, Midkiff, etc., and returning to the original meaning of the Constitution, but he has no problem with O’Connor setting aside precedent for the purpose of broadening government takings power further.

If this is conservatism and judicial restraint, it’s curiously selective, standing in the way of any reduction in government power, but aquiescing to any expansion of such power. I want none of it.  

UPDATE: I’ve just come across Friday’s George Will column (WaPo; log in with BugMeNot). His warning to conservatives seems directed toward those of Carl Frank’s persuasion:

Liberalism triumphed yesterday. Government became radically unlimited in seizing the very kinds of private property that should guarantee individuals a sphere of autonomy against government.

Conservatives should be reminded to be careful what they wish for. Their often-reflexive rhetoric praises "judicial restraint" and deference to — it sometimes seems — almost unleashable powers of the elected branches of governments. However, in the debate about the proper role of the judiciary in American democracy, conservatives who dogmatically preach a populist creed of deference to majoritarianism will thereby abandon, or at least radically restrict, the judiciary’s indispensable role in limiting government.

Amen.

Update: Check out the fatwa festival at The Jawa Report. I’m shooting for a fatwa, and there are lots of fatwa-worthy posts there already.

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Technorati embed

Posted by Richard on June 25, 2005

Technorati search is smarter (searches posts only), but doesn’t always work.

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Rove is right

Posted by Richard on June 24, 2005

Today’s NY Post editorial (log in with BugMeNot) starts with a wickedly funny observation:

To judge from the rising Democratic outrage, you’d think presidential counselor Karl Rove came to town Wednesday and compared liberals to Nazis, or Stalin, or Pol Pot.

Oh, sorry.

That was Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Democrat in the United States Senate — slandering U.S. soldiers.

Rove, speaking to the NY Conservative Party, said, "Conservatives saw the savagery of 9/11 and the attacks and prepared for war; liberals saw the savagery of the 9/11 attacks and wanted to prepare indictments and offer therapy and understanding to our attackers." Schumer, Clinton, Dean, Lautenberg, and others started screaming for his head and demanding an apology.

I was struck by two things about the Democrats’ outrage: First, they all reacted as if Rove had said "Democrats" instead of "liberals"; in fact, several of them accused Rove of insulting Democrats and demanded that he apologize to Democrats. I thought Democrats weren’t liberals. Don’t they routinely deny being liberals? Didn’t the Kerry camp get mightily upset when he was described as one of the most liberal Senators? I thought they were all moderates. The mainstream media says they’re all moderates.

Second, their protestations are blatant attempts to rewrite history. No, the country wasn’t completely unified after 9/11; no, the left didn’t unite behind the effort to go after al Qaeda and the Taliban. Ever since the Iraq invasion, the left has adopted this posture of "We were 100% behind the Afghan War because those were the people responsible for 9/11. But Iraq is just a distraction from that. Why haven’t we found Osama yet?" What a load of horse manure!

By and large, the left opposed the war in Afghanistan and predicted massive casualties, defeat, and quagmire almost immediately after it began. And Howard Dean famously insisted that bin Laden was not guilty until convicted by a jury, and complained that harsh accusations against him would prejudice his right to a fair trial.

The Post editorial offers a brief list of examples proving that Rove’s remarks were correct:

But, as Rove said, "submitting a petition is precisely what MoveOn.org did" after 9/11. "It implor[ed] the powers that be ‘to use moderation and restraint in responding to the . . . terrorist attacks against the United States.’ "

Extremism in the pursuit of political advantage? Let’s look at the record:

* John Kerry, the party’s 2004 standard-bearer, declared terrorism to be a law-enforcement problem, one he likened to going after prostitution, organized crime and illegal gambling.

* George Soros, sugar-daddy for liberal causes and Democratic campaigns — and the major money behind MoveOn — said the same thing. He called 9/11 a "crime against humanity," adding: "Crimes require police work, not military action" and charged that the War on Terror had claimed more "innocent victims" than the 9/11 attacks themselves.

* Sen. Joe Biden, now considering a 2008 White House run, said America would "pay every single hour, every single day" that bombs were dropped on Afghanistan in the campaign that forced out the Taliban.

* And Michael Moore, the capo di tutti capo of Democratic crackpots, said he "couldn’t understand" why America was targeting the Taliban, suggesting that we "examine our contribution to the unsafe world we live in."

The list, actually, is endless.

"Conservatives saw what happened to us on 9/11 and said: ‘We will defeat our enemies.’ Liberals saw what happened to us and said: ‘We must understand our enemies’," Rove said Wednesday.

Right on.

The hysteria of his critics proves just how close to home the remarks hit.

Yep.

(HT: Power Line)

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Condi in Cairo

Posted by Richard on June 24, 2005

Belatedly, I went to the Secretary of State’s site and read the speech Condi Rice delivered at American University in Cairo on Mon., June 20. Wow. It’s a powerful and moving speech, an important speech, and I encourage everyone to read the whole thing. It’s five pages if you print it, which you should do — not only is it easier to read that way, but you can pass it on to others.

But, what the heck, I’ll provide some big chunks of it here. As you read the words, think about what it must have been like to hear it delivered — the electricity and drama of hearing a black American woman address these words to a (predominantly male) audience of Egyptian Arab Muslims. A few years ago, it would have been inconceivable that any American would address an audience in that part of the world with such words. It’s still astonishing and remarkable.

Note: I’m quoting a lot of text. In the interest of readability, I’m dropping the convention of italicizing block quotes (I’ve been thinking of dropping it anyway; if you have thoughts pro or con, let me know).

Rice started by saying as explicitly as I’ve seen it said that American foreign policy throughout the Cold War, post-colonial period was wrong, and that this administration has broken with that shameful past and embraced a principled, idealistic foreign policy as being both more moral and more practical than the cynical "pragmatism" of the past:

In this time of great decision, I have come to Cairo not to talk about the past, but to look to the future — to a future that Egyptians can lead and can define. Ladies and Gentlemen: In our world today, a growing number of men and women are securing their liberty. And as these people gain the power to choose, they are creating democratic governments in order to protect their natural rights.

We should all look to a future when every government respects the will of its citizens — because the ideal of democracy is universal. For 60 years, my country, the United States, pursued stability at the expense of democracy in this region here in the Middle East — and we achieved neither. Now, we are taking a different course. We are supporting the democratic aspirations of all people.

As President Bush said in his Second Inaugural Address: "America will not impose our style of government on the unwilling. Our goal instead is to help others find their own voice, to attain their own freedom, and to make their own way."

We know these advances will not come easily, or all at once. We know that different societies will find forms of democracy that work for them. When we talk about democracy, though, we are referring to governments that protect certain basic rights for all their citizens — among these, the right to speak freely. The right to associate. The right to worship as you wish. The freedom to educate your children — boys and girls. And freedom from the midnight knock of the secret police.

Securing these rights is the hope of every citizen, and the duty of every government. In my own country, the progress of democracy has been long and difficult. And given our history, the United States has no cause for false pride and we have every reason for humility.

After all, America was founded by individuals who knew that all human beings — and the governments they create — are inherently imperfect. And the United States was born half free and half slave. And it was only in my lifetime that my government guaranteed the right to vote for all of its people.

Nevertheless, the principles enshrined in our Constitution enable citizens of conviction to move America closer every day to the ideal of democracy. Here in the Middle East, that same long hopeful process of democratic change is now beginning to unfold. Millions of people are demanding freedom for themselves and democracy for their countries.

She then stepped through a travelogue of the Middle East, providing examples — Jordan, Iraq, the Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and ending with Egypt. Some of her descriptions were very positive — justified, IMHO, regarding the Iraqis and Lebanese; overly generous toward Jordan and the Palestinians. But regarding the others, including Egypt, she pulled few punches:

… The case of Syria is especially serious, because as its neighbors embrace democracy and political reform, Syria continues to harbor or directly support groups committed to violence — in Lebanon, and in Israel, and Iraq, and in the Palestinian territories. It is time for Syria to make a strategic choice to join the progress that is going on all around it.

In Iran, people are losing patience with an oppressive regime that denies them their liberty and their rights. The appearance of elections does not mask the organized cruelty of Iran’s theocratic state. The Iranian people, ladies and gentlemen, are capable of liberty. They desire liberty. And they deserve liberty. The time has come for the unelected few to release their grip on the aspirations of the proud people of Iran.

In Saudi Arabia, brave citizens are demanding accountable government. And some good first steps toward openness have been taken with recent municipal elections. Yet many people pay an unfair price for exercising their basic rights. Three individuals in particular are currently imprisoned for peacefully petitioning their government. That should not be a crime in any country.

She made especially specific and detailed remarks about her host country; no pandering here:

Now, here in Cairo, President Mubarak’s decision to amend the country’s constitution and hold multiparty elections is encouraging. President Mubarak has unlocked the door for change. Now, the Egyptian Government must put its faith in its own people. We are all concerned for the future of Egypt’s reforms when peaceful supporters of democracy — men and women — are not free from violence. The day must come when the rule of law replaces emergency decrees — and when the independent judiciary replaces arbitrary justice.

The Egyptian Government must fulfill the promise it has made to its people — and to the entire world — by giving its citizens the freedom to choose. Egypt’s elections, including the Parliamentary elections, must meet objective standards that define every free election.

Opposition groups must be free to assemble, and to participate, and to speak to the media. Voting should occur without violence or intimidation. And international election monitors and observers must have unrestricted access to do their jobs.

Rice then challenged the critics of democracy on a variety of points, including one that we hear all too often from the left (heck, I’ve heard it from Libertarian friends) which just drives me up the wall — the idea that when you prevent someone from oppressing others, you’re "imposing" something on them, denying them their "right" to be an autocrat or tyrant:

Throughout the Middle East, the fear of free choices can no longer justify the denial of liberty. It is time to abandon the excuses that are made to avoid the hard work of democracy. There are those who say that democracy is being imposed. In fact, the opposite is true: Democracy is never imposed. It is tyranny that must be imposed.

People choose democracy freely. And successful reform is always homegrown. Just look around the world today. For the first time in history, more people are citizens of democracies than of any other form of government. This is the result of choice, not of coercion.

There are those who say that democracy leads to chaos, or conflict, or terror. In fact, the opposite is true: Freedom and democracy are the only ideas powerful enough to overcome hatred, and division, and violence. For people of diverse races and religions, the inclusive nature of democracy can lift the fear of difference that some believe is a license to kill. But people of goodwill must choose to embrace the challenge of listening, and debating, and cooperating with one another.

For neighboring countries with turbulent histories, democracy can help to build trust and settle old disputes with dignity. But leaders of vision and character must commit themselves to the difficult work that nurtures the hope of peace. And for all citizens with grievances, democracy can be a path to lasting justice. But the democratic system cannot function if certain groups have one foot in the realm of politics and one foot in the camp of terror.

There are those who say that democracy destroys social institutions and erodes moral standards. In fact, the opposite is true: The success of democracy depends on public character and private virtue. For democracy to thrive, free citizens must work every day to strengthen their families, to care for their neighbors, and to support their communities.

There are those who say that long-term economic and social progress can be achieved without free minds and free markets. In fact, human potential and creativity are only fully released when governments trust their people’s decisions and invest in their people’s future. And the key investment is in those people’s education. Because education — for men and for women — transforms their dreams into reality and enables them to overcome poverty.

There are those who say that democracy is for men alone. In fact, the opposite is true: Half a democracy is not a democracy. As one Muslim woman leader has said, "Society is like a bird. It has two wings. And a bird cannot fly if one wing is broken." Across the Middle East, women are inspiring us all.

Closing: 

Ladies and Gentlemen: Across the Middle East today, millions of citizens are voicing their aspirations for liberty and for democracy. These men and women are expanding boundaries in ways many thought impossible just one year ago.

They are demonstrating that all great moral achievements begin with individuals who do not accept that the reality of today must also be the reality of tomorrow. 

… These impatient patriots can be found in Baghdad and Beirut, in Riyadh and in Ramallah, in Amman and in Tehran and right here in Cairo.

Together, they are defining a new standard of justice for our time — a standard that is clear, and powerful, and inspiring: Liberty is the universal longing of every soul, and democracy is the ideal path for every nation.

The day is coming when the promise of a fully free and democratic world, once thought impossible, will also seem inevitable. The people of Egypt should be at the forefront of this great journey, just as you have led this region through the great journeys of the past.

A hopeful future is within the reach of every Egyptian citizen — and every man and woman in the Middle East. The choice is yours to make. But you are not alone. All free nations are your allies. So together, let us choose liberty and democracy — for our nations, for our children, and for our shared future.

Thank you.

Like I said, astonishing and remarkable. Did you notice she used the phrase "ladies and gentlemen" three times? "Woman," "women," "girls," and "daughter" occurred more than a dozen times. There was no pandering to Muslim "cultural sensitivities," no lowered expectations, no showing respect for barbaric values.

I’ve been a bit depressed and annoyed regarding politics lately — the Republicans’ horrible domestic record, their bumbling and timid defense of the war and foreign policy, the ongoing chorus of negativism and cries of "quagmire" (against all realistic assessments from people actually on the scene), the judicial nominations compromise, the Bolton fiasco, the terrible Supreme Court decisions — it’s been just one thing after another.

Reading Condi’s speech reminded me of what’s good about this administration and why I voted Republican for the first time in eight Presidential elections. Reading Condi’s speech made me feel good and hopeful and proud. And filled my eyes with tears.

Thank you, Condi!


Addendum: Ideas have consequences. Two days after her speech:


AMR NABIL / AP

Hundreds of Egyptian activists denounced President Hosni Mubarak’s rule during a rally in Cairo yesterday. Thousands of people lined the streets and watched from windows and balconies.

© 2005 The Seattle Times Company

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The difference between us and them

Posted by Richard on June 24, 2005

People like Nancy Pelosi and Dick Durbin are convinced that U.S. detention centers are cesspools of evil, as bad as the worst detention facilities anywhere, anywhen. For the sake of argument, assume that we sincerely want to change their minds and that their minds are capable of being changed. How can we demonstrate that there’s no moral equivalence between our soldiers and the enemies they fight? How can we illustrate what makes us different?

Opinipundit suggests that a recent discovery in Western Iraq illustrates the difference nicely:

We have manuals on how to properly handle the Koran and humanely treat prisoners, paying respect to their cultural sensitivities, they have manuals on how to properly torture and decapitate hostages.

Baghdad, 23 June (AKI) – US Marines have found manuals on taking hostages and decapitation during a raid on a guerrilla hideout in the Iraqi village of Karabla, near the town of Qaim, close to the Syrian border. The Arab newspaper Al-Sharq al-Awsat reports that in the hideaway the troops also found several hostages who were being held there by Islamic militants. The hiding place was being used as a centre for the interrogation and torture of hostages, and contained electrodes and other instruments of torture.

The manuals found were used as Jihad (Holy War) handbooks. The first was titled: "How to choose the best hostage", the second covered decapitation and was called: "Rules for cutting off the heads of infidels", and the third manual, "principles of the philosophy of the Jihad", was more theoretical.

The three documents, the last of which is 574 pages long, carry the name Abdel Rahman al-Aliya, which the newspaper says is probably a cover name to hide the identity of the real author. The hideout – in the volatile western Anbar province which has been the scene of fierce fighting between insurgents and the US-led forces – is believed to have been used by the group led by the Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. He is credited with introducing the practice of decapitation to the activities of the Jihadist movement.

Who are the barbarians Sen Durbin?

Good question. Anyone who has trouble answering or mumbles something insincere followed by "but…" needs to be smacked with a cluestick.

I’ve seen a decapitation video. I don’t recommend it and wouldn’t inflict it on anyone. Nevertheless, the American people need to know much more about the Islamofascists — their beliefs, goals, tactics, methods, etc. That means, for those willing, exposing them to some things that aren’t for the squeamish. I’d like to see a non-profit put together and promote to the public some "Know the Enemy" educational programs and materials.

I’m willing to consider force-feeding the stuff to members of Congress.

(HT:Michelle Malkin)

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SCOTUS: gov’t. power unlimited

Posted by Richard on June 23, 2005

This Supreme Court session really sucks. Kelo v. City of New London confirms what Raich suggested: there are now five solid votes that will embrace the flimsiest of arguments in favor of more government power and against the rights of individuals.

At least this time, Scalia joined O’Connor, Rehnquist, and Thomas in dissent. I guess that’s because Suzette Kelo wasn’t growing pot on the property that New London wanted to seize.

Once again, Clarence Thomas stands out as the unbending, unequivocating, principled defender of a Constitution that strictly limits the power of government and protects the rights of the people. He concurs with (and praises) O’Connor’s dissenting opinion, but filed his own dissent because she didn’t go far enough. His sharp tongue and biting sarcasm are evident throughout; it’s clear his opinion is strongly felt, and he rejects the majority’s thinking forcefully.

Thomas doesn’t bow (as O’Connor does) at the altar of stare decisis; he thinks the precedents on which Stevens based the very brief majority opinion — chiefly Bradley, Berman, and Midkiff — were badly decided and should be revisited (references removed throughout for readability):

…the Court replaces the Public Use Clause with a "'[P]ublic [P]urpose’" Clause (or perhaps the "Diverse and Always Evolving Needs of Society" Clause (capitalization added)), a restriction that is satisfied, the Court instructs, so long as the purpose is "legitimate" and the means "not irrational," …

I cannot agree. If such "economic development" takings are for a "public use," any taking is, and the Court has erased the Public Use Clause from our Constitution, as JUSTICE O’CONNOR powerfully argues in dissent. … Regrettably, however, the Court’s error runs deeper than this. Today’s decision is simply the latest in a string of our cases construing the Public Use Clause to be a virtual nullity, without the slightest nod to its original meaning. In my view, the Public Use Clause, originally understood, is a meaningful limit on the government’s eminent domain power. Our cases have strayed from the Clause’s original meaning, and I would reconsider them.

Thomas discusses the original intent of the phrase "public use," arguing that it can’t be interpreted as having no meaning, and contrasts it with the broader phrase "general Welfare" used elsewhere. Noting "the Constitution’s common-law background" (as only Thomas would), he points out that nuisance law, not eminent domain, dealt with land uses adversely impacting the public welfare and cites Blackstone:

Blackstone rejected the idea that private property could be taken solely for purposes of any public benefit. “So great … is the regard of the law for private property,” he explained, “that it will not authorize the least violation of it; no, not even for the general good of the whole community.” …

Then we come to an argument that illustrates what really sets Thomas apart. He actually understands — indeed, insists upon — the original purpose of the Constitution — to limit government:

The public purpose interpretation of the Public Use Clause also unnecessarily duplicates a similar inquiry required by the Necessary and Proper Clause. The Takings Clause is a prohibition, not a grant of power: The Constitution does not expressly grant the Federal Government the power to take property for any public purpose whatsoever. Instead, the Government may take property only when necessary and proper to the exercise of an expressly enumerated power. … For a law to be within the Necessary and Proper Clause, as I have elsewhere explained, it must bear an “obvious, simple, and direct relation” to an exercise of Congress’ enumerated powers, and it must not “subvert basic principles of” constitutional design. In other words, a taking is permissible under the Necessary and Proper Clause only if it serves a valid public purpose. Interpreting the Public Use Clause likewise to limit the government to take property only for sufficiently public purposes replicates this inquiry. If this is all the Clause means, it is, once again, surplusage. …  

Thomas recounts some early American history of eminent domain practice, which supports his reading. Then he dumps on the precedents cited by Stevens and on Stevens for relying on them:

Our current Public Use Clause jurisprudence, as the Court notes, has rejected this natural reading of the Clause. The Court adopted its modern reading blindly, with little discussion of the Clause’s history and original meaning, in two distinct lines of cases: first, in cases adopting the “public purpose” interpretation of the Clause, and second, in cases deferring to legislatures’ judgments regarding what constitutes a valid public purpose. Those questionable cases converged in the boundlessly broad and deferential conception of “public use” adopted by this Court in Berman v. Parker and Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff, cases that take center stage in the Court’s opinion. The weakness of those two lines of cases, and consequently Berman and Midkiff, fatally undermines the doctrinal foundations of the Court’s decision. Today’s questionable application of these cases is further proof that the “public purpose” standard is not susceptible of principled application. This Court’s reliance by rote on this standard is ill advised and should be reconsidered.

Thomas discusses the "two misguided lines of precedent " leading to Berman and Midkiff and then dissects those two cases thoroughly. Here are a few choice observations:

More fundamentally, Berman and Midkiff erred by equating the eminent domain power with the police power of States. …  In Berman, for example, if the slums at issue were truly “blighted,” then state nuisance law, not the power of eminent domain, would provide the appropriate remedy. To construe the Public Use Clause to overlap with the States’ police power conflates these two categories.

The “public purpose” test applied by Berman and Midkiff also cannot be applied in principled manner. …  I share the Court’s skepticism about a public use standard that requires courts to second-guess the policy wisdom of public works projects. The “public purpose” standard this Court has adopted, however, demands the use of such judgment, for the Court concedes that the Public Use Clause would forbid a purely private taking. It is difficult to imagine how a court could find that a taking was purely private except by determining that the taking did not, in fact, rationally advance the public interest.  The Court is therefore wrong to criticize the “actual use” test as “difficult to administer.” It is far easier to analyze whether the government owns or the public has a legal right to use the taken property than to ask whether the taking has a “purely private purpose”—unless the Court means to eliminate public use scrutiny of takings entirely. Obliterating a provision of the Constitution, of course, guarantees that it will not be misapplied.

For all these reasons, I would revisit our Public Use Clause cases and consider returning to the original meaning of the Public Use Clause: that the government may take property only if it actually uses or gives the public a legal right to use the property.

Thomas echoes O’Connor’s observation that this ruling will disproportionately harm poor communities:

Those communities are not only systematically less likely to put their lands to the highest and best social use, but are also the least politically powerful. If ever there were justification for intrusive judicial review of constitutional provisions that protect “discrete and insular minorities,” surely that principle would apply with great force to the powerless groups and individuals the Public Use Clause protects. The deferential standard this Court has adopted for the Public Use Clause is therefore deeply perverse.

Thomas’ conclusion is a devastating dismissal of the practice of following bad precedents:

The Court relies almost exclusively on this Court’s prior cases to derive today’s far-reaching, and dangerous, result. But the principles this Court should employ to dispose of this case are found in the Public Use Clause itself, not in Justice Peckham’s high opinion of reclamation laws. When faced with a clash of constitutional principle and a line of unreasoned cases wholly divorced from the text, history, and structure of our founding document, we should not hesitate to resolve the tension in favor of the Constitution’s original meaning. For the reasons I have given, and for the reasons given in Justice O’Connor’s dissent, the conflict of principle raised by this boundless use of the eminent domain power should be resolved in petitioners’ favor. I would reverse the judgment of the Connecticut Supreme Court.

Bravo, Justice Thomas. Now, can we start a campaign to elevate Janice Rogers Brown to the Supreme Court so that Thomas won’t be entirely alone so often?

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I heart Gitmo

Posted by Richard on June 23, 2005

Thanks to M. Simon at Power and Control for pointing out the newest campaign by Move America Forward:

(SACRAMENTO) – The non-profit group that supports our troops and the war against terrorism, Move America Forward (website: www.MoveAmericaForward.org) has launched a campaign to rally public support for the Detention Center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The “I LOVE GITMO” campaign will take to the airwaves in the form of paid commercials urging Americans to support the men and women operating the terrorist detention facility at Guantanamo Bay.

They have bumper stickers and T-shirts available.

But Rush Limbaugh’s EIB Store has the really cool slogans in its line of "Club Gitmo" T-shirts (although I find the apostrophe annoying):

My Mullah went to Club G’itmo and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt

I Got My Free Koran and Prayer Rug at G’itmo

Your Tropical Retreat from the Stress of Jihad

What Happens in G’itmo Stays in G’itmo

Caps, polos, and coffee mugs, too.

Considering the poll numbers on Gitmo, there’s quite a market for this stuff.

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