“They Fought for Our Freedom”: American Veterans Abused by the Police State

By Doug Newman – email me

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Posted at Liberty Calling, Reddit, Veracity Voice, The Free Thought Project, Liberty Crier and Daily Paul. I update this periodically, as I become aware of new stories. Therefore, if you want to post this elsewhere, please just link to this URL instead. Thanks!


It is easy to stand up and cheer for your favorite government activity. It is quite another to acknowledge what it means in the real world.

There I was. Ricky Recruit. 1983.

Me. Ricky Recruit. 1983.

I almost never try to speak for other people. However, I think it is fairly safe to say that the average military recruit firmly believes that he joins the military so that you and I can live and breathe in freedom. To be sure, he had other reasons for joining, but I think the defense of liberty is a fairly common characteristic.

That is certainly what I thought when I was in Navy boot camp in Orlando, Florida, in 1983. After all, this is what I had been told all my life: sailors, soldiers, airmen and marines defend freedom.

But is this actually what they do?

Consider the following:

  • This Marine lost both legs in an IED blast in Iraq. He claims he was forced by TSA to remove both prosthetic legs before he could board an airplane in Phoenix.
  • This Vietnam veteran in Spicewood, Texas, had flashbacks to his combat experience during a marijuana raid at a friend’s house. What police claimed was marijuana turned out to be ragweed.jared goering
  • Jared Goering, who served 19 years in the Army, including tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, was kicked off the boardwalk in Wildwood, N.J. for walking with his service dog, Gator.
  • Emily Yates, who served two tours with the Army in Iraq, was violently arrested by park police in Philadelphia for asking why she couldn’t play her banjo under some shade trees.
  • Lee Carroll Brooker is a 75-year-0ld disabled Army veteran who used medical marijuana to treat some chronic health conditions. He faces life in prison under Alabama’s draconian marijuana laws.
  • Dimitrios Karras is a Marine Corps veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan. Read about the ATF raid on his business in National City, California.
  • Martin Goldberg of Brooklyn is a World War II veteran whose apartment was subject to a drug raid. Later, the cops realized they had raided the wrong apartment. His 83-year-old wife was hospitalized with an irregular heartbeat as a result of the raid.norfolk 4
  • In 1997, four sailors from the USS Saipan (LHA-2) were falsely accused of the rape and murder of a Norfolk, Virginia, woman. One spent eight-and-one-half years in prison while the other three were sentenced to life in prison. These three were pardoned in 2009. Even though the actual killer is serving a life sentence, four innocent men are still required to register as sex offenders and are still fighting to clear their names.
  • Charles Loeks was 18 and fresh out of Marine boot camp. On a trip home to Covina, California, he was hanging out with a few friends when he was arrested for resisting arrest and nothing else. He spent 21 days in a Los Angeles County jail, even though he had harmed no one.
  • Carlos Jaramillo is a former Marine combat instructor who lives in Onslow County, North Carolina. Watch what happened when he recorded a sheriff’s deputy who arrested him for no apparent reason.
  • Vietnam veteran Jose Oliva needed shoulder and throat surgery after being assaulted by guards as he peacefully entered the VA hospital in El Paso.
  • Yvona Rodriguez, who served with the Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan, faces deportation for smoking marijuana to treat his PTSD.
  • bradford batesArmy veteran Bradford Bates was beaten senseless by cops in Pasadena, Texas, who entered his home without a search warrant. He was wrongfully charged with felony assault and spent a year in prison.
  • Noel Polanco was an unarmed 22-year-old National Guardsman who was shot and killed by New York City police at a traffic stop near LaGuardia Airport.
  • John Laigaie, a retired Army master sergeant, was threatened at gunpoint by police while legally carrying a gun in a park in Bellingham, Washington.
  • Bobby Daniels was a Navy veteran and a private security officer. When Atlanta police were summoned to deal with a hostage situation that Daniels had already defused, they fatally shot him.
  • Douglas Ponischil, a 94-year-old World War II Navy veteran in Charlotte, was arrested for felony possession of marijuana.
  • Homer Wright is an 80-year-old Army veteran who was charged with felony gun use after he shot a burglar who entered his home in Englewood, Illinois.schmidter
  • Mark Schmidter, a Vietnam veteran who lives in Orlando, is served 145 days in a cage for passing out jurors’ rights information on the steps of a local courthouse.
  • Justin Ross of Ankeny, Iowa, was recently discharged from the Army. Police used a battering ram to enter his home executing a warrant for some items purchased with stolen credit cards. They did not find any of these items.
  • Air Force veteran Saadiq Long was placed on a TSA no-fly list. He had to battle for months to be removed from this list just so could fly home from Qatar to visit his ailing mother.
  • Michael Funk, a Vietnam veteran, was fatally shot by police in Neenah, Wisconsin after Funk had escaped a situation where he was held hostage.
  • William Wingate, a 69-year-old Air Force veteran spent 25 hours in jail after he was falsely accused of swinging a golf club at a Seattle police officer.
  • dimaggio ww2During World War II, baseball legend Joe DiMaggio served three years in the Army Air Corps. His parents, however, were designated as “enemy aliens” because of their Italian ancestry and forbidden from traveling outside a five-mile radius of their home in San Francisco.
  • Chuck Benton of Long Grove, Iowa, served 22 years in the Army. He was arrested and charged simply for living in the same house with his son who was growing medical marijuana.
  • While 69-year-old Navy veteran Philip Williams was on an extended visit to Florida for surgery, town officials in West Hempstead, N.Y. had his home demolished.
  • “Our young men and women are being destroyed in endless wars and tossed aside like useless trash in our dysfunctional courts.”
  • Cody Donovan is a former Marine MP who lives in New Milford, N.J. He was charged with unlawful possession of a weapon after carrying a loaded gun into the Garden State Plaza mall when he attempted to help police apprehend the shooter.bonus march
  • In 1932, 17,000 veterans marched on Washington to demand payment of bonuses they had been promised as a result of their service in World War I. Two were shot and killed by police. 55 were arrested and 135 were injured when the United States Army became an instrument of domestic law enforcement. Two of the chief enforcers were named MacArthur and Patton. Yes, those two.
  • Mark England, an Army combat medic who saw action in Iraq and Kosovo was beaten and tasered by police at McCarran Airport in Las Vegas.
  • Deanna Robinson, who was decorated for bravery while with the Air Force in Iraq, was beaten by sheriff’s deputies in Hunt County, Texas, even though she had not committed any crimes.
  • Lucas Jewell, a Navy veteran, was pulled over by a tank in Jacksonville and charged with a whole lot of bogus nonsense.
  • Air Force Staff Sergeant Matt Pinkerton of Glen Burnie, Maryland, faces second degree murder charges after fatally shooting a home intruder in September.
  • nicholas mcgeheeNicholas McGehee, an Army sergeant and Purple Heart winner was fatally shot by Tooele County, Utah, sheriff’s deputies after his wife called 911 because he head injured his foot.
  • Leo Hendrick, an army veteran who lives in Northwood, Iowa, faces up to 30 days in jail and a $600 fine for raising chickens in his yard.
  • Yes, the cops had a search warrant. However that in no way excuses their vandalizing the home of Army veteran Dan Neary of Lakewood, Washington.
  • Air Force veteran Anthony Hill was naked and unarmed when he was shot dead by DeKalb County, Georgia, police.
  • Eddie Lowery, a soldier at Fort Riley, Kansas, spent 10 ten years in prison for a rape he did not commit.
  • These World War II veterans were threatened with arrest for visiting a closed war memorial in Washington, D.C. during the 2013 “shutdown.”vets arrested nyc
  • These Vietnam veterans actually were arrested for visiting a New York City war memorial after curfew.
  • Denis Reynoso was a disabled veteran who saw action with the Marines in Iraq. He was shot dead by police in his Lynn, Massachusetts, apartment.
  • Nick Morgan, an Iraq veteran, was pulled out of a crowd by police in Hempstead, New York, and trampled by their horses.
  • Gary Shepherd of Broadhead, Kentucky was a Vietnam veteran. He used medical cannabis to relieve the pain in his left arm, which was crippled during the war. Shepherd was shot dead by a SWAT team, after they had threatened to cut down his cannabis plants.
  • Mark Brewer served with the Air Force in Afghanistan. Sheriff’s Deputies in Douglas County, Nebraska seized over $60,000 in cash from him even though they never charged him with a crime.
  • James Brown, who served two tours with the Army in Iraq, reported to a jail in El Paso to serve a 2-day sentence for DUI. He was beaten to death by riot police.
  • Marine Sergeant Manuel Loggins was fatally shot by police in San Clemente, California, after giving an officer a “‘mean’ expression”.
  • tommy yancyTommy Yancy served in the Army in Afghanistan and Iraq. He was beaten to death by police near Imperial, California, after being pulled over for a missing front license plate.
  • Douglas Dendinger is a disabled Army veteran in suburban New Orleans. He was recently acquitted of totally trumped up charges that would have landed him in prison for up to 80 years.
  • Valente and Manuel Valenzuela of San Antonio produced sufficient documentation to enlist, respectively, in the Army and Marine Corps. Both fought in Vietnam, where Valente won a Bronze Star. Now they are facing deportation to Mexico because of erroneous entries on their birth certificates.
  • These veterans say they were required to prove they are worthy of gun rights. Our rights are gifts from God that are inherent in our very humanity. We never have to prove to anybody that we have them.
  • William Wingate, a retired Air Force veteran, was arrested and jailed after a Seattle cop told him to put down his golf club, which he used as a cane.
  • Watch how police in Winston-Salem, N.C. harass and threaten Marine Corps veteran James Goins for exercising his First Amendment right to film them.
  • bill swanBill Swan, 80, of Lone Jack, Missouri, is an Army veteran who took issue with utility crews digging on his property. He called the police, who proceeded to beat him leaving him bloodied with several broken bones.
  • Jerome Murdough, a homeless Marine Corps veteran, died in a jail cell on New York’s Rikers Island after being arrested for trespassing. A heating malfunction caused the temperature in the cell to soar to 100 degrees.
  • Marine veteran Gene Vela was shot at three times by Austin police who had banged on his door without identifying themselves. He was ultimately acquitted after being charged with assault on an officer, a charge that carries a sentence of five years to life.
  • Kenneth Chamberlain was a retired Marine and Vietnam veteran living in White Plains, New York. Early one morning he set off his medical alert device. The first responders in this case were not medics, but rather police, who proceeded to kill Mr. Chamberlain.

    Colorado veterans say LEGALIZE!

    Colorado veterans say LEGALIZE!

  • This group of combat veterans in Colorado organized to help legalize marijuana during the 2012 elections. They claim – and I believe them – that marijuana helps mitigate PTSD. If you support any punishment whatsoever for a combat veteran who heals himself with a plant that grows wild in some form within a few miles of you, I don’t care what you tell me. YOU DON’T BELIEVE IN FREEDOM!
  • Stanley Gibson, a 43-year-old Gulf War veteran was shot dead over a total non-crime by Las Vegas police in December, 2011.
  • Army Specialist Michael Sharkey returned home from deployment in Afghanistan to find his home in New Port Richey, Florida, unlawfully occupied by two squatters. The local sheriff says that Sharkey has no grounds upon which to evict them.
  • Dwight Edwards, a disabled Marine veteran of Afghanistan, says that cops in Queens brutally beat him for no reason.
  • Army Staff Sgt. C.J. Grisham, who won the Bronze Star with Valor, was forcibly disarmed for no good reason by a policeman while on a hike with his son not far from Fort Hood, Texas.brandon raub
  • Brandon Raub, a Marine who was decorated for bravery in Iraq and Afghanistan, was forced to spend a week in a Virginia mental hospital over some “anti-government” Facebook posts. (His interviewer here, John Whitehead, is a constitutional attorney, Vietnam infantry veteran and superlative anti-police state blogger.)
  • Air Force Captain Nicolas Aquino was assaulted by sheriff’s deputies in Monterey, California, even after he had provided ample evidence that he was not a trespasser.
  • Anthony Hill, a mentally ill Air Force veteran, was shot and killed after being seen walking around naked by police in DeKalb County, Georgia.
  • Raymond Schwab of Garden City, Kansas, is a Navy veteran of the Gulf War who uses marijuana to treat his PTSD. When he moved from Kansas to Colorado for easier access to medical marijuana, he and his wife lost custody of their children.
  • Decorated Air Force veteran Tim Arnold faces up to 25 years in prison after being convicted on totally bogus charges of, among other things, manufacturing firearms without a license.
  • alexander devillenaMarine Corporal Alexander DeVillena, who had harmed nobody, was fatally shot by Palm Springs, California police officers, who were later cleared of any wrongdoing.
  • Read about the ordeal of Marine veteran Tyler Truitt as he struggles with authorities in Huntsville, Alabama, for his right to live off-the-grid.
  • Alex Horton, an Army veteran of Iraq, was on the receiving end of a warrantless no-knock raid by police in Alexandria, Virginia.
  • James Howard Allen was a 74-year-old Army veteran living in Gastonia, North Carolina. When family members called the police to check on how he was doing after surgery, they shot and killed him.
  • Operation Vigilant Eagle is a project of the Department of Homeland Security that has led to numerous Iraq and Afghanistan veterans “finding themselves under surveillance, threatened with incarceration or involuntary commitment, or arrested, all for daring to voice their concerns about the alarming state of our union and the erosion of our freedoms.” Indeed, merely being a “returning veteran” can have you designated as a potential terrorist.Christopher Dorner
  • We will never know the whole truth about Navy veteran and former Los Angeles cop Christopher Dorner, who was the subject of a police manhunt and media witch hunt in 2013. He never got the chance to tell his story in court.
  • Hector Barrios came to America in 1961. He was drafted and served as an infantry soldier in Vietnam. In 1996, he was busted for possessing marijuana, which he used to treat his PTSD. As a result, he was deported to his native Mexico where he died.
  • Michael Giles, a six-year Air Force veteran who had served in Iraq, is serving s 25-year sentence for firing two shots in self defense outside a Tallahassee bar.
  • Carlos Martin, a 10-year Army veteran, was beaten and pepper sprayed for calling a Columbia, South Carolina, police officer “Dude”. This officer recently gained national attention for assaulting a 15-year-old girl in her school.
  • Matthew Corrigan of Washington, D.C. was a first sergeant in the Army Reserve and a veteran of Iraq. His home was destroyed in a SWAT rampage because it was reported to the police that Corrigan had a gun.
  • raymond keith martinezRaymond Keith Martinez, a homeless and, more importantly, harmless, Marine Corps veteran was shot and killed in cold blood by a cop in West Monroe, Louisiana.
  • Ronnie Hankins is an Iraq veteran. Look at the warrantless search that police performed on his vehicle in Dickson County, Tennessee.
  • 81-year-old Navy retiree Herman Crisp was brutally beaten and left overnight without medical care by police in Georgetown, Texas, who were serving a search warrant for his nephew, who apparently wasn’t present at the time.
  • Jamie Dean was an Army veteran of Afghanistan was diagnosed with PTSD. Upset about his impending deployment to Iraq, Dean had an intense emotional outburst at his Maryland home in December 2006. Even though he neither harmed nor threatened anyone, he was shot and killed by a local SWAT team.bennie coleman usmc
  • Bennie Coleman, 76, is a retired Marine who lost his Washington, D.C., home because of a $134 tax lien that District authorities had sold to an investor.
  • Jeremy Usher is a former Navy hospital corpsman who lives in Greeley, Colorado. He faces jail time for using medical marijuana to treat his PTSD.
  • Mack Worley, an Air Force veteran, was arrested by police in Vancouver, Washington, for lawfully carrying his rifle in public.
  • Brittany Ball, a 23-year-old soldier at Fort Jackson, S.C., was manhandled by a cop at a local bar, even though she had done nothing wrong.
  • Alejandro Natividad, an Army veteran, had two La Quinta, California, police pull guns on him while he was filming an arrest.  He has been called America’s “Tank Man.”
  • Air Force Airman First Class Michael Davidson was shot in the stomach by police in Opelika, Alabama, at the scene of a traffic accident.
  • Benjamin Wassell sustained traumatic brain injuries while with the Marines in Iraq. The Buffalo-area resident was the first person charged with illegal gun sales under New York’s new SAFE Act.erik scott
  • Erik Scott graduated from West Point in 1994 and served as a tank platoon leader. In 2010, he was gunned down and killed by police as he peacefully walked out of a Las Vegas Costco.
  • Scott Olsen saw action with the Marines in Iraq. Later, he would join the Occupy Oakland movement. In October, 2011, suffered a fractured skull after being hit in the head with a projectile fired by police.
  • Derek Hale served honorably with the Marines in Iraq. Although, he had committed no crime, he died after being tasered three times and then shot three times by police in Wilmington, Delaware.
  • Roderick King, an Iraq war veteran, was arrested in Philadelphia after he and his friends had criticized a cop’s driving.
  • Howard Dean Bailey, a Navy veteran, was deported to his native Jamaica when immigration authorities discovered he had taken a plea bargain in a marijuana case in Norfolk, Virginia.seeger pete
  • To be sure, the recently deceased folk singer Pete Seeger could not have been more of a leftist. However, he did serve three years in the Army after being drafted during World War II. He was sentenced to one year in jail after refusing to reveal his political connections to the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1956. He appealed this sentence, citing the First Amendment, and ultimately spent only four hours behind bars.
  • Larry Kirschenman of Nogales, Arizona, served 22 years in the Army and was decorated for bravery in Vietnam. He was brutalized by Border Patrol agents when asking why he was subjected to a warrantless search.
  • Kristoffer Lewandowski of Geronimo, Oklahoma faces life in prison for using marijuana to heal his PTSD.
  • Look at this Facebook group of veterans who, while here in America legally, were accepted into the military, served honorably and yet still were deported. Also, read this article about the Deported Veterans Support House.
  • We will never know for sure what happened in Army veteran Matthew Stewart’s Ogden, Utah, apartment one night in January 2012, as he will never have his day in court. He was in prison awaiting trial on charges of shooting and killing one of the police officers who raided his apartment searching for marijuana. Stewart, whose guilt was never proven, committed suicide in his cell.
  • Shooting_of_Walter_ScottCoast Guard veteran Walter Scott was unarmed when he was shot and killed while running away from a police officer in North Charleston, South Carolina. (This video went absolutely viral.)
  • Arnold Abbott of Fort Lauderdale won two Purple Hearts as an infantry soldier in World War II. He faces possible jail time for feeding the homeless.
  • Isiah James is an Army veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan. A cop in Riviera Beach, Florida, smashed his iPhone 6 even though he was legally parked in a handicapped parking space.
  • Sergio Arreola is a cop in Los Angeles who served with the Marines in Iraq. He was beaten by the police in suburban Pomona for no reason whatsoever.
  • This former Army paratrooper is appealing to the New York state legislature to legalize medical marijuana. He has severe multiple sclerosis and is “forced to break the law to have some semblance of a bearable existence.”guerena jose
  • On May 5, 2011, a Tucson SWAT team approached the home of Jose Guerena, who had served two tours with the Marines in Iraq. Guerena grabbed his AR-15 as is his right, but did not fire. The SWAT team let loose with 71 rounds, 60 of which perforated Guerena’s body.
  • Marty Maiden lived a few blocks from Guerena in Tucson and saw action with the Army in Afghanistan. He posted a suicidal note on Facebook which prompted a call to the police, who shot him dead.
  • Bob Jordan of Parrish, Florida, is a disabled Vietnam veteran. His wife, Cathy, suffers from ALS and mitigates many of the symptoms with marijuana, which is illegal even for medical purposes in Florida. The Jordans face possible jail time.
  • Dakota Serna, a Marine combat veteran who uses medical marijuana to combat PTSD, was not allowed to finish his testimony before the Michigan State Senate opposing a tax increase. Watch the video in this article.
  • Steve Lefemine is a West Point graduate who was arrested for protesting against abortion in a “no-demonstration zone” outside the Republican National Convention in New York in 2004. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court justified the arrest based on a “compelling state interest in security”.treehouse erickson
  • Eileen Erickson’s husband Sid served in Vietnam and died of Agent Orange exposure. Erickson is now in the crosshairs of authorities in Venice, California, who want to tear down the tree house Sid built before he died.
  • Listen to this disabled Navy veteran plead with then-Senate candidate Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) about the benefits of medical marijuana. Listen to the totalitarian response.
  • John Wrana, a 95-year-old Army Air Corps veteran of World War II, was tasered and then shot to death by police in Forest Park, Illinois. His “crime”? Refusing medical attention.
  • John Colaprete saw action in Vietnam as a Marine Corps officer. In 1994, his Virginia Beach home and restaurants were the object of paramilitary-style raids by the IRS. The raid was prompted by a false accusation by a former employee. While you need to watch this documentary in its entirety some time, for now just pick it up for a few minutes starting at the 55:40 mark.joe louis
  • Boxing legend Joe Louis was also tyrannized by the IRS. The Brown Bomber enlisted in the Army in 1942 saying “Let us at them Japs.” Louis never saw combat, as he was assigned to the Special Services Division. While still a civilian, Louis fought some charity bouts and donated the proceeds to the Navy Relief Society. The IRS, however, viewed these proceeds as taxable income. IRS problems would plague him all his life. Please watch this video starting at the 53:17 mark.
  • Adam Arroyo is a Hispanic veteran of the Iraq war who lives in Buffalo. Police shot and killed his dog while executing a drug warrant for a black man.
  • Henry Taylor, a retired Air Force veteran in Louisville, Tennessee, who was shot dead by a local sheriff’s deputy while investigating a burglary at a rental property he owned.
  • This is a fascinating article: When Johnny Comes Marching Home … He Goes to Jail. It is absolutely tragic how we chew up and spit out so many of those we send to “fight for our freedom.”
  • livseyWilliam Livsey is an 84-year-old retired four-star Army General whose accolades include Defense Distinguished Service Medal, the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit and the Distinguished Flying Cross. He says he is “ashamed to be an American” after he was brutally arrested following a minor disagreement with a delivery person in Fayetteville, Georgia.
  • Adam Kokesh won the Navy Commendation Medal as a Marine in Iraq. In recent years, he has been arrested several times for various non-violent protests. His most recent arrest happened after he loaded a shotgun in public in Washington, D.C. on July 4, 2013. On July 10, police violently raided his home and arrested him. He was incarcerated for four months without bond, bail or trial. He is currently on probation for two years. You may not like Kokesh’s demeanor or approve of all of his antics, but he has been very courageous when so many of his critics can’t be bothered to put down the remote.james moore
  • James Moore, my brothah from anothah mothah, walked away from a very lucrative engineering position in San Jose to re-enlist in the Army following 9/11. He sustained significant physical injuries as well as PTSD while serving in the Special Forces in Afghanistan. On the afternoon of March 25, 2008, Moore, who had done absolutely nothing wrong, was beaten to the point of flat lining by Denver police.
  • Antonio Buehler graduated from West Point in 1999, earned his Ranger tab, and saw action in Kosovo and Iraq. (He also sports a Stanford MBA and a master’s degree from Harvard.) Early in the antonio buehlermorning on January 1, 2012, Buehler was arrested for taking a few pictures of Austin police manhandling a young woman outside a 7-11. Buehler has been arrested four times since. He heads the Peaceful Streets Project, whose members work to expose abuse, brutality and overreach both in Austin and across the nation.

There are no doubt numerous other injustices against veterans that I do not know about. Enough to fill a book. None of these things would have happened if America were a free society. As Kokesh puts it, “The greatest enemies to the Constitution are not to be found in the sands of some far off land but rather right here at home.”

I cannot speak to the specific political beliefs of most of the veterans I have mentioned here. Some may be pacifists, while others may make John McCain look like a hippie in Haight-Ashbury. No matter what their individual views may be, the freedom they risked their lives for was flagrantly violated on the streets of the land they fought to protect.

With the ability to carry 192 nuclear warheads, just one Ohio-class submarine is the world's sixth largest nuclear power.

With a maximum capacity of 192 nuclear warheads, just one Ohio-class American submarine is the world’s sixth largest nuclear power.

Society endlessly applauds sailors, soldiers, airmen and Marines for “fighting for our freedom”. It is in no way disrespectful to say that this is not what they do. No foreign government or terrorist group poses any threat to our liberty. America accounts for about half of the world’s military spending. We have 400 ships in our Navy, plus thousands of planes, tanks and nuclear warheads as well as 300 million firearms in private hands. Nobody is going to invade us.

In a constitutional country, which America ceased to be 100 years ago, the job of the military – a vital and most noble one – is to defend the borders, shores and airspace. It cannot protect you from being tyrannized domestically. Indeed, throughout history, armies have been instruments of domestic tyranny. Our Constitution forbids a standing army for just this reason.

Keeping'em free.

Keeping’em free, baby.

Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia had enormous military establishments.  How did things work out in these countries?

I am a Christian who believes liberty is a gift from God – Leviticus 25:10; II Corinthians 3:17; Galatians 5:1. To quote Jefferson, liberty is preserved not by military might, but by “eternal vigilance” against one’s own government at all levels. It is the grossest form of disrespect to send young men around the world to “fight for freedom” while relinquishing that freedom on the home front. soldier letter cartoonFor several years, America has had the world’s highest incarceration rate. Since 2001, Americans have gladly accepted previously unthinkable intrusions on their freedom in the name of “safety” and “security”. These include, but are not limited to: warrantless searches and spying, the suspension of habeas corpus, sexual assault as a condition of travel, rampant police brutality, indefinite detention without any semblance of due process, severe restrictions on peaceful protest, massive ammunition purchases by DHS and surveillance drones in our skies watching our every move. Can predator drones be far behind? And in every election 98 percent of voters put their stamp of approval on perpetuating this monstrosity.

boston martial law 3

Watertown, Massachusetts, on the 238th anniversary of the “shot heard ’round the world.”

On April 20, 2013, Boston and several surrounding towns got a serious taste of martial law. How many military veterans were on the receiving end of this?  Is this what they signed up to fight for?

Stop thinking in clichés. Have a good hard look at everything your media and government tell you. This includes media outlets and parts of the government that you like. Study. Read. Ask questions. And learn that the defense of liberty is not the duty of the military. Rather, it is your duty and mine. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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This Guy Saw It in 1970. Why Can’t You See It Now?

“It is a known fact that the policies of the government today, whether Republican or Democrat are closer to the 1932 platform of the Communist Party than they are to either of their own party platforms in that critical year.” —Walter Trohan (1903-2003) Chicago Tribune reporter (1929-1972) and bureau chief in Washington, D.C. Source: CHICAGO TRIBUNE, October 5, 1970, (Look at us 81 years later!)
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Source: An article I almost didn’t read.

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The AP Wiretap Scandal: I Told You So!

By Doug Newman
Follow me on Facebook.
Posted at the Daily Paul.
If you would like to post this elsewhere, please email me and include a link to this URL. Thanks!
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If true, the Obama/Holder DOJ’s gathering of two months worth of AP phone records is a flagrant violation of the Fourth Amendment.

However, this is not why I write.

Those who will scream the loudest about this are those on the right who paved the way for it with their endless trust in his predecessor, Duh-bya.

For eight years, I tried to tell these people that their president was a reckless spender, a socialist and a tyrant who had nothing but contempt for our liberty. And I did so until I was blue in the face.

These people looked the other way while Duh-bya, along with a Republican House and Senate majority, outspent Klinton by $1 trillion per year and added $5 trillion to the debt. And now they complain about Obama’s fiscal recklessness … even though every dollar he has spent since January 2011 has been spent with the blessing of a Republican House..

They were in total denial when Duh-bya and the Dumbos passed the Medicare prescription drug benefit. This was a massive lurch in the direction of the Obamacare plan they hate so much.
Nothing-changedComes now the revelation of the AP wiretapping scandal, and guess who has their whitey-tighties in a wad: the Obama-hating Right.

In the fall of 2001, immediately after 9/11, it was these same people who gladly accepted the Patriot Act. They told us that we had to disregard the Fourth Amendment in order to “go after the terrorists.” And they implicitly trusted that Duh-bya would not abuse these powers.

Again, I warned them that these powers would one day be inherited by another president. Very likely this new president would be someone they hated and who would only augment these abuses of power.

The moral of the story is one of my maxims: It is always easy to say that the government should “do something” as long as they do it to somebody else.
obama bush blindly

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I Am Not Afraid of Radical Islam

By Doug Newman
Please follow me on Facebook.
Slight revision of something I originally wrote on May 12, 2008.
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“Radical Islam” is not at war with America. It can’t be.

Radical Islam has no command center. As a religion it has no pope or Vatican. Politically, it has no Berlin, Tokyo or Moscow from which to dispatch terrorists on missions of death.

Can you name the last time a Muslim country conquered a non-Muslim country? If not, don’t feel bad. I can’t either. It has been centuries.

Take two minutes and watch this video on the history of the Middle East. Ever since Old Testament times, empires have come and gone. None have been permanent.

Terrorism is a means of venting political grievances. It is not a philosophy of government. Terrorists don’t even control the government of Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries on earth. So this idea that they are going to come to America, take over, and force us all to speak Arabic, submit to shari’a law and pray to Mecca five times a day is indescribably absurd.

The Islamic world is militarily irrelevant. Consider Iraq. It had no navy or air force. American planes flew thousands of missions over Iraq between 1991 and 2003, and not a single one was shot down. In 2003, Iraq had a military budget of $1.3 billion – enough to build two stadiums here in America.

I hear the train a-coming … But isn’t Iran about to get a nuke? Even if they do, Israel has hundreds of nukes and America has thousands. Pakistan, with a far larger Muslim population, has nukes and no one has their skivvies in a wad about them. Besides, when was the last time Iran invaded another country?

And as bad as the hostage crisis of 1979-81 was, it did not result in the death of a single American.

Terrorists do not “hate us for our freedom and democracy.” While America is not as free as most people think, we still have a measure of freedom. Many other countries have a similar measure of freedom, as well as democratically elected governments. And they have no terror problem.

When you have a military presence in 130 countries and you insist on throwing your weight around to the extent that America does, you will inevitably have a few folks hating on you. The Bible teaches that you reap what you sow and that if you live by the sword you die by the sword.

us military bases around the world

It is a lie that “if we don’t fight them over there, we will fight them over here.” I don’t worship at the altar of Ronald Reagan, but I will give him this: after 240 Marines were killed in a suicide bombing in Lebanon in 1983, he pulled the Marines out of Lebanon. Lebanese terrorists didn’t “follow us here.” Britain once had a terror problem in Kenya. And when they granted independence to Kenya, the problem of Kenyan terrorism went away. France, likewise, once had a problem with terrorism in Algeria. And then, when they granted independence to Algeria – budda bing budda boom – the Algerian terror problem went away. As Pat Buchanan has said, terrorism is the price a nation pays for having an empire.

9119/11 was an attack, not an invasion. This is not just a matter of semantics. There was no invading Army. There was no naval battle group in New York Harbor or Chesapeake Bay. There were no aerial bombing raids by the terrorist Luftwaffe. There were no amphibious raids in by jihad jarheads in Battery Park and along the Jersey Shore.

Moreover, the 19 hijackers are DEAD!!! You cannot take over a country and establish an Islamofascist dictatorship and do all kinds of horrible things WHEN YOU ARE DEAD!!!

There is a Constitutional provision for dealing with things like terrorism. Article I, Section 8 authorizes Congress to “grant Letters of Marque & Reprisal.” Wikipedia defines this as an official warrant or commission from a government authorizing the designated agent to search, seize, or destroy specified assets or personnel belonging to a foreign party which has committed some offense under the laws of nations against the assets or citizens of the issuing nation”.

letter of marqueThe response must be in proportion to the offense. 9/11 was not an act of war by a foreign nation, but an act of gang violence against American people and property. Let Congress authorize the pursuit and apprehension of the specific perpetrators, but don’t launch an endless, ruinously expensive, unwinnable war against a tactic.

Oh how I wish this thought were mine: if 19 Americans went overseas and committed some horrendous crime, would that justify a decades-long war against America?

Shortly after 9/11, the Marque and Reprisal Act of 2001 was introduced by – surprise! – Congressman Ron Paul.

I hear another train a-coming: But aren’t American judges now ruling based on shari’a law? Isn’t shari’a coming to America? Under Article 6, Paragraph 2 of the Constitution, “judges in every state” are bound to uphold the Constitution as the “supreme Law of the Land.” Let’s impeach those judges who rule based on shari’a. Let’s stand firm in defense of our Constitution and stop using Islamophobia was a reason to wage war all over the globe.

The Boston Marathon bombings were a horrible crime and I don’t want to minimize the grief of those affected. However, on an average day in America there are 40 murders and 80 automotive fatalities. This makes for 2280 deaths from just these causes in the last 19 days, or 760 times the death toll. You have a far greater chance of dying from many causes other than terrorism. (Please click here, here and here for my thoughts on the aftermath.)

The Nazis didn’t do it. The Communists didn’t do it. But the American people tolerate it in the name of “security.”

Over the last several decades, the American people have tolerated innumerable intrusions on their liberty in the name of “security”. The greatest threat to our liberty comes not from the Muslim world, or even from Washington, D.C. Rather, it comes from a populace that willingly surrenders its freedom, while all the while believing it can remain free.

H.L. Mencken once stated that “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed — and thus clamorous to be led to safety — by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.“

The left wants us to freak out and to give up all our freedom in the name of fighting global warming. The right wants us to freak out and to give up all our freedom in the name of fighting terrorism. As LewRockwell.com’s Butler Shaffer has put it: left and right are actually two wings of the same bird of prey. The war on terror is a war on you and me.

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Lockdowns Do Not Keep You Safe – Letter to the Denver Post

By Doug Newman – please email me.
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Published in the Denver Post.
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Editor:

If Denver and the surrounding area were ever subject to a Boston-style lockdown, I would not feel safe or secure. That is because I would not be safe or secure. None of us would be.

Imagine if a terrorist armed with explosives were holed up in the house next to yours. Would you want to be forced to remain in your house? Or would you like the option of being able to leave your house – and your neighborhood altogether – for your own safety without asking permission or risking arrest? I don’t know about you, but I would certainly choose the latter.

If you cannot freely flee from danger, what rights do you truly have?

Locking people down and forcing them to remain in dangerous situations does not protect them. This is not just a philosophical matter of rights. It is a profoundly practical matter of personal safety as well.

Douglas F. Newman
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boston martial law 3

The 238th anniversary of the “shot heard ’round the world.”


madison quote

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“Sometimes Martial Law Is Necessary”

By Doug Newman – please email me
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“Sometimes Martial Law Is Necessary”

Thus read a response to my Friday column about the lockdown of 1 million people during the manhunt for one of the Boston Marathon bombing suspects. I didn’t “write” that so much as I slapped together a bunch of random thoughts.

I just want to say that I am honored by the response that this received by viral “sharing” of it on Facebook. Thank you, everyone.
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Here are some more random bullet points.

1.       On April 19, 1995, a few hours after the bombing of the Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, a coworker commented on how easy it was for people to just “drive up anywhere”. I asked her if she would prefer to live an alternative kind of society where moving around freely was not an option. Boston on April 19, 2013 was just such a place. The inability to travel freely is a common feature of all totalitarian societies.

The right to travel freely is a prerequisite of liberty.

The Berlin Wall.

    2. If a million people in and around Boston can be put on lockdown for one day, why can’t a million people elsewhere be put on lockdown for 3 or 4 or even more days sometime in the not-too-distant future?

       3. And why were just Boston and some surrounding towns on lockdown? I mean, like, the suspect could have fled to Cape Cod, Worcester, Springfield or Williamstown. Or, he could have crossed state lines. Why not put all of New England and New York on lockdown?

boston martial law 2  4. “But what if the terrorist was on the loose in your neighborhood?” you ask. “Wouldn’t you feel safer being on lockdown?” No, actually I wouldn’t feel safer at all. And while I would certainly appreciate notice that an intensive manhunt was underway, I would also like the opportunity to get the hell out of my neighborhood for my own safety. And you can’t very well do that when you are on lockdown.

5.       5. If you are a “conservative” who approves of the Beantown Lockdown, DON’T EVER complain to me again about nationalized health care, the IRS, gun control or any other big government program. None of these ever resulted in a million people not being able to leave their homes. You deserve every ounce of big government you get.

boston martial law 3

They hate us for our freedom.

6. 6. What  is the next step after a lockdown? Drone strikes? All of America is now a battlefield in the war on terror. And there could be a “suspected militant” right in your neighborhood – a scary looking guy with a name you can’t pronounce from a country you can’t find on a map where the military budget is less than the payroll for the Red Sox infield.  So what if 100 innocent people are killed by a Hellfire missile “if it gets the bad guy.”

drones your house

7.   7. Why not also internment camps for Chechens, Muslims, etc.? I mean, like, desperate times call for desperate measures.

8.      8. “Sometimes you have to give up liberty to have security.” They sang the exact same song in Germany in 1933 as they gave up their liberty for 12 years of sicherheit.

9.      9. And if you don’t think Uncle Sam would kill innocent Americans en masse, think again. And consider the Branch Davidians, the Trail of Tears, the Sand Creek Massacre, Wounded Knee and the War of Northern Aggression from 1861-1865.

        10. About 40 people are murdered every day in America. About 280 have been murdered in the last week. Why do the 4 Boston killings – 3 at the Marathon and the cop at MIT – get all the attention? (And this is not to minimize the grief of those affected by these killings.) Fourteen people perished in the plant explosion in West, Texas, and that has not been nearly as much of a showstopper as the Boston bombing.

Please don't shout as they fiddle about.11. If you think the warrantless searches during the lockdown were “reasonable” because there was a manhunt for a terrorist, do you likewise believe that it is “reasonable” for TSA to molest children at airports?

     12.If you tolerate locking down schools for the safety of the students, why wouldn’t they take the next step and put whole cities on lockdown?

Aurora, June 2, 2012

Aurora, June 2, 2012

    13.If you approve of the police in Aurora, Colorado – where I live – detaining 40 innocent people for 2 hours in order to apprehend one bank robbery suspect, why wouldn’t police restrict the liberty of 1 million people for a whole day?

      14.   If you cheered on the police authorities in Southern California as they shot at innocent people as they hunted down and killed Christopher Dorner with no due process, why wouldn’t cops put entire cities on lockdown to catch a fugitive?

boston celebrating

      15.   It does not surprise me at all that so many chowds celebrated the capture of Dzhokar Tsarnaev while not minding at all that they had been under martial law for the better part of a day. Since 9/11, many millions – perhaps even a majority – of Americans have gladly accepted – in the name of “safety” and “security”: warrantless searches and spying, the suspension of habeas corpus, sexual assault as a condition of travel, rampant police brutality, indefinite detention without any semblance of due process, severe restrictions on peaceful protest and surveillance drones in our skies watching our every move. Are predator drones next?

     16. You will note that I have not mentioned the names of any politicians here. It does not matter at all whom we elect anymore. When you grant unconstitutional power to a president that you like and trust, please know that the next president will inherit and, inevitably, augment these unconstitutional powers.

     17.  “The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all times, and under all circumstances. No doctrine, involving more pernicious consequences, was ever invented by the wit of man than that any of its provisions can be suspended during any of the great exigencies of government. Such a doctrine leads directly to anarchy or despotism.” — U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Davis, Ex Parte Milligan (1866)

     18.   At the “4/20” marijuana rally in Denver on Saturday, 2 people were shot and a third was grazed by a bullet. As this column goes to bed, the suspect remains at large. Should metro Denver – including Aurora, where I live – be put on lockdown for everyone’s “safety”?

      19.   If you profess a belief in Jesus, who would He subject to martial law?

      20.   Do you believe everything the government and their media lapdogs tell you?

terrorism tv

boston resisting

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“But they got the suspect.” … THAT’S NOT THE POINT!!!!!!!

By Doug Newman – please email me
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Also posted at Red State Eclectic and Three Stooges.
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 “The welfare of humanity is the alibi of tyrants.” – Albert Camus

Here are 30 thoughts about the martial law which was imposed on Boston in the name of apprehending one bombing suspect.

1.       The Marathon bombings constituted a horrible crime. Likewise for the killing of the MIT police officer. Thoughts, prayers and condolences need to be offered to all affected.

2.       The suspects could be totally guilty.

3.        The suspects could be totally innocent.

4.       The suspects were at large for over 3 days, but Boston was not on lockdown. Then, all of a sudden, it was deemed necessary to put Boston and several surrounding towns on lockdown.
boston martial law

5.        Is this the way it is going to be now in the aftermath of high profile crimes?

6.        Will the American people continue to tolerate it?

7.        If the answer to #6 is “yes”, this is ought to frighten you more than any terrorist. The cops are the business end of the government. And when they can put whole cities on lockdown, what can’t they – or any government entity – do? What is the next step after this?

boston girl tank

Just what kind of America awaits this young girl?

8.        I am all good with cops pursuing violent criminals. This does not justify martial law.

9.        Why am I concerned about rights at a time when suspected terrorists are on the loose? Because it is in times like this when governments want to take away liberty and people are more than willing to give up their liberty – in the name of “security”.

10.    There wasn’t a lot of street crime in Nazi Germany or Soviet Russia. The cops could do as they pleased. Would you want to live in either place? How “safe” would you feel?

11.    The most dangerous criminals have always been in governments. They have always sent police to do their dirty work. They always dress things up in the name of some higher good.

12.   238 years ago today, near Boston, “the shot heard ’round the world” was fired. King George III did a lot of bad things. Did he ever put an entire city on lockdown?

lexington 1775

Lexington Green. 13 miles from Boston. 238 years ago today.

13.   The lockdown of Boston in pursuit of one accused terrorist came on the 20th anniversary of the torching by the feds of 80 innocent citizens near Waco. This was a trial balloon that was floated before a brainwashed nation to see just how much Uncle Sam could get away with. As it turns out, he can get away with just about anything.

Where was the Texas National Guard?

14. The lockdown of Boston came on the 18th anniversary of the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City. Several witnesses claim to have seen a suspect known only as John Doe #2. A fugitive suspect in a bombing that killed 168 people did not cause the area around OKC to be put on lockdown. Why, then, was it necessary to put Boston and several suburbs under martial law after the killing of four people?

okc

15.   “But these were local police”, you say. Police have become more and more militarized and federalized in recent years, especially since 9/11.

Boston-martial-law15

Can anyone here say “occupying army”?

16.   The media parrot everything the authorities say.

17.   Millions of Americans believe everything the mainstream media says.

18.   Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Mark Levin, etc. etc. are part of this mainstream media.

19.   The 5th Amendment demands due process regardless of the severity of the charges or the weight of public opinion against the defendant.

20.   The 6th Amendment spells out the details of due process.

21.   If these protections don’t apply to the suspects here, they don’t apply to you or me either.

22.   If you will cheer on the authorities in this instance, you had just better hope and pray that you are never falsely accused of anything.

Boston-martial-law3

23.   Most criminals are not Muslim.

24.   99-plus percent of Muslims are not violent criminals.

25.   The most violent demographic in America is unmarried men. Let’s go after THEM! Oh, wait. Let’s not. I am an unmarried man.

26.   It is always easy to say that your government should “do something” as long as they do it to somebody else.

boston military cops

From the Boston Globe – April 19, 2013

27. NEVER GIVE UP YOUR GUNS! They are your last line of defense against any kind of crazies – be they terrorists or rogue police.

28. How many military veterans who “fought for our freedom” were on the receiving end of Friday’s lockdown?

29. You will note that I have not said anything about conspiracies, “false flags”, etc. Even if everything the authorities are saying  is entirely true, their reaction to the Boston Marathon bombings is totally grotesque and tyrannical.

30.   Dear God, why did You task me with being a “watchman on the wall”? (Ezekiel 33:6) Why do I have to be the bearer of this kind of news? Why couldn’t You give me a “nicer” ministry?

there was a time
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In the end, it was not martial law that caught Tsarneav, but a common citizen defying martial law by leaving his house in defiance of orders.
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Moral Indifference about Waco

By Doug Newman
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Published in the Rocky Mountain News on September 23, 1999.
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NOTE: The murder of 80 innocent people at the Branch Davidian compound 20 years ago today was a test run to see just how much the feds could get away with. As it turns out, they can get away with just about anything with the blessing of the majority of the American people.
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Editor:

One need not be a psychopath in a cave in Montana to be indignant about the atrocities committed at Waco in the spring of 1993. The incineration of 80 people, without any due process, was one of the most horrifying events in recent memory.

In his September 5 column, Mike Littwin speaks of the recent revelations about FBI actions in the Waco tragedy. He writes, “The sound you’re hearing is the full-throated roar of vindication from conspiracy theorists everywhere.” It is as if only lunatic fringe types would attribute this massacre to a government run amok. Over the last six years, I have talked with plenty of people of all political stripes who express horror at the Waco massacre.

 David Koresh was a wacko, as was anyone who would follow him. There is a difference, however, between being a kook and being a criminal. The Branch Davidians lived for years on the outskirts of Waco, and did nothing to harm those in the area. If the feds felt Koresh violated any laws, they could have served him a warrant on one of his very frequent trips into town. There was no justification whatsoever for the amount of firepower with which the feds surrounded the Davidian compound.

Oh sure, Waco made for sensational television. This could only happen in an intellectually and morally bankrupt nation. The nonchalant response of so many Americans shows how far we have drifted from our dual moorings of constitutionalism and limited government. Time and again we hear that, because the Davidians were so weird, their rights were just not that important. (The silence about Waco from mainstream Christian pulpits has been particularly appalling. What if the feds had torched a community of traditional Christians similar to those described in the biblical book of Acts?)

The government’s quest for truth and justice concerning Waco has been about as vigorous as O.J. Simpson’s search for Ron and Nicole’s real killers. Bill Clinton is not Hitler, and Janet Reno is not Himmler. However, Waco happened on their watch. Freedom lovers everywhere should be highly indignant about this tragedy. That Clinton and Reno could carry out such an atrocity with impunity suggests that America is heading in a dangerous direction.

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Gang Violence: What Would Libertarians Do?

By Doug Newman
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Originally posted elsewhere on January 12, 2007.
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RB is a Christian friend who is of sound mind on political matters. He is no fan of either the present administration or of big government in general. He writes:

“I watched Peter Boyles’ talk show last night on PBS. They covered gangs and the Darrent Williams’ murder and all that gang-related stuff. Denver is not LA or NY, but we have a problem with gangs, something the politicians, churches (not the inner city churches) and us honkies in south suburban-land (i.e. Littleton, Centennial, Highlands Ranch) are not willing to look at or deal with. Your thoughts on that subject, especially being from back East, etc.”

darrent07I replied:

Thanks for writing. The tragic shooting death of Bronco cornerback Darrent Williams may well have been gang related. Thus it has got everyone asking: “What should we do about gangs and gang violence?” My thoughts on the subject are shaped not so much by my growing up in New Jersey – in a honky suburb – but by my Christianity and libertarianism.

People who ask “what should we, as a society, do” about a given problem always conclude that we need more laws, policies and programs as if we did not have enough already. America has more social programs than any other country on the planet.

Insanity is doing the same thing again and again and expecting different results. We drive ourselves crazy enacting more and more laws, policies and programs while the problems we attempt to solve get worse and worse.

Here are just a few suggestions:

  • The words “solve” and “problems” do not appear in the Constitution. The idea that government could solve problems was totally foreign to the Founders. Moreover, the idea that we could render our problems unto Caesar so the he could solve them has zero basis in Scripture. Utopia is not an option. Gang violence will never be totally eliminated no matter how many laws, programs and policies are in place.US_incarceration_rate_timeline
  • End this absolutely insane War on Drugs, which is totally unconstitutional under the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. We have a nightmare on our hands that we never could have envisioned in 1937 when we started outlawing hippy lettuce. After 70 years and God knows how many billions of dollars, we have more drugs than ever; more dangerous drugs than ever and – in the land of the free – the world’s highest incarceration rate. Moreover, just as alcohol prohibition resulted in huge profits for the likes of Al Capone and Joe Kennedy, Sr., drug prohibition makes drug trafficking extremely lucrative for the Crips, the Bloods, MS-13, etc. (Moreover, because it is illegal, drug dealing is a cash business and tax free.) Legalizing drugs would minimize the profit and largely defund the gangs.
  • Repeal all gun laws. The original gun laws in America were put in place to disarm racial minorities. Gun control only disarms law abiding citizens. Criminals, by definition, have zero respect for gun laws. Compton, Bed-Stuy and New Orleans’ Ninth Ward are killing fields because only the criminals have guns. Let everyone be armed, keep would-be criminals guessing and watch the crime rate plummet.minimum wage cartoon
  • Repeal all minimum wage laws. If you know anything whatsoever about economics, you know that when you mandate a price above the market price, you immediately create a surplus of the commodity in question. Unskilled labor is no exception to this rule. Why is teenage unemployment so tragically high in the inner cities? It is because Uncle Sam has forced employers to pay an unjustifiably high wage to unskilled workers. Where is a teenager in the hood better off? Employed at $4 per hour or unemployed because of a mandated wage of $6.85 per hour? The true minimum wage is zero. No wonder drug dealing looks so appealing.
  • Stop asking Uncle Sam to be our national parent. Someone once remarked that while Democrats want to be your Mommy and Republicans want to be your Daddy, libertarians believe you are an adult and that you can look after yourself. Seventy-plus years after the New Deal, forty-plus years after the Great Society and fifteen years after Dan Quayle’s “family values” speech, I think we can conclude one thing: there is no substitute for family. The family is God’s primary form of government. Families were a whole lot stronger and effective and morals were a world stronger before we started asking government to solve all our problems. 

As a friend used to say, if the only tool you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. If the only tool you have is government, every problem looks like it can be solved by a law, a policy or a program. Again, America has more of this nonsense than any other society in history. All this micromanaging has not worked and will never work.

It didn’t save the life of Darrent Williams. More of the same would still not have saved the life of Darrent Williams.
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“Don’t Tempt Us” – the article that prompted me to post this again.
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Walter Block wrote something quite similar on LewRockwell.com today.
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None Dare Call It Dictatorship

By Doug Newman
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Patriot Act, Military Commissions Act, Faith-Based Initiative, No Child Left Behind, Medicare Part D, TSA, DHS, two undeclared wars, taxvictim funding for the baby killers at Planned Parenthood, outspending Kim Jong-Bill Klinton by $1 trillion per year and adding $5 trillion to the debt, and much more … if any Democrat president did this the outrage from the Right would be endless. However, when GWB did all these things, those on the right looked the other way. If you didn’t hold Bush accountable, please don’t moan and groan at me about Obama. He is EXACTLY who you deserve.

This was originally published on March 17, 2002.

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A few years ago, I wrote a letter to the editor about a woman who ran afoul of the authorities when she refused to rent a room to a couple who were shacking up out of wedlock. She was charged with discrimination, and had appealed the decision to the level of a federal circuit court. When the circuit court ruled against her, she appealed to the Supreme Court, which decided not to take the case.

I sent the letter to my e-mail list, and got the following response from a recipient: “What kind of government would do something as outrageous as this?”

I replied, “A dictatorship would do this.”

Such was my reaction this past week when President Bush announced a decision to impose a 30 percent tariff on imported steel. Did anyone notice how president simply imposed a tariff without a vote by Congress? There was no debate, no nothing. The president simply raised taxes. What kind of president would do something as outrageous as this?

A dictator would.

A steel mill in China.

A steel mill in China.

Can you imagine the sound and fury from Republicans had a president Al Gore done something like this? A special interest group feels the economic pinch and tightens the screws on the president to grant them a favor and to win votes for him and his party in places such as Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Gary, Indiana. The president, without batting an eye, grants them their wish by unilaterally imposing a new tax.

At least if a president Al Gore had done this, there would have been vehement Republican opposition. There would have been some check on such an arbitrary and capricious act of tyranny. (If this is not taxation without representation, what is?) But if a Republican president does this, Republicans say nothing.

In Florida in 2000, Libertarian candidate Harry Browne no doubt got more than 538 votes needed to cover the spread and deliver the election to Dubya.

In Florida in 2000, Libertarian candidate Harry Browne no doubt got more than the 538 votes needed to cover the spread and deliver the election to Dubya.

Time and again, they tell me that, by supporting the Libertarian Party, I take votes from the Republicans and pave the way for Democratic victories. Does it really matter anymore? At least when Clinton raised taxes, he did so with prior congressional approval.

Let’s admit it: we live under a dictatorship. Oh sure, we have elections. And, oh sure, I can write this column without fear of imprisonment on the North Slope of Alaska. But we have moved so far from what could be described as a free country that most Americans would not recognize freedom if it landed on their head in the form of a 16-ton weight. Indeed, how many Americans even care about freedom anymore?

What was Bush’s source of authority for imposing such a tax increase? Who knows? But even assuming that federal law (maybe it was one of those newfangled “free trade” agreements) permitted it still does not justify such an act. The law permits plenty of objectionable things. Abortion, pornography, joining the Ku Klux Klan, and public flag desecration are cases in point. What happened at Auschwitz was permitted under the laws of the Third Reich. That which is legal and that which is desirable are often very different.

The one and only Joe Sobran.

The one and only Joe Sobran.

The Declaration of Independence speaks of, “a long Train of Abuses and Usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object, (evincing) a Design to reduce them under absolute Despotism.” The always-quotable Joseph Sobran once said that the size and intrusiveness of our current form of government makes the “Train” of King George III resemble a caboose.

All the fiery rhetoric of the Founders was directed at a “tyrant” who taxed his subjects at a rate of about three percent. Today, we in “the land of the free” are taxed at about 50 percent when you add federal, state, and local taxes. What kind of government would do this?

A dictatorship would.

I wrote this five years before the R3VOLution started.

I wrote this five years before the R3VOLution began.

The Declaration of Independence lists among the grievances against King George III, “imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:” Only dictators govern in such a manner. Not only do we have one-party government any longer, we have one branch of government. The Founders gave us three branches of government so that, when one branch stepped out of line, another branch could say, “We don’t think so.” Thus far, only the venerable Congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas) has criticized President Bush’s naked act of tyranny. There has been no other challenge from Congress or the Courts. Nor will there likely be one.

It was a long time coming. Long before Obama, long before Dubya.

It was a long time coming. Long before Obama.

The Founders also took King George III to task for “(erecting) a Multitude of new Offices, and (sending) hither Swarms of Officers to harass our People, and eat out their Substance.” Consider the IRS, DEA, FDA, DOE, DOT, BATF, EPA, OSHA, and all the other unconstitutional alphabet soup agencies that infest our landscape. (Look how Bush created the cabinet level Office of Homeland Security by executive fiat, again, without congressional approval.) Once instituted, these agencies never go away. The only debate is over how best to run them. What kind of government would micromanage our lives like this?

A dictatorship would.

King George III was a lot of bad things, but he never insisted that we educate our children in his schools. Indeed, there is no biblical mention of the Romans forcing Christians to educate their children in imperial schools. And yet the conservative establishment never questions the institution of state education. They simply think that if they put Bill Bennett or someone like that in charge everything will be fine. There is no biblical or constitutional basis for state education. State education is a policy prescription of the Communist Manifesto.

What kind of government would impose such a system on its subjects, and still force them to pay for it even if they decided to educate their children elsewhere?

A dictatorship would.

drugs legal illegalIn the last two years I have had three relapses of an old back injury. This has complicated my life severely. There may well be either surgical procedures or muscle relaxing medications that could help me, and that are doing great things for people overseas, but that are not approved by the FDA. (There are medications of many kinds that are working quite successfully overseas that are verboten by the FDA.) What kind of government would make you a criminal for ingesting beneficial substances into your body?

You guessed it: a dictatorship.

But don’t we have representative government and doesn’t the majority elect our officials? Well, yes, but your right to vote does not imply a right to violate my rights. Someone far wittier than I once quipped that a democracy is where two wolves and a sheep take a majority vote on what’s for supper. Another wit followed up on this saying that a constitutional republic exists when the wolves are forbidden on voting on what’s for supper and the sheep are well armed.

(I hope by now that you have figured out what kind of government would disarm innocent law-abiding citizens.)

We have a Constitution that sets clear, defined limits on what the federal government can and cannot do. Just because something sounds good, or just because voting for something makes you feel good, does not authorize the government to violate someone else’s rights. Indeed, our current philosophy of government may be summarized in six words: If it sounds good, do it.

patriot act buttonWe have not even talked about the War on Drugs or the president’s post-9/11 domestic agenda. I know they sound good to a lot of people and I know they make a lot of people who support them feel all tingly inside. However, they are both excuses to tyrannize America even further. They are just two more examples of government run amok, which is just another way of saying dictatorship.

Toward the end of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson wrote that, “A Prince, whose Character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the Ruler of a free People.” Most conservatives would have no problem applying these last nine words to Bill Clinton. Yet when George W. Bush tyrannizes this country to a greater degree than Bill Clinton did, they are strangely silent. Why do they not subject Dubya to the same scrutiny as his predecessor?Nothing-changed

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