Attribute to L. Neil Smith's The Libertarian Enterprise
It's not FROM the pen of Mama Liberty, but it's passed on BY her...
[Link]
If Congress can employ money indefinitely to the general welfare, 
and are the sole and supreme judges of the general welfare... It would 
subvert the very foundations, and transmute the very nature of the 
limited government established by the people of America; and what 
inferences might be drawn, or what consequences ensue, from such a 
step, it is incumbent on us all to consider."
—James Madison, Speaking in the House of Representatives, 
1792
I guess James Madison wasn't as bad as some have claimed over the 
years.... NOT that I'm a huge fan of his!
This was posted to NewsVine by SteveH. I liked it so much, I am 
shamelessly posting it to this rant. HOWEVER, if you wish to comment 
about it and you are a Viner, make your comments at the
[Link]
#10. I vote Democrat because I love the fact that I can now marry 
whatever I want. I've decided to marry my German Shepherd. #9. I vote 
Democrat because I believe oil companies' profits of 4% on a gallon of 
gas are obscene, but the government taxing the same gallon at 15% 
isn't. #8. I vote Democrat because I believe the government will do a 
better job of spending the money I earn than I would. #7. I vote 
Democrat because Freedom of Speech is fine as long as nobody is 
offended by it. #6. I vote Democrat because I'm way too irresponsible 
to own a gun, and I know that my local police are all I need to 
protect me from murderers and thieves. I am also thankful that we have 
a 911 service that get police to your home in order to identify your 
body after a home invasion. #5. I vote Democrat because I'm not 
concerned about millions of babies being aborted so long as we keep 
all death row inmates alive and comfy. #4. I vote Democrat because I 
think illegal aliens have a right to free health care, education, and 
Social Security benefits, and we should take away Social Security from 
those who paid into it. #3. I vote Democrat because I believe that 
businesses should not be allowed to make profits for themselves. They 
need to break even and give the rest away to the government for 
redistribution as the Democrat Party sees fit. #2. I vote Democrat 
because I believe liberal judges need to rewrite the Constitution 
every few days to suit fringe kooks who would never get their agendas 
past the voters. ...
And the #1 reason I vote Democrat is because I think it's better to 
pay $billions$ for oil to people who hate us, but not drill our own 
because it might upset some endangered beetle, gopher or fish here in 
America. We don't care about the beetles, gophers or fish in those 
other countries.
I add another reason to vote Democrat—I leave it to you, dear reader, 
to decide it's place in the lineup—I vote Democrat because then I can 
ban the very things I deal in, thus increasing my profit margin when I 
then break my own laws and continue my dealings.
The interviewer is not very articulate, but he sure got an honest 
answer from the anti-Constitutional Democrat, now didn't he?
[Link]
That's right, Mr. Democrat—tell the 
constituents to go fuck themselves. It is my hope that it is YOU who 
has fucked himself... right out of an elected office.
Remember Mark Witaschek? The DC man arrested for "unregistered ammo" 
for possessing a misfired shotgun shell, cleaning kit, and bullets for 
a blackpowder firearm? Well, the cocksuckers convicted him.
[Link]
Un-fucking-believable.
On March 26th Mark Witaschek's trial over his possession of a 
shotgun shell in his Washington, D.C., home took a turn, and he was 
found guilty of "attempted possession of unlawful ammunition" over 25 
muzzleloader bullets which were also in his house—these are lead 
and copper bullets
without primers.
According
to The Washington Times, Judge Robert Morin ruled on the muzzleloader 
bullets when the prosecution team could not figure out how to open the 
shotgun shell to see if there "was powder inside." Morin shook the 
shell and listened to it and "said he could not hear any gunpowder."
Concerning the muzzleloader bullets,
Morin 
said, "I am persuaded these are bullets. They look like bullets. 
They are hollow-point. They are not musket balls."
Morin "sentenced Mr. Witaschek to time served, a $50 fine, and 
required him to enroll with the Metropolitan Police Department's 
firearm offenders' registry within 48 hours."
Mark—copy Connecticut and New Jersey gun owners. "I will not comply!" 
This is absolutely unacceptable. He has lost a Constitutional right 
because of anti-Constitutional laws, a brain dead judge, and 
head-hunting cops. In the capital of the land of the formerly 
free and the home of the no longer brave.
Coming soon to a town near YOU!!
[Link]
This crap should 
scare the hell out of ALL of us, and piss us off, as well. Police are 
getting farther and farther away from any semblance of 
Constitutionality. The suspect is black. The occupants are white. 
Right there, the moment the cops saw white faces rather than black 
ones, they had a huge clue they were in the wrong house. Instead, they 
did the following:
David was seized and shackled. Connie and Aaron were also dragged 
from their home. Neighbors who were drawn by the commotion poked their 
heads out and were ordered to go back into their rooms.
But wait! There's more!
At the request of the neighboring Nampa Police Department, which 
received the tip, a tactical team from the Caldwell Police Department 
conducted what they call a
"welfare
check" that was actually a
guns-drawn,
no-knock,
SWAT-style raid. The Caldwell PD claimed knowledge of "the presence of guns at the premises"—which, 
according to
the
standard "threat matrix," supposedly justifies a paramilitary assault.
Although the officers claim they were dealing with a "homicide in 
progress,"
Police
audio of the incident documents that the 
officers didn't know the specific apartment number—which means that 
the door-kick on the Johnsons' home—which could easily have 
resulted in a homicide—was the product of a whimsical guess.
Gerst is a young black man. The police had his description, but 
they didn't have his address. David Johnson is a middle-aged white 
man. This distinction was so obvious that it wouldn't have been missed 
even by the typical police officer within a few seconds of the door 
breach.
If the police had knocked on the door and announced their presence—as
they are required to do, by law, unless there is evidence of 
imminent danger to an innocent person—they wouldn't have terrorized 
an innocent family in a near-midnight raid, nor would they have 
inflicted significant and expensive damage to the property of an 
economically marginal household.
Furthermore, if the
warrantless,
no-knock raid was supposedly justified for "tactical" reasons, by hitting 
the wrong apartment door the cops surrendered the element of surprise.
In the legal response filed on behalf of its local enforcement 
caste, the City of Caldwell denies that the unlawful attack on the 
Johnsons' home inflicted "damages" to their property, or violated 
their rights in any way. Because this near-midnight raid was carried 
out according to established "policies and procedures," the City 
insists, the assailants are swaddled in the impenetrable cloak of
"qualified
immunity."
These Gestapo tactics make me sick. If Writs of Assistance were enough 
to trigger 1776, what the fuck does this type of action merit? These 
wrong address, no-knock warrants terrorize, injure, and kill dozens 
every year. And decent, law abiding citizens who kill one of these 
invading terrorists wind up charged with murder of a cop, while if a 
cop kills the homeowner during one of these raids they have "qualified 
immunity".
It's sure nice to see that my birth-state still gives forth people 
with the balls to live by their principles.
[Link]
According
to GunsSaveLives.net, Colandro said a ban on magazines larger than 10 
rounds would impact law-abiding citizens—rather than 
criminals—because it would turn "one million law-abiding, tax-paying 
citizens into criminals" if signed into law. 
He then called lawmakers' attention to Connecticut, and said, "One 
million gun owners in New Jersey are also going to say, like our 
brothers and sisters in the north, that 'we will not comply.' And I 
can tell you here and now, 'I will not comply.'"
He added: "You can write these laws against us tax-paying, 
law-abiding citizens, but we're not going to follow them."
I sure hope he follows through....
For the last few weeks, I have been singing the praises (well, sorta) 
of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. Despite their refusal to go far 
enough, they HAVE overthrown several key components of 
Kahleefourneeyah's CCW laws, including throwing out the requirement to 
show you have a "legitimate need" for a carry permit. Today, they 
showed they have not lost their anti-Constitutional anti-gun chops.
[Link]
On March 25th the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a San 
Francisco law that requires "handgun owners to keep their weapons 
locked up or on their person when they are at home." The court also 
upheld a ban on the sale of hollow-point ammunition within city limits.
However, "San Francisco residents can still obtain them outside the 
city limits and bring them back [into the city] with them."
According to 
The Wall Street Journal, the Ninth Circuit ruled that the 
requirement to keep a gun locked up was not onerous because "a modern 
gun safe may be opened quickly. Thus, even when a handgun is secured, 
it may be readily accessed in case of an emergency."
Regarding the prohibition of the sale of hollow-point ammunition 
within city limits, the court upheld it because it "affects only the 
sale of hollow-point ammunition, [but] San Franciscans are still free 
to use and possess hollow-point bullets within city limits."
Isn't it nice to know some things haven't changed? (sarcasm, don'tcha 
know?)
Let us revisit ID for a wee bit. But first, a disclaimer—I do not 
support the entire concept of government issued ID. I do not have ANY 
DESIRE whatsoever to "prove" my right to engage in business dealings, 
operate a motor vehicle, buy, carry, or possess a firearm, open a bank 
account, or get married. There is one, and only one, place I feel I 
need to prove who I am, and that's before I vote. Otherwise, who I am 
and what I am doing is none of the government's business. Now, to the 
fun. Obama and his merry band of anti-Constitutionalists have been 
screaming to high heaven that requiring ID in order to vote is racist, 
un-American, and un-Constitutional, because it is somehow a poll tax 
to require a $10 piece of plastic in order to vote. It's just "too 
hard" for minorities to get an ID, so requiring one disenfranchises 
the poor little poor people. Guess what? Obamacare requires you to 
present photo ID in order to get your "free" Obamacare.
[Link]
I just returned from two doctor visits for a checkup and a 
follow-up test. These were my first doctor visits since Obamacare took 
effect. Guess what both medical offices asked me for before any doctor 
could see me or any medical test could be done?
Official government-issued photo ID.
You cannot see a doctor or receive your free Obamacare without ID 
to prove it's really you. A health insurance card won't do the trick, 
simply because the medical office needs to prove you are in fact the 
person whose name is on the insurance card.
I questioned the nurses at both offices. They verified no one can 
collect their "free" Obamacare services from any doctor without 
showing ID. And since everyone is now required to have health 
insurance (or is given free insurance), the government is requiring 
that everyone have a photo ID.
Does that make Obama and the Democrats racists? No, what it makes 
them is hypocrites who are in total fear of fair elections that they 
know they have no chance of winning—no chance, that is, unless they 
cheat. Don't look now, but Obamacare just opened the door for voter ID.
This is where the younger generation screams, "Busted!"
Let's take the hypocrisy a step further. Every single Democratic 
voter must be lining up to get his photo ID so he can get his free 
Obamacare. So the argument that poor and minority Democrat voters 
don't have ID, or shouldn't be "burdened" to get it, is out the window.
I think this is where the younger generation screams, "Double 
busted."
Now, whether Wayne is a reputable or reliable source in your opinion 
is moot. I, too went to the doctor today. I've been using this doctor 
for 5 years, the practice as a whole for 30. I was required to show 
"valid photo ID" to get my care, even though my insurance is NOT 
through an Obamacare website, subsidy, grant, or government agency. 
When I asked Lisa (who I have known for 10 years now) why I had to do 
this her answer was "These new rules caused by Obamacare. I have to 
photocopy the ID and keep a copy in your file. Then, from now on, we 
are supposed to check your ID every visit, and verify that it is the 
same as last time, or see what may have changed, and why."
Ahhh, DiFi is at it again.
[Link] 
Constitutional law. It bans weapons that are not nazis running around 
Idaho shouting "White Power!". It's about citizens, armed and willing 
to defend this country from enemies foreign and domestic, and in 
extremis, defend this country against the government. In addition, 
isn't it funny that she's against people importing "military style" 
weapons. I guess she doesn't care about....
Fellow San Franciscan Democrat, State Senator Leland Yee, arrested by 
the FBI for agreeing to smuggle in and sell fully-automatic M16s, 
AK47s, and man-portable missiles.
[Link]
[Link]
Senator Yee often used the used car salesman's trick of selling 
appearance rather than performance. To the public, Yee sold the flat 
black of a plastic rifle as being "a military style weapon". Yee knew 
better. To the FBI buyer, Senator Yee was precise when he asked and 
guaranteed delivery of fully automatic weapons along with shoulder 
fired missiles. Yee sold public safety to the public media while 
seeking to privately profit from public violence. Stated simply, Yee 
sought to disarm ordinary citizens while he funneled guns to 
criminals.
Another fucking hypocrite Democrat. Now, let me be blunt—I do not 
support, endorse, or agree with the NFA '34 (which created the entire 
"Class Three" concept of firearms) or any other gun control law 
Victim Disarmament Laws. I do not have a problem with civilian 
ownership of fully automatic weapons, silencers, sawed off shotguns, 
or other "destructive devices". Just as I support the free enterprise 
system known as drug dealing, I support ANY civilian who chooses to 
break the laws about full automatic weaponry. But do NOT spend your 
time passing ever-more draconian laws prohibiting something while 
using those laws to drive up the price of YOUR business selling that 
something. I also note that he never actually imported ANYTHING. Now, 
the corruption charges are enough to oust the bastard....
Please, my friends, keep up the good work of pointing out mistakes. 
I'm only human, after all! Sooo, to the reason for that comment. Last 
week, I included the following line—
Well, excuse me, but if the person is not adjudicated mentally 
incompetent, WHAT FUCKING RIGHT DOES THE STATE HAVE TO STEAL 
CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED PROPERTY?
My new friend, John L, took me (gently) to task. He said the following-
 Enjoyed your rant at
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2014/tle763-20140323-06.html,
but did you go far enough when you said, "Well, excuse me, but if 
the person is not adjudicated mentally incompetent, WHAT FUCKING RIGHT 
DOES THE STATE HAVE TO STEAL CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED PROPERTY?" 
I'm very worried that the government will adjudicate as "mentally 
incompetent" anyone who, for example, thinks that guns should be used, 
in extreme circumstances, to defend basic rights which statutory law 
has abandoned. 
I would rather live in a society in which nobody has the authority 
to disarm anyone for being mentally deficient, with all its attendant 
risks, than to live in one in which that label can be applied, with 
all its implications, by untrustworthy men (i.e., human 
beings).JdL
I was not clear enough, nor did I take into account the current 
mandated thinking of Obamacare-compliant doctors that gun ownership is 
a health problem, that firearms ownership is a sign of possible 
paranoia, and that having served in a war zone is a sign of mental 
illness. Once these things are taken into account, I recant my former 
statement, and amend it thus.
Well, excuse me, but unless a person has been committed to an 
insane asylum for life, what fucking right does the government have to 
take away his Constitutionally protected private property? In 
addition, is it the government's right even then? No, the MOST the 
government should be permitted to do (and I don't really agree even 
with granting it this much power) is to take them away from his/her 
immediate control, and surrender them to their guardian/custodian.
I tire of repeating myself, but it seems that once again, I must. The 
title of the linked article is wrong.
[Link]
"Gun Owners: 'Will Not Comply' with 
Unreasonable Registration" There is NO such thing as a "reasonable 
restriction" on a right that "Shall not be Infringed". I am 
sick and fucking tired of lying assholes trying to claim that there is 
somehow a reasonable restriction on enumerated rights. The fact that 
certain morons have tolerated them does not make them reasonable. It 
IS your right to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theater. And if it causes 
harm to anyone and there is NOT a fire, your ass is sued into 
bankruptcy. But it is STILL your right. As to "Well Regulated", well, 
I have an answer to that, too. Two of them, in fact. First, "Well 
regulated" meant, in the parlance of the times, well trained and in 
good working order, NOT licensed and controlled when dealing with 
militias, especially since one of the two militias (the irregular 
militia) was trained (or regulated) solely on an individual basis. 
Second, the whole "militia has been replaced by the National Guard, so 
you have no individual right to own and carry weapons is shot down two 
ways—first, by the phrase "the Right of the People to Keep and Bear 
Arms Shall not be Infringed" specifically states it is an individual 
right, not a collective right superseded by the formation of a 
National Guard. Second, if this were the correct interpretation of the 
2nd Amendment, then the following: A well-trained orchestra, being 
necessary to the artistic life of a free state, the right of the 
people to own and play musical instruments shall not be infringed 
means that only members of the state orchestra can own and play a 
flute.That being said, I like the solidarity being shown by gun owners 
across the country.
Mike, this is a good start, but it doesn't go far enough.
[Link]
Pro-gun legislation which would allow "teachers, parents, and 
school visitors to have guns concealed and locked in their cars in 
school parking lots" is awaiting Indiana Gov. Mike Pence's (R) 
signature.
"Wait a minute Mr. Liberal Psychopath, I need to run to the car to get 
my gun so I can protect the kids!" isn't good enough. And yes, I meant 
it—almost every single mass shooter has been a Democrat or at least 
liberal leaning nutcase.
I'm gonna have to re-think my stance on the Ninth Circuit CoA. Three 
excellent decisions on the 2nd Amendmentin as many months.
[Link] Hawaii, 
watch out!
With the case Baker v. Kealoha
(9th Cir. Mar. 20, 2014), the Ninth Circuit 
ruled that Hawaii's restrictions were just like San Diego County's and 
the rules would have to be reworked to conform to earlier court 
decisions.
Law professor Eugene Volokh notes that gun rights advocates cannot 
start celebrating just yet because various cases are still making 
their way through the courts and these decisions could be overturned. 
But he also says that the law has been moving in the direction of 
expanding Second Amendment rights, not restricting them, so the
"writing
is on the wall" for gun control fanatics.
From Volokh's lips to the court's ears.
Many people send me links to many things, but one of my best 
link-sources is Gene, also known as "The Gunny". He got me hooked on 
DC Clothesline, Freedom Outpost, and a host other sites. He sends me 
links every day to articles I might find interesting, and many of them 
wind up here. So, while I also find a lot of these links in my own 
cruising through these sites, Gunny's input tells me I'm reading the 
right ones (and sometimes, missing the good ones!) Semper Fi, Gunny! 
And many thanks, as well. If any of you have similar sources, pass'em 
on!!!
Last summer, at the county fair, I caught flack from passers-by for 
expressing my disgust at the county sheriff's new toy—a matte-black 
Hummer with a pintle-mount for a machine-gun or other military 
equipment. The stormtroopers manning the vehicle, proudly displayed at 
the county fairgrounds, were decked out in black paramilitary 
coveralls, tactical holsters, and had face-obscuring "riot masks" hung 
on hooks. And apparently, many communities around the country are 
starting to agree with me.
[Link]
While some communities have welcomed such acquisitions amid 
increased concern over mass shootings, others have balked at the idea. 
As RT reported
last year, residents in Salinas,
California,
flooded
the Facebook page of their local police 
department after it obtained a heavily armored vehicle capable of 
withstanding rifle fire and minefield explosions.
"That vehicle is made for war," mentioned one commenter at the 
time. "Do not use my safety to justify that vehicle," another one 
wrote. "The Salinas
Police
Department is just a bunch of cowards that 
want to use that vehicle as intimidation and to terrorize the citizens 
of this city."
That's exactly what these military vehicles are used for. 
Terrorization.
Idaho's governor signs bill telling the federal government they'll get 
no help in Idaho enforcing federal anti-Constitutional laws.
[Link]
"Protect Idaho law enforcement officers from being directed, 
through federal executive orders, agency orders, statutes, laws, 
rules, or regulations enacted or promulgated on or after the effective 
date of this act, to violate their oath of office and Idaho citizens' 
rights under Section 11, Article I, of the Constitution of the State 
of Idaho."
It also criminalizes any action by employees of the state that violate 
the legislation:
"Any official, agent or employee of the state of Idaho or a 
political subdivision thereof who knowingly and willfully orders an 
official, agent or employee of the state of Idaho or a political 
subdivision of the state to enforce any executive order, agency order, 
law, rule or regulation of the United States government as provided in 
subsection (2) of this section upon a personal firearm, a firearm 
accessory or ammunition shall, on a first violation, be liable for a 
civil penalty not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000) which shall 
be paid into the general fund of the state..."
Hear Hear!!!! May this be the first of many to come....
The legislation rests on a well-established legal principle known 
as the anti-commandeering doctrine. Simply put, the federal government 
cannot force or coerce states into implementing or enforcing federal 
acts or regulations—constitutional or not. The anti-commandeering 
doctrine rests primarily on four Supreme Court cases dating back to 
1842. Printz v. US serves as the cornerstone. According to that 
doctrine: "The Federal Government may neither issue directives 
requiring the States to address particular problems, nor command the 
States' officers, or those of their political subdivisions, to 
administer or enforce a federal regulatory program...such commands are 
fundamentally incompatible with our constitutional system of dual 
sovereignty."
"Don't Tread On Me" indeed!
And finally, our Quote of the Week—
"The right of self-defense is the first law of nature; in most 
governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right 
within the narrowest limits possible. Wherever standing armies are 
kept up, and when the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, 
under any color or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not 
already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction."
—Henry St. George Tucker, in Blackstone's 1768 Commentaries 
on the Laws of England.
 
So I end this rant with the thanks I send out to those of you who 
responded with kind thoughts over the death of Gracie. Not one person, 
no matter how much I have fought with them, no matter how vitriolic 
our contacts usually are, said anything other than some variation on 
"I'm so sorry for that loss. I hope your family is well." Yes, we are, 
and little Chewie, the pup who rescued us, is fitting right in.
Good night, Gracie. :(