Update from the Heartland
No.565
8.10.12 – 14.10.12
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- Congress is adjourned to allow our vaunted and noble
representatives to focus on their re-election. Yet, the even nobler and conscientious, House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee is investigating the Benghazi attack [561] and seems to have a rather strange
agenda . . . well, given the polarized, political partisanship in Congress,
perhaps not so strange, now that I think of it. Republicans are in a fire-aim-ready mode, far more
interested in affixing blame rather than determining the facts and root cause.
Vice President Joseph Robinette “Joe” Biden, Jr. and
Representative Paul Davis Ryan of Wisconsin squared off for their only public
debate, moderated by Martha Myrna Raddatz of ABC News. Well, first things first, the VP debate
was far more entertaining than the 1st presidential debate. I think that is about the best thing I
can say. These events rarely, if
ever, offer anything of substance.
We, the People, are still left with absorbing all the relevant
information we can acquire to place the statements of the candidates into some
sort of meaningful perspective. No
need to waste anyone’s time.
There
have been events in my life where I felt His Hand. Some call it karma, some divine intervention . . . others
may called it fate, or even luck or happenstance. There are big events, little moments, and private
instances. These junctures, the
proverbial fork in the road, come to all of us – some recognize them, some do
not.
As
even a casual reader must know, I have been on a quest to understand the
Constitution and the impact of the law on our lives. I continue to read various judicial pronouncements at all
levels from a district court to the Supreme Court, both in this Grand Republic
as well as other nations. I also
read key formative documents that illuminate our history and the genesis of our
laws. Months ago, I decided to
read and I am nearly finished with the opus magnus of Associate
Justice Joseph Story (the youngest Supreme Court justice in history (32yo),
served 1811-1845) – Commentaries on the Constitution of the
United States (in 3 volumes) [412].
Perhaps
fortuitously, as I completed the Story Commentaries, the following essay arrived at our
home.
“Individual, Community, and State: How to Think about
Religious Freedom”
by Matthew J. Franck, The Witherspoon Institute
Imprimis
Hillsdale College (Michigan)
Published: September 2012; vol.41, no.9
Matthew opened his essay, “There is a growing awareness
among Americans that religious freedom has come under sustained pressure. In the public square where freedom of
religion meets public policy, it becomes clearer all the time that there is a
high price to be paid for being true to one’s conscience.” He cites a number of contemporary cases
reviewed in this humble forum to illuminate his underlying premise.
· Christian
Legal Society v. Martinez [560 U.S. ___ (2010); no. 08-1371; 28.June.2010] [451]
· Varnum v. Brien [SC IA no. 07–1499 (2009); 3.April.2009] [381/2]
· Hosanna-Tabor
Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. E.E.O.C. [565 U.S. ___
(2010); no. 10-553; 11.January.2012] [NYR]
· Newland
v. Sebelius [USDC CO case 1:12-cv-1123-JLK (2012); 27.July.2012]
[555]
Franck went on to note, “It is that no one can claim, on
behalf of an incorporated business he owns, any
right of religious freedom or conscience that can trump a requirement of law.”
[emphasis: the author] Further, he
said, “[T]here is a characteristic failure to perceive the legitimate
contribution of religion to public discourse.” There are points of agreement and many elements of
disagreement; herein lies one key factor.
I would make precisely the same statement and implied accusation back to
Matthew Franck. The essential
question appears to be, does religious freedom overwhelm all other freedoms and
rights? Thus, what place does
religion have in proper public discourse?
Franck also quotes from Madison’s Memorial and Remonstrance [1785] and the Second Vatican Council’s Dignitatis
Humanae
[1965], as comparable documents espousing the place of religion in
public debate, specifically from the “‘social nature of man,’ and the natural
consequence that ‘he must profess his religion in community.’”
In
contrast, Joseph Story recounts in exceptional detail the legal creation of
each of the colonies, or rather colonial states, as well as the evolution of
political thought that contributed to the Declaration as our societal manifesto
and the Constitution as the foundation of our laws and governance. Story noted the importance of
Protestant Christian religion in the formative years. Even at the time of the Commentaries, the influence of religion remained
pervasive, and while marginally more tolerant than the colonial era, the
predominant Protestant religion continued to practice rampant discrimination
against those who did not believe as they believed. Story’s reflection upon the first phrase of the First Amendment,
“In fact, every American colony, from its foundation down to the revolution,
with the exception of Rhode Island, (if, indeed, that state be an exception,)
did openly, by the whole course of its laws and institutions, support and
sustain, in some form, the Christian religion; and almost invariably gave a
peculiar sanction to some of its fundamental doctrines.” Story concluded his assessment of the
freedom of religion, “It was under a solemn consciousness of the dangers from
ecclesiastical ambition, the bigotry of spiritual pride, and the intolerance of
sects, thus exemplified in our domestic, as well as in foreign 'annals, that it
was deemed advisable to exclude from the national government all power to act
upon the subject.”
To
answer my previous questions, neither the First Amendment nor our laws exempt religious
organizations from enforcement.
Religion is not an excuse for the imposition on other citizens. Therefore, religion does NOT trump the
law. The difficulty for We, the
People, rests upon balance. The First Amendment
prohibits the imposition of the State upon religion. However, there is an
equally important implicit prohibition upon religion’s right to impose upon
other citizens. Thus, the question
transforms into where do we draw the line? What is the proper balance? To me, the answers are simple, yet I recognize that to
others they are not so simple, or rather others draw the line deeper into the
private domain. Let the debate
continue.
On Sunday, 14.October.2012, at 14:05 [T] MDT, history was
made when Felix Baumgartner jumped from a balloon gondola at 127,800 ft ASL,
achieved a speed of M1.24 (834 mph), and broke numerous records, including the long-standing
Kittinger record [16.August.1960].
Congratulations to Baumgartner and the Red Bull Stratos Team for a job
well done.
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court denied the appeal and refused
to hear the arguments in the expansive case of In re: National Security Agency
Telecommunications Records Litigation {AKA Hepting v. AT&T [9CCA
no. 09-16676 (2011); D.C. nos. 3:06-cv-00672-VRW; M:06-cv-01791-VRW]; 29.December.2011}. The case was a collective of 33 cases regarding
the National Security Agency (NSA) “Terrorist Surveillance Program” (TSP) – the
warrantless electronic surveillance project. I am a long way from reading all the contributing judicial
documents, although we have reviewed some:
·
ACLU
v. NSA [USDC MI(ED{SD}) no. 06-CV-10204 (2006); 17.August.2006] [245]
·
Al-Haramain
Islamic Foundation v Bush [USDC OR no. 06-274-KI (2006); 7.September.2006] [343]
· In Re: National Security Agency
Telecommunications Records Litigation, the appeal of al-Haramain Islamic Foundation v Bush
[2.August.2008] [343]
·
Al-Haramain v. Obama [USDC CA(ND)
M:06-cv-01791-VRW (2010); 31.March.2010]
[433]
Shortly after 11.September.2001, President Bush issued
consent orders allowing the NSA to significantly expand electronic surveillance
efforts in the War on Islamic Fascism.
The TSP remained secret, compartmented and highly classified until 16.December.2005,
when the New York Times published “Bush
Lets U.S. Spy on Callers Without Courts” by James Risen and Eric Lichtblau
[210, 343] – 1st public disclosure of the TSP. Six weeks later, the President
acknowledged that following 9/11 he authorized a “terrorist surveillance
program to detect and intercept al-Qa’ida communications” and stated that the
program applied “only to international communications, in other words, [where]
one end of the communication [was] outside the United States.” As is so often the case in this Grand
Republic, the lawyers went into convulsions of effervescent excitement. Congress did not miss the significance
and importance to national security of the disclosure and subsequent legal
actions. On 10.July.2008,
President Bush signed into law the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act of 1978 Amendments Act of 2008 (FISAAA) [PL 110-261; HR 6304; Senate:
69-28-0-3(0); House: 293-129-0-13(0); 122 Stat. 2436] [344]. The specific law at issue in Hepting
is §802 – Procedures for Implementing Statutory
Defenses [122 Stat. 2468; 50 USC 1885a] added by FISAAA, Title II,
§201. The law allows the government
to retroactively indemnify telecommunications companies that contributed to the
TSP. Circuit Judge Mary Margaret
McKeown wrote for the unanimous three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals and declared the §802 constitutional. She wrote, “The intelligible principle
that comes through in the legislative history [of the FISAAA] is one of
protecting intelligence gathering and national security information.” Courts at all levels upheld the
constitutionality of §802 and the Supreme Court implicitly concurred. As a consequence, the court felt the
law had minimal impact on any particular citizen’s 4th Amendment
protection. History shall judge
the validity of the law and these arguments in defense of the law.
Every so often, a judicial pronouncement sparks heightened
curiosity regarding the logic and reasoning. So, it is in the case of Sullivan v. United States
{[2012] EWHC 1680 (Admin) Case No: CO/1672/2011} – an extradition petition to
Her Majesty’s Government for the return of a fugitive-from-justice, American
citizen – Shawn Eugene Sullivan.
The issue at hand did not involve the alleged crimes, rather that if
extradited, Sullivan would be exposed to “a real risk” of detention “under a
process known as ‘civil commitment’” in contravention to “Article 5 of the
European Convention on Human Rights.”
The law in question before the British court was the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act 1994 [Minnesota
Statute § 253B.185 – Sexual Psychopathic Personality; Sexually Dangerous] that
provided for indefinite detention of any convict determined to be “irresponsible
for personal conduct with respect to sexual matters and thereby dangerous to
other persons” as evaluated by the Minnesota Sex Offender Screening Tool
Revised (MnSOST-R). To put this
legal debate into a relevant perspective, Sullivan is alleged to have sexually
assaulted two girls under the age of 13 during the autumn of 1993, in Dakota
County, Minnesota, and raped a 14-year-old girl on 31.January.1994, in Hennepin
County, Minnesota. Local law
enforcement interviewed Sullivan regarding the Dakota County crimes at about
the time of the Hennepin County rape.
Sullivan fled the country shortly thereafter. Further, he was convicted of indecent assaults on two 12
year-old girls in Ireland in 1997.
I know we are not supposed to rush to judgment before trial, but events
begin to paint clear picture – Sullivan needs to face a jury and answer the
charges in Minnesota. Lord Justice
of Appeal Moses (Sir Alan George Moses) decided the Minnesota civil commitment
law had the potential to violate Sullivan’s rights, thus he denied the
extradition petition. Bad
characters like Sullivan need to be in prison. I certainly do not wish a bad man on the British people, but
I suspect he will do more to invite incarceration in England. One way or another, justice will visit
the perpetrator. My interest in this
case sprang from curiosity surrounding Sir Alan’s reasoning; I agree with Lord
Justice Moses. Although he did not
say it, sex makes us crazy.
Indefinite extra-judicial confinement is an instrument of state that nearly
invites abuse.
News from
the economic front:
-- The International Monetary Fund (IMF) issued its World
Economic Outlook, and lowered its forecast for global growth next year, as it
criticized U.S. and EU policy makers for their failure to resolve their fiscal
challenges, which is threatening to worsen an already “slow and bumpy” global
economic recovery. The IMF lowered
its forecast for global economic output from 3.9% to 3.6%. They also noted their forecast assumes
the U.S. Congress will take action to avoid the sequester “fiscal cliff” and
that eurozone governments will follow the European Central Bank’s plan to buy
sovereign debt by committing to economic reform and closer integration. The IMF outlook provided ample ammunition
to critics of government austerity, concluding that governments had
systematically underestimated the damage done to growth by tax rises and
spending cuts.
-- U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet
Bharara filed a civil lawsuit on behalf of the Federal Housing Authority against
Wells Fargo & Co., accusing the biggest U.S. mortgage lender of behaving
recklessly in issuing federally backed home loans. The action is the latest
example of prosecutors and regulators going after banks for alleged misconduct
in the housing boom and financial crisis.
Comments and contributions from Update no.564:
“Loosey goosey! Not heard that one before Cap.
“Hear hear to your comment re Spain and Germany. I see
Angela's getting a hard time today. As if it's the German's fault they have
messed in their own kitchen (or bed as we Anglo Saxons might say.)”
My response:
Re:
“loosey goosey.” LOL It is a highly technical term for one’s
habit of not being very precise or factual with statements.
Re:
Merkel. Spot on, brother. I do not like what I see in Southern
Europe . . . way too far down the socialist spectrum, verging on anarchy. The Greeks, and to a certain extent the
Italians (I do not know so much about the Spaniards & Portuguese), chose to
not enforce their tax laws, granted exorbitant entitlements, and were otherwise
generous beyond their means with their citizens; and, now they expect Germany
to make good on all the borrowed promises of their government. Not good for any of us.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
The questionable timing of the Benghazi investigation continues a pattern of rabid partisanship that has already cost the United States much in the opinion of the rest of the world, and that translates into major problems in economics and international relations.
I also have no use for the Presidential debates or for their lesser examples in other races. I took advantage of my opportunity to vote early the day before the first debate.
I take Mr. Franck’s whining about having to follow the law with respect to others’ rights as one more example of some (not all) Christians trying to present themselves as a kind of persecuted majority for not being allowed to control the rest of us. His citing of a Vatican document as somehow equivalent to the US Constitution in US law is at once ludicrous and insulting. His opinion is unworthy of further attention. Justice Story gets more of my attention and respect. He was closer to the origins of this country and apparently put much more effort into his study of the issue. I had not been aware of Justice Story; I will learn more of him.
Felix Baumgartner’s spectacular parachute jump provided entertainment for several million people. I suppose there must be some other significance to it, but that eludes me.
The rule of law in the United States, which invented the concept, continues to decline. President Obama has followed President Bush (43) in seizing power, Constitution be damned. The damage is not limited to them, though, as you point out with regard to Minnesota’s extrajudicial detention of people it fears.
My comment on the economy: I have concluded that taxes need to rise even on near-poverty incomes such as mine. Americans continue to want road maintenance, police protection, and many other government services but have somehow been convinced that we need not pay for those services. Nonsense!
In your comment on Southern Europe, you say they are, “. . . way too far down the socialist spectrum, verging on anarchy.” You need to take one side or the other; socialism and anarchy are opposites.
Calvin,
Re: Benghazi investigation. Spot on, brother! The timing was suspect from the get-go, but the theatrical performance of some representatives on the panel was downright nauseating. They could care less about the facts; they are only interested in making the sticky bomb stick. I find it incredulous that some folks sop up that tripe.
Re: voting. Good for you. I’ve requested my absentee ballot (just in case) but not here yet.
Re: Franck essay. Again, spot on! I decided to include my review simply because I could not believe he tried that hard to mask his parochialism in studious trappings.
Re: Story Commentaries. His opus magnus is worth the reading effort, especially if you are interested in history and/or the genesis of the Constitution. I’ve read chunks of the Blackstone Commentaries [on English common law], but I decided to read all of the Story Commentaries [and took notes] as they more directly apply to Americans. As a side note, I continue to be amazed at how little, influential history is covered in conventional American history teaching. I read sections on the Commerce Clause and the Amendments several times.
Re: Baumgartner jump. Far more data were collected than on the Kittinger jump. I would say the significance is the science & engineering involved in preparation and execution.
Re: extrajudicial detention. I presume your accusations toward President Obama are focused on the Guantánamo Bay detention facility. If so, my criticism would be quite the opposite. We released far too many jihadi battlefield combatants, allowing them to return to their indiscriminant killing. Fortunately, we have killed some, although many more remain on the loose.
Re: taxes. Once again, spot on! The Tea Party folks apparently want to choke spending by slashing revenue. This debate will boil down to what do we spend the treasury on? They want spending on their stuff, but not the other guys stuff. And, rather than find appropriate compromise, they spend on all of the above.
Re: take a side. LOL Nicely done! I should have been more explanatory with my words. I did not intend to imply socialism and anarchy were adjacent milestones on the same continuum. Anarchy can be one of numerous outcomes in a failure of socialism, or capitalism, or fascism for that matter. Greece in particular is verging on anarchy as we speak. The people suffer the inevitable pain of austerity, and yet the corrupt politicians and wealthy continue to defy the law and suck down precious resources to pad their wealth. The politicians, being the crafty devils they are, have convinced the people that Germany is the root cause of their suffering. I believe the bill will come due eventually and that will be anarchy, as the rule of law breaks down completely.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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