vakkotaur: Centaur holding bow - cartoon (serious)


I've just finished reading John Ringo's and Linda Evans' book The Road to Damascus, set centuries in the future on a world, Jefferson, at the about the edge of human space colonization. Early in the book one character notes a part of the Jeffersonian constitution that reads, in effect:

The right of the people to keep and bear arms for self-defense and defense of the homeland shall never be infringed, limited, rescinded, interfered with, or prohibited by any decree of law, decision by court, or policy by executive branch or any of its agencies. And this time, we mean it. (Pages 152-153)

I really like the brilliant clarity and utter lack of an all too often misinterpreted phrase.

vakkotaur: (kick)


Terry Pratchett, through the character of Sam Vimes, notes that all crime is theft. Burglary and theft and embezzlement are certainly theft. Kidnapping is theft of a person. Murder is theft of life. Other crimes are theft of privacy, from simple trespass all the way up (or rather down) to rape. Plagiarism is theft of ideas. It is worth asking then, when something is to be considered criminal, what it is that is being stolen. Not what might be stolen by error or abuse, but what is being stolen.

If one takes the time to examine the founding of the United States of America and its constitution, there was really only one crime, one theft, that had to be guarded against: the theft of individual liberty. What government can do is carefully limited. Some of what government is barred from doing is listed, but it is noted that the listed limitations are not necessarily all of the limitations. Where there is question, the answer is this: Do what maximizes individual liberty.

Looking at the issue of marriage for homosexuals, can anyone show anything being stolen? Despite cries from some religious folks that such a thing would harm heterosexual marriage, there is no evidence of how this could be. Would homosexuals suddenly start stealing wives or husbands? The idea is absurd. Perhaps it is meant as stealing from the pool of available men or women - yet by the very definition, the pool that gays and lesbians would take partners from is not the same as the pool of available heterosexual partners. As there is no theft, where is the crime? And, which way lies greater individual liberty?

Nobody has to like the idea for themselves, as many no doubt dislike the free choices of others. People disagree on who to vote for, on what church to attend, whether to attend one at all, what do with their money, and on and on. But that is the beauty of liberty: it doesn't matter what others believe. You choose whether to vote, and if you do, who to vote for. You choose whether to participate in any religion, and if you do, which religion. You choose how to spend, or save, your money. Already millions disagree with you about which way, if any, to vote, what religion, if any, to pay heed to, and the best thing to do with your money. But that's not a problem, unless they make their own choice to have heartburn over choices that are not theirs to make. So why shouldn't you be able to choose who to marry? Because it might piss someone off? What say should anyone not directly involved have in what is your choice? None at all.

vakkotaur: Centaur holding bow - cartoon (Default)


As [livejournal.com profile] jmaynard mentioned, the "concealed carry" bill was finally passed and signed into law here in MN. It's more a "carry" bill - the weapon could be concealed but now, well eventually, would simply be permitted to be carried beyond one's own property. The critical change in the law is from "may issue" to "shall issue." The permit can still be denied, but now the denier can get called on it and will have to show a convincing reason for the denial. Those who would deny, a small number, are limited, and that limit upholds the freedom of a large number.

There was also a decision by the Minnesota Supreme Court about searches and traffic stops. The Minnesota Constitution has some privacy guarantees that I wish were in the U.S. Constitution. The upshot of all this is the current ruling that a traffic stop cannot become a search or an interrogation (beyond the reason for the stop) without a "reasonable suspicion" that a(nother) crime is being committed. This limits how a search be instigated, and in doing so preserves freedoms. It removes the idiotic "What do you have to hide?" question that exists even if not explicitly asked and puts the burden of proof on the accuser, which is exactly where it belongs.

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