Saturday, October 15, 2011

Government At All Levels Loses Its Common Sense

When  government becomes all powerful and stops serving the public and instead becomes a bully, the idea of personal freedom quickly erodes. Whether it is a child's lemonade stand that is closed down for "health" reasons as in the following story or a local school board which did not follow its own rules in selling off property as in the case of West Bloomfield, Michigan selling off a school without competitive bids (to a Muslim group), we are nearing a time when America becomes a dictatorship. Is that event close at hand?  In a previous posting, we told you of the North Carolina Governor who called for no 2012 elections so that the current legislature could be things straightened out. No one would even express an idea like that way twenty short years ago, it was unthinkable.  Now it is promoted, not by some fringe blowhard, but by a mainstream governor. 

Freedom is lost, not overnight, but slowly. A little nibble here, a small restriction there  and then all of a sudden, it is all gone.

Take freedom of speech  as an example.  Most people would tell you that it is an important right and very necessary in a free society.  However, it is very quickly being eroded.  Years ago a law was passed that you could not cry out "FIRE" in a movie house.  That made sense. Doing so would endanger others. However, in the past twenty or so years, we have come up with "hate speech" laws where one's utterance toward someone in a protected class will result in your being charged with a crime.

Please understand that we are not saying that one should use such language, however, to criminalize language, is wrong. Words no matter how vile and despicable should not be a crime. Politically correct language is no replacement for freedom of speech.

How long will it be before calling the President, your Senator or Representative a name, become a crime? We fear time is near. Once that occurs, our freedom of speech is lost.

Omnipotent government regardless of how kind initially, will, over time, become domineering and crushing of the peoples freedoms as it tries to maintain control. It is a normal human condition that all organizations wish to continue to exist and will do everything in their power to stay in control regardless of the price.  A good example is Libya.  As the Gaddafi's dictatorship was falling, not only did they turn their guns on the protesters but also uninvolved civilians.  They turned on the very people they governed.


Are we there yet? Probably not, however, the United States it would not take much to put us over the edge. For example, a world economic collapse, riots in the streets, imposition of martial law, and elimination of the rights of speech, assembly, gun ownership topped off with the elimination of elections could dramatically end America as we know it.

We still  have time but we must reverse the actions taken by all levels of government starting with our local representatives.  We must hold them responsible by watching their actions and bringing suit when they violate laws or pass laws which violate our basic rights. It is up to each of us. Are you willing or are you going to sit on the sidelines and let someone else do it?  The choice is yours.



Government Declares War On Lemonade Stands

October 14, 2011 by  
Government Declares War On Lemonade Stands
PHOTOS.COM
In community after community, budding entrepreneurs are being told to pack it up and scoot before they’re charged with various violations.
Let’s switch for a bit from the deadly serious to the merely very irritating.
Last week, I pondered whether the U.S. is now sanctioning murder. Please click here if you didn’t read that very important column. So much more has come out about the slaying of Anwar al-Awlaki, and there has been so much confusion and controversy, that I’ll definitely return to the topic very soon.
But today, I want to talk about one of the most ridiculous results of our Big Nanny government run amok. It is the startling fact that all across the country, children are being told that their lemonade stands are against the law. And not just lemonade stands, but sales of Girl Scout cookies and Japanese green tea have also been declared enemies of the State.
I kid you not. In community after community, these budding entrepreneurs are being told to pack it up and scoot before they’re charged with various violations. In some instances, in fact, fines have been levied.
I’m beholden to the Freedom Center of Missouri, a relatively new public policy group in the Show Me State, for documenting the following list of outrages. Please note that all of these occurred this year. Such crackdowns are becoming more and more common.
Aug. 6: Massachusetts State police shut down the stand of a 12-year-old refugee from Fukushima, Japan, who was selling green tea he brought with him when he and his family evacuated after the tsunami.
Aug. 1: Police officers in Coralville, Iowa, ordered at least three sets of children to quit selling lemonade during the Register’s Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa unless they first got a vendor’s permit and a health inspection. This is the first known example of a coordinated set of shutdowns at a single time.
July 19: In McAllen, Texas, authorities shut down a girl’s lemonade stand for failing to obtain a food permit and threatened a grandmother who protested with a $50 fine.
July 17: Police in Appleton, Wis., inform children that despite legally selling lemonade and cookies in their front yard during an annual city festival for the past several years, a new city ordinance bans these sales. The reason? To protect licensed vendors from competition. How’s that for a great example of how America works?
June 16: A county inspector in Maryland closes kids’ lemonade stand and fines parents $500 for violating county law.
June 10: The Philadelphia Department of Health shuts down a lemonade stand operated by a cancer charity because it lacked a necessary permit and — get this — didn’t install a hand-washing station.
March 7: Officials in Hazelwood, Mo., said a cookie stand in a family’s driveway violated local ordinances and ordered an end to the Girl Scouts cookie sale.
Feb. 26: Georgia police demanded the closure of a Girl Scout cookie stand until the girls obtained a peddler’s permit.
Feb. 26: Savannah, Ga., officials determined that city ordinances require an end to a 40-year tradition of Girl Scouts selling cookies outside the historic home of the organization’s founder.
Is this a world gone crazy or what?
I wish I could tell you that the evil triumvirate of Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Barack Obama were responsible for this nuttiness. But they aren’t. In virtually every case, the culprits were local officials obeying local ordinances. So much for my long-held conviction that the closer you can bring government to the citizenry, the more fair and efficient it will be. Clearly, in the communities described above, some petty bureaucrats have an awful lot of time on their hands.
Have you heard of a similar outrage in your community? If you have, please notify the good folks at the Freedom Center of Missouri at www.mofreedom.org. They have a national map on their website where they like to track such things.
I thought of a way we can turn this absurd negative into a bit of a positive. And that is by asking you to share an inspiring story from your own youth when you demonstrated the same entrepreneurial spark as the youngsters above. What happened as a result?
I’ll start. My first money-making effort, besides a long list of chores that earned me a weekly allowance, was setting up a roadside lemonade stand along the highway that ran past our house.
What I didn’t consider, and what neither parent pointed out to me, was that the two-lane highway was in rural Ohio and that cars zipped by at 50 miles an hour. Want to guess how many slammed on the brakes and backed up a few hundred yards so they could buy our lemonade?
None. Our only customer in three days was a nice neighbor who knew we were there and came to a stop in front of our house. My younger brother, who was my partner in the enterprise, got pretty discouraged after the first hour or two. Because I was older and bigger, however, I made him keep at it for two more days.
Truth be told, I didn’t mind our lack of success. First of all, I had all the lemonade to drink I wanted. Second, I always had a book handy and could wile away the quiet hours with one of the Black Beauty stories or Tom Swift and his electric whatever. It didn’t take much to keep me happy in those days.
But during the third day, I finally threw in the towel. I had had enough of my brother’s complaining. Besides, he came up with an alternative idea that made sense to me.
“Why don’t we walk along the highway and pick up all the empty bottles we find,” he suggested. “We can take them to the store in town and collect the deposit on them. Then we can spend it on Coke, candy and comic books.”
Like any brother, Jeff knew all my weaknesses. I wasn’t that crazy about Coke or candy; in fact, I preferred a root beer float. But the chance to purchase a brand-new comic book, and not wait until my monthly haircut to read whatever remnant of a comic book I could find in our neighborhood barbershop, was irresistible.
So we went inside and each took a pillowcase from our bed. Then we started searching the roadside and gutter for castoffs.
You’ll probably be surprised to learn how successful our efforts were. As I recall, we received 2 cents for every small glass bottle we found and a nickel for the larger ones. After a couple of hours of effort, I think we’d each earned a dollar or two. That may not sound like much today, but back in the early 1950s, it was a king’s ransom — or at least enough for several comic books and candy.
The whole experience was a great lesson for us. Our parents made sure we realized there was no such thing in this world as something for nothing. If you wanted something, you had to earn it. As the Lord said in Genesis 3:19, “By the sweat of your brow will you have food to eat until you return to the ground from which you were made” (NLT).
I wish I saw more examples of today’s youngsters working as hard for their spending money as we did a generation or two ago. Kids today take their $100 sneakers and jeans for granted as well as their $200 electronic gizmos.
Would they actually be better off if they had to trudge down the highway, picking up empty soda and beer bottles to earn a few extra dollars? You tell me.
Until next time, keep some powder dry.
–Chip Wood

Chip Wood
Chip Wood is the geopolitical editor of PersonalLiberty.com. He is the founder of Soundview Publications, in Atlanta, where he was also the host of an award-winning radio talk show for many years. He was the publisher of several bestselling books, including Crisis Investing by Doug Casey, None Dare Call It Conspiracy by Gary Allen and Larry Abraham and The War on Gold by Anthony Sutton. Chip is well known on the investment conference circuit where he has served as Master of Ceremonies for FreedomFestThe New Orleans Investment ConferenceSovereign Society, and The Atlanta Investment Conference.

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