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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
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Governments:
Do your job; protect our rights
By Henry Lamb
February 24, 2007
The right to speak freely; the right to
worship freely; and the right to pursue happiness, are defined by our
Founders to be "unalienable rights," endowed by our Creator.
The pursuit of happiness begins with the ownership of property. The
absence of the right to own property is slavery. These rights are
enshrined in our Constitution which created a government expressly for
the purpose of "securing" these rights.
Government was given the authority to take private
property under certain conditions, "...for the erection of forts,
magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, and other needful buildings...."
The Fifth Amendment says: "...nor shall private property be taken
for public use without just compensation." Nowhere does the U.S.
Constitution say that government may take private property for a
"public purpose." This addition to the Constitution is a gift,
from the U.S. Supreme Court, to governments at every level.
The KELO et al. v. CITY OF NEW LONDON et al.,
decided in 2005, reaffirmed the power of state and local government to
take private property from one owner, and give or sell it to another
private owner, as long as the taking could be described to serve some
"public purpose," rather than a "public use." This
horrible decision launched a parade of measures to prohibit the use of
eminent domain to transfer private property from one owner to another
private owner, simply for the sake of so-called "economic
development."
Utah was one of the first states to prohibit its Rural
Development Authorities from using eminent domain power to take private
property on the pretext that the takings would somehow serve a
"public purpose." Citizens of Utah were proud of their
Legislature for recognizing the threat to private property rights, and
responding responsibly.
Now, however, at the urging of the Utah League of
Cities and Towns, the Legislature is considering reversing its previous
private property rights protection by restoring eminent domain power to
local governments for economic development, a so-called acceptable
"public purpose." Under the proposed "compromise"
legislation, a municipality would first have to declare an area to be
"blighted." Blight, of course, is in the eyes of the beholder.
Where is the Utah government that should be protecting
the property rights of land owners in Utah?
Where is the Oregon Government that should be
protecting its citizens? Twice, the people of Oregon have approved
property rights protection initiatives, most recently, Measure 37. The
first time, the courts overturned the clear wishes of the people. The
people corrected the initiative to answer the court's objections, and
overwhelmingly approved the initiative again.
Now the Governor, Ted Kulongoski, has asked the
legislature to modify Measure 37, and take away the private property
protections the initiative provided. The legislature is now considering Senate
Bill 505, which, far from securing the rights
guaranteed to each American by the U.S. Constitution, would destroy
them.
In Washington State, King
County implemented what was called a
"65-35" plan, which means that the landowner can use only 35
percent of his land, leaving 65 percent in its "natural"
condition. Of course, the owner must pay taxes on 100 percent of the
property. In Northampton County, Pennsylvania, a
similar proposal is under consideration,
except that it is a "90-10" plan, in which 90 percent of the
land must remain untouched, while only 10 percent can be developed.
Why are governments rushing to erase private property
rights, instead of protecting them? It's almost as if a generation of
socialists has been produced by our public education system, a
generation that encourages government to limit
Constitutionally-guaranteed individual freedom in order to achieve some
perceived "public purpose." It doesn't matter whether the
public has endorsed the purpose, it matters only that a government
agency has declared the purpose to be "public."
In his 1787 "A Defense of the American
Constitutions," John Adams said:
"The moment the idea is admitted into society
that property is not as sacred as the laws of God, and that there is
not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and
tyranny commence."
The moment Adams feared has arrived. The idea that
property is no longer sacred has been admitted into society. As the
legislatures in Utah, Oregon, and other states yield to this idea
advanced by the League of Cities, and other non-elected lobbying forces,
the force of law is twisted to protect - not the sacred right of
property ownership - but the desires of non-elected bureaucrats, and
those who profit at the expense of others.
The only power stronger than lobbyists' money is the
power of determined voters expressed at the ballot box. The right to
speak freely; to worship freely; and to own property in the pursuit of
happiness is threatened by a generation who never knew John Adams, nor
the principles of freedom he helped define. Elected officials must be
told - so they know beyond any doubt - that the vast majority of their
constituents do want the principles of freedom protected, and retained
exactly as they were defined by Adams and the other founders of this
great country. Let's get busy.
See biography for Henry
Lamb
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source: http://www.freedom.org/news/200702/24/lamb.phtml
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