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Recap: How to Oppose TRV Eminent Domain Abuse

In June, I took some notes at a workshop hosted by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm helping to build a grassroots resistance to the Trinity River Vision eminent domain abuse. The lead organization working on behalf of those affected in the county is Citizens Who Care.

Personally, I think opposition to the TRV is a great cause to support to protect individuals and businesses from the plunder of local bureaucrats. However, the hosts had some great tips for general activism in the future.

Mike Miller, from IJ’s Texas chapter, talked about the new eminent domain constitutional amendment that went into effect in Texas this year. There are some pluses and minuses to it. The matter left open is who determines if a project is primarily for “economic development,” which the new amendment forbids. The best-case scenario is that government judges will determine the purpose of contested eminent domain use. Otherwise, local governments will be able to deem that a project’s purpose is whatever they please, effectively neutralizing the constitutional amendment.

Christina Walsh is part of the Castle Coalition, the activism arm of IJ. Her focus is to defeat eminent domain abuse by building a local coalition against the project without ever having to litigate, a preemptive stike, if you will. She emphasized forming an effective organization and building a broad coalition among potentially affected constituents. Some examples of how to organize your allies, to make noise, and to work with media are online.

Here are some bullet points Walsh presented.

  1. Identify others potentially threatened: property owners, renters, employees, customers, suppliers, tax payers, those who could face similar threats in the future, ect.
  2. Create a broad coalition with one unifying message
  3. Get local political officials and media on your side
  4. Find respected academics to support your findings, recruit college students
  5. Use current members to recruit others
  6. Distribute fliers: door-to-door, at businesses, or post
  7. Go where the crowds are
  8. Utilize sign-in sheets to retain contact information
  9. Welcome new members
  10. Match talents with tasks
  11. Define Victory
  12. Get online: keep everyone current; give visitors five things they can do now; use social networking sites like Facebook
  13. Speak at every public meeting
  14. Hold rallies and protest — be visible
  15. Working with the Media
  16. Humanize and personalize your issue
  17. Present facts reporters can wrap their heads around
  18. Repeat concise sound bites
  19. Distribute one-pagers that are easily digestible
  20. Offer an alternative
  21. Respond en masse to all media publicity
  22. Expose myths
  23. Get published in any format possible

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Recap: FIJA Literature Distribution

fightfortruth and I distributed about 270 brochures to potential jurors and some county employees. It seemed to be a light jury pool today. Otherwise, we could have reached more people.

We passed out a different brochure [PDF] this time, “A Primer for Prospective Jurors.” We think it is more professional looking in addition to providing some useful tips on answering private questions during voir dire.

Some of the common questions about jury nullification are also addressed in the brochure. For example, “Once on a jury, must I use the law as given by the judge, even if I think it’s a bad law, or wrongly applied?” There are also historic examples of jury nullification being used to right a wrong, like the trial of William Penn.

We will set another event for next month. I know I said this last time, but I will make time for a training session sometime for any newcomers who like to attend FIJA events in the future.

Categories: Recap.

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Event: FIJA Literature Distribution

What: Thanks to a generous donation from the Fully Informed Jury Association, we have over 1000 copies of brochures and other literature to give to potential jurors.

We will be informing potential jurors that their primary function is to protect the rights of the accused from tyrannical or immoral laws, not simply to administer verdicts regarding the guilt of defendants. Approximately 700 potential jurors appear at the Justice Center in downtown Fort Worth each Monday morning.

Meter parking is available for about 50 cents. It would also be helpful if someone brought a camera to record the event. The event lasts for about an hour, but if someone can only stay for a few minutes, that would still be helpful.

A copy of the tri-fold (PDF) being distributed is available for downloading.

Here is a copy (PDF) of useful tips that FIJA recommends for passing out literature near courthouses.

If you are interested, you may also view the jury selection process as a guest, according to the court bailiff.

The topic of jury rights will be of most interest and relevance to people who may serve on a panel. It will be on the top of their mind, for they are much more likely to read those documents than at any other time. This also provides an opportunity for outreach to meet other like-minded folks and bring them into the fold.

When: Monday, July 19, at 7:15 until 8:30 a.m.

Where: Tarrant County Justice Center, 401 West Belknap St, Fort Worth, TX 76102, at the Weatherford-Taylor intersection.

This is event is being coordinated with the Campaign for Liberty — Tarrant County.

Image credit: Albie Girl, with a Creative Commons license

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Event: How to Oppose TRV Eminent Domain Abuse

What: The Institute for Justice will be addressing grassroots activists wanting to stop eminent domain abuse by the Trinity River Vision project.

According to the event page on Facebook, “Speakers include local activists Adrian Murray and John Austin Basham. Also – Sam Stavron, who stands to lose many, many acres of his land that has belonged to three generations of his family.”

The IJ is a libertarian public interest law firm specializing in defending individuals and businesses from government abuse.

When: The event begins June 15 at 6:00 p.m.

Where: The back room of Billy Miner’s Saloon at 150 West 3rd Street, Fort Worth, TX 76102.

More information is available here.

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‘Sticky’ Government and Immigration

One of John Maynard Keynes’ criticisms of the market mechanism was what he called “sticky” wages. He claimed that the market for employment does not work as efficiently as previously thought, because employees are reluctant to accept lower wages. He not only claimed that wages failed to respond to supply and demand but that it was a good thing they were unresponsive.

In his book The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, he said, “It is only in a highly authoritarian society, where sudden, substantial, all-round changes could be decreed that a flexible wage-policy could function with success.” Astoundingly, he thought authoritarian societies were more susceptible to the market process. In an earlier comment, he said that was “because men want the moon. … There is no remedy but to persuade the public that green cheese is practically the same thing and to have a green cheese factory (i.e. a central bank) under public control.” So Keynes thought the role of government was to deceive individuals in the public into making decision they otherwise would not have made. In an authoritarian society, he swooned, there is no need for such pretenses.

Part of Keynes’ confusion was failing to distinguish between the total wage income and the hourly wage rate of an employee. In today’s market, there are all sorts of adjustments that employers can consider when wanting to cut their overall labor costs, such as reducing the number of labor hours and providing fewer health benefits. But those are best achieved in an open, dynamic market process.

Governments, as commonly conceived, are incapable of this downward flexibility because they are anything but open and dynamic. They are a violent assault on reason. Government escalates in a progressively intrusive way, making it what is sticky downward.

For the most part, conservatives, who rightly deplore their stolen tax dollars being redistributed to make welfare recipients more dependent on government handouts, hardly ever talk about reducing government welfare. Not including the automotive and financial industry bailouts, entitlement spending almost doubled under George W. Bush from 2002 to 2009. Instead, conservative politicians look to expand government power in hopes of deterring those who have moved into the country without government permission. They understand how difficult it would be politically to reduce government handouts, even to those without the ability to vote. Their best bet is to advocate for more government power, more police, more laws, more taxes.

Worse still, government is slippery upward. The reason why conservatives do not more vigorously advocate for reducing government welfare is varied. It might be because they do not want to be called racist, or it might be because it would hurt their chances of gaining control of government to impose their own social agenda. It is also not worth much of an individual’s time to lobby congressmen to reduce spending when the extra savings would probably just be spent on some other boondoggle. Violence does not produce positive overall results. It is less than a zero-sum game. In government, you are either stealing or being stolen from. The power of the state is being used immediately for your benefit, or the power of the state is being used against your benefit.

I can understand why conservatives clamor for more laws. On their own, they could not afford to kick out all the foreigners, to hire bounty hunters and deport them. That would be awfully expensive, and people might not look too kindly on using violence against peaceful people, even against those who broke an arbitrary government edict. But somehow, people acquire a different moral nature while wearing a government-issued uniform. If they can lobby for power of their own, they can use the government to achieve something, financially and culturally, not possible otherwise. The government’s monopoly on taxation means they can spend resources they did not have access to beforehand, extinguishing liberty one amber at a time.

We can see why government does not solve problems but only makes them worse. We can also see why reducing government aggression, at least through the conventional electoral process, has been so fruitless.

Categories: Commentary.

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Support* the Troops

It is easy to dislike politicians and what they do. It is not so easy to publicly oppose their henchmen: the police and the troops.

The police are only enforcing the law. If you want it changed, lobby the legislature, said the serf to the slave. After all, it is not the military’s fault they are being ordered to invade nations that pose no threat to the American government’s security, what they call “national security.” It is the commanders and the politicians who got them into this mess.

I agree somewhat. But the troops are the ones who chose to join the military — for the adventure, or for self-improvement, or for whatever lie their recruiter fed them. Soldiers are the ones who bomb wedding parties, who torture other indoctrinated men, and who massacre families. Of course, I bet a good number of troops perform a lot of heroic missions to save their comrades in the field. Most of the troops are just there to do their part to fight for a country they love. I am friends with a handful of them, so I know they are probably in the majority.

We are constantly fed guilt that we should support the troops — and by extension the politicians and bureaucrats who put them in danger. But how should I support the troops?

Should I pay taxes to buy their overpriced toys? Should I support their immoral occupation of countless countries? Or, should I support the hegemonic government of which they play an integral part? I know a more moderate position is to support the troops by insisting they be returned home. But is that much better?

Even if the troops were not abroad, they would be that much easier to deploy in our cities. Conceivably, it would become more difficult to scale down government spending once an influx of soldiers boosted depressed local economies.

With all that said, I believe we should support the troops. I support troops who stop following orders and take personal responsibility for their behavior. I support the troops who stand down and refuse to deploy.

Reposted from Who Plans Whom?

Categories: Commentary.

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Recap: FIJA Literature Distribution

I had a productive time at the Fully Informed Jury Association event this morning at the Tarrant County (Texas) Justice Center. Unfortunately because of the weather, I had to run solo. I did get out about 175 brochures though I only stayed for about 45 minutes.

One lady called for jury service took special interest. She told me about her son who was arrested for marijuana possession. She agreed that it should not be illegal, and I told her that her son had the right to own property, including marijuana. She said she had never thought of it like that before. She wanted to know more about how to exercise her rights as a juror, and I told her not to bring it up during voir dire or else she wouldn’t be selected.

I do think it is important to reach people who do not already hold political ideologies. I think you’ll find that many of Ron Paul’s supporters had not been too involved in politics, if at all.

In the coming months, we plan to continue educating potential jurors about how they can protect the liberty of individuals. Especially if people refuse to obey the new government health insurance mandates, jury nullification could become a valuable tool if state governments do not nullify it first.

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Event: FIJA Literature Distribution

What: We’ll be informing potential jurors that their primary function is to protect the rights of the accused from tyrannical or immoral laws, not simply to administer a judgement on guilt. Approximately 700 potential jurors appear at the Justice Center in downtown Fort Worth each Monday morning.

This is a copy of the tri-fold that we’ll be distributing.

Here is a copy of useful tips that the Fully Informed Jury Association recommends for passing out literature near courthouses.

If you’re interested, you may also view the jury selection process as a guest, according to the court bailiff.

This event is being sponsored by the Campaign for Liberty — Tarrant County, and event registration is available on the site.

When: March 22, Monday at 7:15 until 8:30 a.m.

Why: The topic of jury rights will be of most interest and relevance to people who may serve on a panel. It will be on the top of their mind, and they are much more likely to read those documents than at any other time. This also provides an opportunity for outreach to meet other like-minded folks and bring them into the fold.

Make a stand for Liberty!

Contact justino for more details.

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