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Wednesday, January 31, 2007
Walter E. Williams :: Townhall.com Columnist
Property rights
by Walter E. Williams
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"Imprimis" is Hillsdale College's monthly publication that has over 1.25 million readers. It's Hillsdale's way of sharing the ideas of the many distinguished speakers invited to their campus. And, I might add, Hillsdale College is one of the few colleges where students get a true liberal arts education, absent the nonsense seen on many campuses.

The January edition of "Imprimis" contains an important speech by former New Jersey Superior Court Judge Andrew P. Napolitano titled "Property Rights After the Kelo Decision." For those who haven't kept up, the Kelo decision is the 2005 U.S. Supreme Court 5-4 decision that upheld the city of New London, Connecticut's condemnation of the property of one private party so that another private party could use it to build an office facility. Such a decision was a flagrant violation of the letter and spirit of the Fifth Amendment, which reads in part, "nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation." Public use, according to the Constitution's framers, means uses such as roads, bridges, and forts.

While most Americans appreciate the concept of yours and mine, Judge Napolitano's speech gives it greater focus. Formerly a law professor, Napolitano says, "When teaching law students the significance of private property, we tell them that each owner of such property has something called a 'bundle of rights.' The first of these is the right to use the property. The second is the right to alienate the property. The third and greatest is the right to exclude people from the property."

Can the government force one to sell his property? James Madison said yes, so long as it was for a public use and the owner was paid a fair market value. Thomas Jefferson was opposed to a person being forced to sell his property for a public use, arguing that the essence of private property is the right to exclude anyone, including government, from the property. But Madison's view prevailed, hence the Fifth Amendment provision.

In recent years, state and local governments have been running roughshod over private property rights in ways that would have horrified our founders. In the 1959 Courtesy Sandwich Shop case, a New York court held that if the tax collector collects more taxes by taking the private property of one party and transferring it to another, that's a public use permitted by the Constitution.

Recently, the city of Port Chester, N.Y., gave a private developer virtual power to condemn property within its designated redevelopment area. Bart Didden and Dominick Bologna, owners of property within the redevelopment area, approached the private developer for a permit to build a CVS pharmacy on their land. The developer told them to pay him $800,000 or give him a 50 percent interest in the CVS pharmacy or he'd have the local government condemn the land. Didden and Bologna refused, and the next day their land was condemned. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the local government's decision, which is nothing less than sanctioning extortion.

Napolitano concluded his speech pointing out something that few Americans appreciate. Natural rights do not come from government; they spring from our humanity. Or, as our founders put it, we are endowed by our "Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness," the latter meaning property. We establish governments to secure these rights.

Unfortunately, Americans have permitted governments at every level to become increasingly destructive of the ends they were created to serve. Under the color of law, government often does to us what thieves and crooks do, and like a nation of sheep we stand by and take it, and what's worse, sometimes we ask for it.

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About The Author
Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of George Mason University as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and is the author of More Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.
 
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Map to Mt. Doom, Part 3
Uncle Alby, as you are no doubt aware, many, if not most of the Founders were deists.
To borrow the syntax of Thomas Paine: Jesus knew that if a man were impressed as fully and as strongly as he ought to be with a logic-based belief in a God, a fixed point of moral reference, an absolute moral order to the universe, his moral life and behavior would be regulated by the force and power of this belief, he would stand in awe of God and of himself (a creation/child of God), and would not do those things which could not be concealed from either. Jesus also understood that to give this belief/faith the full and fair opportunity of life-governing, life-changing force, it is necessary that the belief/faith acts alone in an atmosphere of free will/freedom/truth completely void of all external coercion. Unfortunately for true believers in the One Ring, that excludes the coercion-based State established as a commercial monopoly by the autonomous legal profession culture. I tend to agree with Paine's view of Jesus and his reality-and-logic-based Gospel.
In reality, there appear to be only two possible theoretical explanations for the existence of the universe and human beings and the planet we live on: 1) intelligent design (ID); or 2) random conglomeration of molecules (RCOM).
Under the ID theory there is a fixed point of moral reference in the universe, with an attendant moral code of obligatory behavior, which transcends the most often ignorant and whimsical opinions of humankind and their problematic coercion-based governments.
Under the RCOM theory, there is no Creator, therefore no Creator-endowed moral code of obligatory behavior, and, consequently, no moral prohibition against using the police power of the state and the forms of law and taxation to steal (in the name of the “common good,” of course) the labor of A and redistribute it to B.
Socialism is evil because it uses evil means (coercion) to achieve what are seen as good ends (helping people). But morally there is no right way to do a wrong thing. That’s why socialism must necessarily be anathematically anti-God, especially when you define the individual human as a self-owning, self-determinative, eternal spirit-child of God, and you define “God,” as the Great I AM Spirit of the universal human desire/need for existence (life), significance (to be loved), self-realization/fulfillment (liberty), and contentment (happiness). I found that a useful way for me to look at reality is the God of the freedom-loving individual vs. the Satan of the coercion-loving herd.
Since the mostly-deist Founders, all really smart guys who seriously distrusted "government," tried their dead-level best to give us the "noble experiment" of the Constitution (aka The State), it has taken us a mere 200 years to completely void it via intellectually-dishonest and revisionist-history "interpretation" by lying rogue judiciaries. In other words, "Meet the new boss, same as the old boss." So much for the "noble experiment." Logic would seem to dictate that it's long past time to unconditionally reject the inherent evil and inevitably corrupting nature of the State and get back to a logic-based faith in a Creator/God. Surely technology can be used to return to a more agrarian, self-sufficient, earth-friendly economy which would gravitate toward the complete abandonment of our self-absorbed and illogical trust/faith in the One Ring of "government" coercion.
To me, at least, that path represents a far higher spiritual and intellectual potential than the sad and self-destructing path we are on.
Even if it should be impossible for us to attain such lofty goals, it helps me live a happier life to believe in them. :-)

Map to Mt. Doom, Part 2
In the phrase, "I deliberately make the conscious choose," the word CHOOSE should have been CHOICE. I apologize for the sloppy editing.
Additionally, I forgot to say, that, for me, a contributing factor in my faith was that an exhaustive years-long study of coercion-based human law led me back to God's REAL cause-and-effect natural law. Decades ago I got into a beef with the government and wound up winning an unprecedented full blown federal trial with over 200 exhibits.
I researched the law, all day, every day for about a year and a half, digressing for weeks into fascinating areas of the law which had nothing to do with the case I was working on.
One of the best ways to become educated as to the inherently evil and inevitably corrupting One Ring of Power (coercion-based State) is to read U.S. Supreme Court opinions and watch 5 brilliant majority minds argue with 4 other brilliant dissenting minds, using all the same points of history, moral platitudes, legal axioms, and doctrines of law while trying to accomplish EXACT MORAL OPPOSITES. I researched the law back through Sir William Blackstone to Sir Edward Coke and the times when judges used to quote Scripture verses as the rationale and basis for their decisions.
The battling judges would use light sabers of reason to slash great gaping gashes in each other's webs of darkness, through which the light of Truth would shine.
At that point I realized the entire legal profession culture and it's creation, the State, has historically always been a moral and intellectual fraud, and an unacceptably poor substitute for faith in a universal fixed point of moral reference, aka God, aka the sovereignty of the individual, which, of course, carries with it the inextricable obligation of obedience to the Two Great Commandments.
Once one understands intellectually the need for faith in, and obedience to the God of the individual, one understands that to be disobedient to God is to be untrue to oneself.
As Socrates once said, an unexamined life is not worth living. Mine is very much an examined life. As I said, I consciously and very deliberately choose faith in the God of individual sovereignty because, in the words of Christ, the free-will-based yoke is light, and it makes me happy. It is infinitely to be preferred over the coercion-based deception and manipulation of the dominant members of mindless never-ending herd pecking order who call themselves "leaders" or "government," and who call their money-and-greed-based system "the State" or "rule of law."
Onward to Mount Doom!
Cheers! :-)
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