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Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
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From: ajteel@dendrite.cs.Colorado.EDU (A.J. Teel)
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Subject: Re: Enforcement of Early Common Law
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Message-ID: <1993Mar17.024330.14586@colorado.edu>
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Organization: Universtiy of Coloardo, Boulder
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Date: Wed, 17 Mar 1993 02:43:30 GMT
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Lines: 263
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>So are you calling for a return to trial by ordeal? Why do you find
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>millenium-old common law so desireable?
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Why do you find our "new" statutory law so desirable? So where
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did you get the idea that Common-Law is "trial by ordeal"? Is small
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claims court, "trial by ordeal"? This Common-Law was the ONLY LAW when
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the Const. was created and it WAS ONLY CREATED TO LIMIT THE POWERS
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OF GOVERNMENT.
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Compare the idea of "Common-Law" which is what the Constitution *for*
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the United States of America is BASED UPON and the corrupt, politically
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expedient "statutory" or "Vice-Admiralty" law that was never the intention
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of the framers of the Const.
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Please, please place me in your kill file or read the items I am
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posting, one or the other. Thanks. I do look forward to THOUGHTFUL
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discussions with you in the future.
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+=============================================================================+
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| D I S C L A I M E R |
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+------------------------------------oooOooo----------------------------------+
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| The sender of this message is not responsible for and does not necessarily |
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| agree with the content or opinions contained herein. Mail will be forwarded |
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| to the source identified, if any. This is for "information purposes only", |
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| has not necessarily been verified or tested in any way, and "should not be |
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| construed as legal advise". Your comments and responses are encouraged. |
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| Please Email to "ajteel@dendrite.cs.colorado.EDU" instead of replying here. |
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| With Explicit Reservation of All Rights, UCC 1-207, A. J. Teel, Sui Juris. |
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+=============================================================================+
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[START OF DOCUMENT: fl870402.txt.lis ]
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How We Lost Our Common Law Heritage
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by Richard J. Maybury
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Two Kinds of Law
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As a public school teacher and economic textbook writer, I saw that
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government control of the school system causes a "chilling" effect.
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Teachers and textbook publishers are reluctant to teach anything that might
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raise the eyebrows of the bureaucrats.
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Any serious criticism of government is omitted from the student's lessons.
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Huge amounts of vitally important information about law and political power
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are not passed on to the next generation.
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Because of this chilling effect, Americans are no longer taught that there
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are two kinds of legal systems, political and scientific.
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Many of America's "Founding Fathers" in 1776 were lawyers, and they took
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care to insure that their new country would be founded on the principles of
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scientific law. But these principles have now been swept from the legal
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system, and from the schools and colleges. What we are taught today is
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political law.
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To understand the differences between a scientific legal system and a
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political one, it is necessary to know how scientific law developed.
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Scientific Jurisprudence.
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Fifteen centuries ago the Roman Empire had collapsed. Barbarians had
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overrun Europe and set up feudal governments.
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These feudal governments were bloodthirsty and brutal, but they had one
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virtue: they were lazy. They had little interest in the day-to-day
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affairs of the common people. as long as the commoners paid taxes and
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fought wars, their new governments left them alone.
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This meant in many kingdoms there were no government court systems.
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Whenever two individuals had a dispute, they had to work it out on their
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own. We can imagine what happened. Disputes often led to brawls or worse.
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After several bloody incidents, the commoners would begin looking for ways
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to avoid violence. When two individuals had a dispute, their families and
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friends would gather round and tell them to find some neutral third party
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to listen to their stories and make a decision.
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Legal historians tell us the most highly respected and neutral third party
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in the community was usually a clergyman. The disputants would be brought
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before this clergyman and he would listen to both sides of the story. The
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clergyman would then consult moral guidelines, and make a decision. This
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decision would become a precedent for later decisions.
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As decades passed, the precedents were written down and kept in a safe
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place. Persons who were not too clear about how to handle an unusual
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business transaction or some other sticky matter could consult them to
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better plan ahead and avoid problems.
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Eventually, some of the clergymen became so skilled at listening to cases
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that they acquired considerable prestige. Demand for their services grew,
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and they became full-time judges. The body of precedents they produced
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became the law of common useage, the "common law".
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In its early years, common law was a private legal system completely
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independent of government. This is important. Students are taught that
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law and government are virtually the same thing, but this is quite wrong.
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Law and government are two very different institutions and they do not
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necessarily go together. Law is a service; government is force.
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Two Fundamental Laws
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A major problem a common law judge encountered was disputes between persons
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from different communities or of different religions. Guidelines on which
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cases were decided had to be those which all persons held in common.
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There are two fundamental laws on which all major religions and
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philosophies agree: (1) do what you have agreed to do, and, (2) do not
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encroach on others or their property.
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Common law was the body of definitions and procedures growing out of these
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two laws: "Do what you have agreed to do" was the basis of contract law;
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"do not encroach on others or their property" was the basis of criminal and
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tort law.
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This is how common law became the source of all our basic laws against
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theft, fraud, kidnapping, murder, etc. These acts were not made illegal by
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Congress; they were prohibited by centuries-old common law principles.
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Legal Consistency
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A skilled common law judge would try to make all his decisions logically
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consistent with the two fundamental laws. Common law was not only a
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private legal system, it was a scientific one. Abraham Lincoln considered
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`Euclid's Geometry' to be one of his most important law books; he studied
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it to be sure the logic of his cases was airtight.
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One of the most important characteristics of common law was its certainty.
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It had evolved very carefully over many centuries, changing little from one
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decade to the next. The two fundamental laws remained always in place, a
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stabilizing force. The community could expect their legal environment to
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remain reasonably orderly.
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In fact, common law was so logical and sensible that the typical American
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could study and understand it! It was regarded as a source of wisdom.
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The great British statesman Edmund Burke said of early America, "In no
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country, perhaps, in the world, is law so general a study." He observed
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that "all who read, and most do read, endeavor to obtain some smattering in
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that science. I have been told by an eminent bookseller, that in no branch
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of his business ... were so many books as those on law exported to the
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colonies."
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A British general trying to govern America in the 1700s complained that
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Americans were impossible to buffalo; they were all lawyers.
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Political Law
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Political law is the opposite of common law. Based on political power --
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brute force -- not on the two fundamental laws. It is crude and primitive.
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It has no requirement for logic or morality. It changes whenever the
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political wind changes. Fickle and tangled; no one can completely
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understand it.
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Democracy or dictatorship, it doesn't matter; political law is arbitrary.
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You do whatever the powerholders say, or else. Right or wrong.
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This is why majority rule is mob rule. The majority is as human as any
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dictator. Like the dictator, they do not necessarily vote for what is
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right; they vote for what they want.
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Their wants change constantly, so political power destroys businessmen's
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ability to plan ahead. James Madison asked in the `Federalist Papers',
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"What prudent merchant will hazard his fortunes in any new branch of
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commerce when he knows not that his plans may be rendered unlawful before
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they can be executed?"
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The American Revolution was fought over the difference between scientific
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law and political law. Government officials had encroached into the
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private business, lives, and property of the colonists, and the colonists
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resented this. "All men are created equal". God has given no one special
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permission to encroach on others, government included.
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The leaders of the American revolution believed common law was superior to
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political law. After the revolution, they created the Bill of Rights and
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other documents based on common law principles. The goal was to make the
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superiority of these principles permanent, and to restrain government's
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efforts efforts otherwise.
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Discovery vs. Enactment
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The founder's understanding of the scientific nature of common law can be
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seen in this statement by Thomas Paine: "Man cannot make principles, he
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can only discover them."
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Common law was a process of discovery: There were courts before there was
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law.
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The premise of common law was that there is a Higher Law than political
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law; the judges tried to discover and apply this Law. It was carefully,
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logically, worked out, case after case, century after century, much like
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the laws of physics or chemistry.
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Political law is an enactment process. Legislators -- lawmakers -- make
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changes according to whatever political pressures they happen to be feeling
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at the moment. Something that seems right today can be very wrong
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tomorrow. In fact, under political law the frequent redefining of right
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and wrong is considered necessary; during re-election lawmakers proudly
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boast of the number of new laws they have enacted.
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In short, we now live in a world where it is assumed politicians have some
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divine power to make law. In 1788, Patrick Henry realized this could
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happen. During his struggle to prevent creation of a federal government he
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warned that "Congress, from their general powers, may fully go into the
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business of human legislation." Henry's warning was ignored, of course,
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and today's burdensomely insane legal system is the consequence.
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`Business Week' says that each year in the U.S. there are more than 100,000
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new laws, rules and regulations enacted. This is a primary reason the
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economy is a shambles. Tax rates, money supply, trade restrictions,
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licensing laws, and thousands of other factors are stirred around in a
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witch's brew of regulation.
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Much of this brew is lunacy. In `The Trenton Pickle Ordinance and Other
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Bonehead Legislation', newsman Dick Hyman cites 600 examples of our
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political law. In Massachusetts, says Hyman, it is illegal to put tomatoes
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in clam chowder. [The FOUNDATION Editorial Staff agrees that some stern
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measures are necessary in this instance.] A Texas law says that when two
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trains meet at a railroad crossing, each shall come to a full stop and
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neither shall proceed until the other has gone. The Arkansas legislature
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once enacted a law forbidding the Arkansas River to rise higher than a
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certain limit.
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Go back and reread Edmund Burke's remark about our forefather's study of
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law. Notice Burke refers to law as a science. Would any sane person today
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call our law a science?
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Observe Hong Cong. A magnet for Red China's impoverished victims of
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socialism. This city is often cited as a model of free-market
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effectiveness; it's one of the most prosperous cities in Asia, yet most in
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Hong Kong know nothing of free-market economics. The city's legal system
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just happens to be based on British common law principles.
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Common law was not perfect, but it was consciously aimed in a specific
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direction; that of truth and justice. Political law has no aim at all,
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other than to obtain and use political power for whatever purposes the
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powerholders decide. Common law historically has had strong popular
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support, indeed it was the principle upon which this country was founded.
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It weathered continuous political assault until the politically
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manufactured exigencies of the New Deal finally overwhelmed it.
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Liberty vs. Permission
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We free-market advocates should bear in mind that under political law
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people have no genuine liberties; only permissions. We do not have freedom
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of speech -- we have permission to speak. We do not have freedom to trade
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-- we have licensed permission to trade. These permissions can be
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restricted or revoked at the whim of the powerholders. Indeed, under
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political law we really have no more political liberty than do the Soviets;
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just more permissions at the moment.
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Under scientific law, the individual's fundamental rights to life, liberty,
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and property were held to be gifts granted by the Creator; they could not
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be infringed. Says Arthur R. Hogue in `Origins of the Common Law', "The
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common law is marked by a doctrine of the supremacy of law ... All agencies
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of government must act upon established principles ... The king, like his
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subjects, was under the law."
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Our attempt to rescue civilization will fail if we continue living under
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political law. Even if hundreds of reforms are enacted, the next group of
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politicians can easily use political law to overturn them.
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[Edited from `Freedom League Newsletter', Apr/May 1987]
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[END OF DOCUMENT: fl870402.txt.lis ]
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