Renegade District Attorneys Who Defy State Mandates Are Often Freedom's Last Line of Defense
Perhaps, as we relearn the virtues of local decision-making, we'll also reacquire a taste for individualism.

Immediately after the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision eliminating constitutional protections for the right to abortion, states with socially conservative leanings began restricting access to the procedure. Just as quickly, dissenting local officials announced they wouldn't enforce restrictions. Anybody paying attention could have predicted the battles and noted that the sides flipped from their stances in earlier conflicts. But in the mix of this partisan combat is a hint that, while letting localities opt out of restrictive laws from further up the political food chain hands nobody the victories they want, it could make it easier for the people of a deeply divided country to live in peace.
"As elected prosecutors, when we stand in court, we have the privilege and obligation to represent 'the people,'" reads a letter organized by Fair and Just Prosecution, an organization promoting ideologically progressive approaches to criminal justice, and signed by dozens of prosecutors. "All members of our communities are our clients – they elected us to represent them and we are bound to fight for them as we carry out our obligation to pursue justice. Our legislatures may decide to criminalize personal healthcare decisions, but we remain obligated to prosecute only those cases that serve the interests of justice and the people. Criminalizing and prosecuting individuals who seek or provide abortion care makes a mockery of justice; prosecutors should not be part of that."
Some signers come from states like California and New York where they're unlikely to be put to the test. But among them are district attorneys in Texas, which even before Dobbs privatized anti-abortion efforts, Missouri, which rushed to implement a restrictive law, and Alabama, where anti-abortion laws on the books are presumably back in effect. Independently, New Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson said she would not jail anybody who violated Louisiana's abortion laws. The New Orleans City Council voted to deny the use of city funds for anti-abortion enforcement.
As you might guess, opponents of abortion aren't thrilled.
"Some of the same Soros-funded prosecutors accused of going easy on criminals are now refusing to enforce the state abortion laws taking effect after the fall of Roe v. Wade," hyperventilated a report in The Washington Times.
Texas legislators might let prosecutors target alleged lawbreakers outside their own counties.
"I expect the urban county DAs to resist it. And that's why we need to come up with alternative remedies," commented State Rep. Briscoe Cain, a Republican for whom abortion is the defining issue.
But we've been here before, with the sides taking mirror-image positions. In 2020, when mostly Democratic state officials imposed lockdowns, curfews, and mask mandates, I pointed out that "[c]ounty sheriffs in California, New York, North Dakota, Oregon and elsewhere say they'll have nothing to do with enforcement efforts and spar with governors who resent such independence."
The refuseniks at that time were mostly conservative-leaning, as are the local officials across the country who have declared their jurisdictions "Second Amendment sanctuaries." They refuse to use local resources to enforce restrictive state and federal gun laws.
"This draws a line in the sand. It doesn't mince words. And I hope it sends a message to what can be described as the authoritarian control freaks," Lake County, Florida, Commissioner Josh Blake (R) said in 2019 when the county became a sanctuary for self-defense rights.
Those words could have been uttered by proponents of the Sanctuary City movement, which preceded and inspired Second Amendment sanctuaries, but focuses on denying cooperation with federal immigration laws. In 2018, the mayor of Oakland, California demonstrated her sentiments by issuing a public warning of a forthcoming four-day Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) sweep.
"A federal immigration official says about 800 people living illegally in Northern California avoided being arrested because Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf warned that immigration raids were upcoming," CBS reported at the time.
Schaaf is a Democrat, like most of the opponents of anti-abortion laws and unlike the majority of the resistance to gun restrictions and pandemic lockdowns, so the local uprising comes full circle. You could connect them all with Norman Vroman, the one-time Libertarian district attorney of Mendocino County, California, who had little use for government overall and refused to enforce marijuana prohibition. In fact, giving a cold shoulder to authoritarian laws that don't suit local tastes has a long history in this country, and is constitutionally protected, at least when it comes to the federal government.
"Thanks to the Tenth Amendment, the federal government cannot force states to help them enforce federal law," George Mason University's Ilya Somin wrote in 2016 with regard to immigration restrictions. "It is also limited in its ability to use conditional spending grants to do so."
Selective enforcement is iffier when it comes to state laws, but as a practical matter local police and prosecutors have enormous discretion when it comes to prioritizing the use of their resources and the choice of cases to pursue. That doesn't nullify laws passed at the state level, but with most law enforcement at the local level, it can kneecap enforcement and protect scofflaws.
"These more recent conflicts represent more than 'uncooperative federalism,'" wrote Richard Schragger of the University of Virginia School of Law, who didn't like the implications, about Second Amendment Sanctuaries in 2020. "What has emerged instead is something that could be called 'punitive federalism'—a regime in which the periphery disagrees with or attempts to work around the center and the center seeks to punish those who do so, not just rein them in."
The prevalence of "punitive federalism" on so many issues demonstrates that top-down authoritarianism imposed against local opposition guarantees defiance. Officials pushing abortion bans can emulate their predecessors on marijuana, immigration, guns, and lockdowns by playing a losing game of "whack-a-mole" with dissenters, or they can endorse the localism that returned abortion to the states to begin with. After all, the respect for local preferences that gave us a federal Constitution and the Tenth Amendment also motivates the signers of the Fair and Just Prosecution letter. Embracing that history could defuse tensions at a time when people are, too often, at one another's throats.
Of course, the most local jurisdiction of all is the individual. Perhaps, as we relearn the virtues of local decision-making, we'll also reacquire a taste for individualism. Then, we can limit government to those few (if any) decisions necessary to its functions while leaving people to make the majority of choices for themselves. In the meantime, letting jurisdictions opt out of locally unpopular prohibitions and restrictions is an important step towards a little more social peace.
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Renegade D.A.'s Who Defy State Mandates Are Often Freedom's Last Line of Defense
Yep, freedom's last line of defense is arresting a bodega cashier for defending himself and letting the guy who attacked him go.
Jury nullification is part of the fix, often! (But that's a state secret.)
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Refusing to enforce an illegal lockdown is the same as refusing to prosecute crimes
Refusing to enforce legitimate, constitutional laws is exactly the same as arbitrarily prosecuting some crimes but not others, by definition. More to the point, it's a step backwards from rule of law to rule of man, where your actions may or may not be a crime depending on how the lord feels that day.
Two important distinctions are time and legitimacy. Refusing to enforce an executive order that was instituted yesterday that you are certain is not going to survive in court is completely different than refusing to enforce drug laws that have been on the books for decades.
In short, yes they should be able to do this, but you a darn good reason.
Examples:
This law is a violation of the 14th amendment. We will not enforce it.
This executive order or regulation does not have legitimacy because it violates full laws.
The law could not possibly have intended this result, so we are refusing to prosecute in this specific case.
Do you really want individual executive officers acting as the USSC until the multi year process to reach the USSC occurs?
In cases of obvious errors, I agree. But this is going to be used at the whim of the individual as we see in DA offices across the nation that are causing harm.
This is a fundamental issue with the current state of government, though.
While, in theory, I totally agree with you, that's philosophical. Practically, there are so many laws that no human could possibly know and understand them all -- yet ignorance of the law is held as no excuse for violating one. So everyone is always guilty of something. Always.
The notion of zero discretion would bring society to a halt. Hell, even in actuality -- if you drove below the speed limit on a freeway around here in non-rush hours all you did was cause a massive traffic jam because everyone goes 75. When they wanted to convince the feds to drop the national 55mph speed limit, protesters only had to drive 55 on the beltway and they caused massive traffic jams, for example.
We need discretion, practically, because there's no way in hell we can convince legislatures to revert all the laws on the books and pare it down to what a real human could actually comply with in a reasonable manner.
Soros putting politically motivated prosecutors in local elections massively subverts the notion of local control and governance, and is a different problem, but the notion of a locally controlled and elected official having discretion is the only protection against the impossible mass of laws.
Nice point. A Soros-appointed prosecutor is hardly representing local interests.
That's why I used obvious errors only. Police are not and should not be required to enforce illegal orders. Yes discretion can be and is abused, but it is also necessary. There's no magic bullet
So you think it was wrong to punish the Brunswick DA who didn’t bring charges against the guys who shot Ahmaud Arbery? She was just exercising prosecutorial discretion, and the states intervention to send in a special prosecutor must have been a gross miscarriage of justice.
Renegade D.A.'s Who Defy State Mandates Are Often Freedom's Last Line of Defense
You know, we really shouldn't be celebrating "renegade DA's". The "renegade DA's" who will refuse to prosecute an unjust law are also the same ones who will abuse the plea bargain process and overzealously prosecute comparatively minor infractions. There ought to be LESS discretion in the DA's office, not more. I don't want DA's prosecuting unjust laws either, but IMO the better way to accomplish this would be for the law itself to be modified and/or repealed, or for a jury to nullify a prosecution, or for a judicial appeals process to overturn the law.
The article does seem to celebrate the abandoning of principles if it gets the desired result.
Yeah. As much as I like Tucille, this represents one of my major disagreements with him and Reason. That is, if you don't like a law it's best to just ignore it. I think that has very, very negative downstream effects. Not the least of which is the 3 Felonies A Day thing that libertarians complain about.
There's a difference between ignoring the law as a citizen and ignoring the law as a member of the system.
Many libertarians, such as myself, do not consider the "law" which government imposes as inherently illegitimate, and thus worthy of being ignored.
While changing government policy to eliminate the "3 Felonies a Day" is a step in the right direction, it is only a step, not the end goal.
Isn't that in Reason's true mission statement?
A few retards under the bridge sure think so.
Exactly. The idea of individual government officials having the power to put people in prison individually deciding which laws will and will not be enforced Does not give me a warm and fuzzy feeling.
"All members of our communities are our clients – they elected us to represent them and we are bound to fight for them as we carry out our obligation to pursue justice. Our legislatures may decide to criminalize personal healthcare decisions, but we remain obligated to prosecute only those cases that serve the interests of justice and the people. Criminalizing and prosecuting individuals who seek or provide abortion care makes a mockery of justice; prosecutors should not be part of that."
Now do the 2nd Amendment.
There's a whole post about that just a few items down that Sullum posted just this morning.
Texas law, in fact, preserves the ancient English common law practice of private prosecution, where a private individual may bring a criminal case to a grand jury, gain an indictment, and prosecute it.
In principle what's the difference between prosecutors ignoring abortion laws and states ignoring the Supremes' ruling on guns?
Need some intellectual consistency here.
People who are intellectually consistent cannot get all the ponies they desire.
States passing laws which challenge court rulings will play out in court and are in the rule of law. Prosecutors deciding to ignore laws in specific cases is not.
That is a surprisingly astute answer.
So you'd be fine with states passing laws that mandate separate spaces for whites and non-whites, and then waiting to see how the courts rule on it? Or do you think there are laws states should sanctioned for passing because they deprive residents of their rights?
He has a point. State laws can be challenged, whereas you can't do much when a prosecutor refuses to do their job.
The state has a ton of options when the prosecutor declines to press charges. They can appoint a special prosecutor, like they did in the Ahmaud Arbery case. They can also sanction or even remove the DA for failing to uphold state law, also like the Ahmaud Arbery case.
And many localities also can trigger special elections if the DA isn't doing their job, like in San Fransisco.
Acting like there's legal recourse for one of these things but not the other is being intellectually dishonest.
I said "Special elections," which is technically accurate, but more accurate would have been "recall elections," as they're a subset of special elections.
How often does that actually happen?
LA County Supervisors just voted to pass a ballot initiative to remove the elected sheriff if they disagree with his actions.
Do you support that?
I'll bite.
No. I don't support what I think you're saying here.
He's elected by the people. If he needs to be removed, he can be recalled by the people, or another Sheriff can be elected when this one's term is up.
You don't get to remove one county supervisor because the other county supervisors might not like the way he's voting, right? Same deal.
There is also Stossel's article on public officials dreaming to be dictators. An executive official who feels empowered to ignore the laws duly passed by the legislature is near halfway to being a dictator.
Or cities ignoring laws about shoplifting.
I do realize that prosecutors have discretion as a matter of limited resources* but seeing folks make broad statements of not enforcing entire laws at all gives me some discomfort. Government officials shouldn't be participating in civil disobedience.
*something we should actually work to recover, the courts are a thing that should truly be well funded by the government. Whether that funding would actually improve the speed of things I don't know.
CPI @ 9.1 %
Way to go Joe
Never forget how much the 'libertarians' at Reason will simp for democrats.
https://reason.com/2022/06/10/has-inflation-peaked/
Renegade local executive branch officeholdes defying the results of SCOTUS ruling are hunky dory now?
*cough* Kim Davis *cough*
She wasn't law enforcement.
So what? Law enforcement has the right to defy what they consider unjust laws but the rest of the apparatus of the state has to operate as automatons?
It's all bad.
"Perhaps, as we relearn the virtues of local decision-making"
No, local decision-making is not inherently better from a liberty perspective.
Which is a funny claim to make since Roe as an example of SCOTUS legislating from the bench for the entire country is about as far from "local control" as is possible under our system.
I in no way claimed that local decision-making was inherently worse for liberty.
It it neither.
"No, local decision-making is not inherently better from a liberty perspective."
Correct.
Assuming local control it is inherently more likely to reflect the will of the local majority.
Which, along with limited government is generally a good thing, IMO.
Although the places with limited government are also not the places where Reason writers see this as a good thing...
"Which, along with limited government is generally a good thing, IMO."
If you actually look at the way municipal governments in the US work, local control is frequently diametrically opposed to limited government.
It is when it is pro-abortion. Just ask J.D.
Cool. Now do officials who refused to issue marriage licences to gay couples.
It is amazing how utilitarian the principles of Reason writers can be.
It’s almost as if “Bofe Sides!” is really just a crutch to go after one side
Totes OK if that is the icky side.
Bad time to valorize renegade DAs in the USA.
Yeah....a lot of examples of the awfulness of the concept, in the comments. Talk about a myopic article.
I'm partial to the idea of both state and local nullification. The problem is that enforcement against nullification efforts inevitably does become an issue of where people stand on the particular issue being nullified. Micky Rat's example of Kim Davis is a solid one. Is Reason going to apologize to her for attacking her refusal to sign off on gay marriage? Or are we left with "That's diiiiiifffferrrennnnt!"? Maybe an enhanced commitment to localism or subsidiarity as a libertarian principle in itself might be more helpful.
Also, in the moment Davis had a better case for what she had been doing. After Obergefell, Kentucky marriage law had no guidance on what to do going forward. She refused to issue marriage licenses at all to anyone under that circumstance. At least some of these DAs being lauded are refusing to enforce laws regulating abortion duly passed by their state legislatures.
But the Kim Davis case was different. She refused to grant ANY marriage license because Ogerbefell conflicted with her personal religious views. Not because enforcing the law - granting marriage licenses - would be an act of tyranny against others.
So what? Every case is different. Gun cases are different from abortion cases are different from Covid cases are different from marriage cases.
The principle should not depend on whether the different case hits you in the feels or not.
The point is, the premise of this current article is that by refusing to prosecute certain laws, "renegade DAs" are promoting the cause of liberty, because enforcing the law would lead to tyranny against those whom would be prosecuted. By contrast, in the case of Kim Davis, her refusal to enforce the law was not about stopping tyranny against the potential marriage license recipients. She believed that the law was violating HER religious beliefs.
You make my point for me. Your argument is that "That's diiiiiifffferrrennnnt!" because you happen to find her (and presumably her voters') politics distasteful. Saying that the law violates one's religious beliefs is akin to saying you believe enforcing the law (in Davis's case) is immoral and, therefore, tyrannical. You may disagree. That's fine. And utterly beside the point. Someone refusing to prosecute abortionists is just as much doing so because they believe prosecuting them is immoral. And you're happy to support their position because you happen to agree with them. And the prevalence of just that sort of double standard is exactly the problem with nullification I identified.
Ultimately, all the different cases are the same.
The New York DA refuses to prosecute the female in the bodega case because he thinks it's the wrong thing to do. (regardless of an assault law she violated)
Some states refuse to follow the 2nd Amendment because they think it's the wrong thing to do. (regardless of SCOTUS guidance on 2A)
Some localities refuse to enforce Covid prohibitions because they think it's the wrong thing to do. (regardless of state law on Covid prohibitions).
A court clerk refuses to issue marriage licenses because she thinks "gay" isn't marriage, and saying that it is, is the wrong thing to do. (regardless of SCOTUS and legislative directives on gay marriage).
It's all the same. The individual at the point of power, think they know better.
The only way to fix it is for the individual government actor not to have decision-making authority; he/she has to follow the law or be relieved of duty, like Kim Davis was.
Or power can be devolved to the most local level possible, which would tend to obviate both Kim Davis and the pro-choice prosecutors.
I actually don't think that's a meaningful distinction.
One of those sheriffs refusing to enforce state rules was the one in Humboldt County California. Keep in mind that the urban - for certain values of urban - areas of the county have police forces to enforce rules like masking. The state demanded that the sheriff stop swimmers and surfers from going to the coast during the pandemic.
Humboldt County has about 100 miles of ocean front and about 200 sheriffs, including staffing the jail. If all other crimes stopped and the sheriffs patrolled beaches during the 12 hours of summer daylight only, that's one-half mile per deputy. What happens inland is anyone's guess. The jail could have been opened, I suppose.
Not complying with an impossible demand is not the same as refusal to comply with one with which one disagrees.
So how does this "rule of law" thing work when the application is completely arbitrary, depending on the issue, local dominant political party, and ESG score of the suspect?
"Politicians Defy the Supreme Court's Ruling on the Right To Bear Arms"
"Renegade D.A.'s Who Defy State Mandates Are Often Freedom's Last Line of Defense"
OK, I give up; which side are we on?
The rule of law, or the rule of random enforcements?
We are principled libertarians who are in favor of subjective, arbitrary enforcement and actions insofar as they are in line with what we want.
When the same standard is applied to things we don't want, we are against it. Duh!
Perhaps Reason could simply post a set of Koch-WEF-Coastal Libratarian positions and shut down the website.
You are being just as partisan as the two party system members and using the same inconsistent logic.
"When they do it do to things I like it's good! When they do it to do things I don't like, it's bad!"
Yes, prosecutorial discretion is important to prevent miscarriages of justice. There is a reason that we have people enforcing laws, not blind robotic obedience, as the law as written cannot possibly encompass all possibilities.
On the other hand, a blanket refusal to enforce laws is not justice or freedom. It's tyranny, as the one prosecutor has put themselves above the legislature and executives, with effectively a veto.
Furthermore, choosing which laws to enforce on a case by case basis opens us up to corruption and abuse of power. "No one is ever prosecuted for filming police, the law isn't important". Until they decide they hate you and want you in prison.
We have seen a significant disparity in prosecution based on political leanings. Biden was taking bribes in Ukraine, and Trump was impeached for trying to investigate it. Rittenhouse defended himself against three armed men in a thousand-man riot that burned dozens of buildings to the ground, and yet the DA went only after the conservative. Need I go on?
Yes, go on. But you'll be at it awhile trying to enlighten asshats like Tucille.
would be better reading than many of the articles.
You said exactly what I wanted to say. Our government is built on checks and balances. Discretion is good, but needs to have reasonable checks on it.
In addition to your reasonable scenarios, I'd like to offer an unreasonable scenario as food for thought: DAs are often elected. What is to prevent a DA from announcing that he will not prosecute people who assault his political rival's campaign donors? Granted, civil lawsuits will still give those donors some redress, but it would have an enormous chilling effect to know that by donating money, the penalty for someone taking a baseball to you drops from several years in jail to a night in a holding cell and a monetary judgment.
Or alternatively: declare that he won't prosecute anyone who donates to his campaign.
Or what about someone who gets elected promising to go after a specific individual.
Not a matter of going after crime, an individual. The ol' show me the man I'll show you a crime routine. And what if that individual is the leader of the opposition party.
It's dirty. Very dirty. And it happens in the real world. Without effective checks, it allows someone like a DA or state AG to bring the full force of the government down on an unfavored individual. So checks are vital or the government just becomes a cudgel wielded by whoever has power, not a force for law and order.
This just shows that Reason has "jumped the shark". There's no rhyme or reason being used anymore.
"There's no rhyme or reason being used anymore."
Sure there is. Just remember that behind every apparent double standard is a singular operative standard.
What Reason writers want is obvious, and equally obvious is that they will twist their ostensible 'principles' however necessary to suit their actual desires.
Proggs in libertarian skin suits. The entire lot of them.
It's this. There's a reason there's no article about the protests going on........
—-It's tyranny, as the one prosecutor has put themselves above the legislature and executives, with effectively a veto.—-
You made good points. Actually, the prosecutor is the de facto executive. Somewhere along the way, the “take care” clause got consumed by the separation of powers doctrine, and prosecutors became despots in deciding whose ox got gored.
The whole scheme seems odd, wrong and non-democratic. For example, the court generally has to follow the ( legislative-imparted) sentencing guidelines; “Sorry, buddy, for the 20 years in Sing-Sing, but my hands were tied.”
Apparently, the separation of powers doesn’t apply, thereof. Ideology doesn’t trump the process. The court simply has to follow orders. Yet prosecutors can ignore the same laws of the same legislature based on…the separation of powers doctrine.
This ain’t passing the smell test. If they can arbitrarily decide which laws to prosecute based on whim ( read ideology), then why can’t they equally decide which people to prosecute?
And we know where world that goes.
that world/edit
DA's are elected and prosecutors are hired to enforce the will of the people. Yes, some discretion is needed for individual cases, but they are violating their public duty by refusing to investigate or prosecute an entire class of law.
Do you want to live in a society where the police and District Attorney can decide to just not enforce laws they don't like ?
Sure. If I get to pick the police chief and the DA.
--George Soros
I think the line tends to be "Yes, if it's a law we don't like."
Which, isn't necessarily inconsistent in a logical sense, but I don't think that system is practically capable of functioning. That does lead basically to tyranny, as that ability for capriciousness is a major requirement for tyranny.
lol. Go, State!
Defy mandates?
What mandates?
Any state level DA that decides to not enforce the state laws that will be replacing Roe is not standing against an unconstitutional federal law or an unconstitutional mandate.
And the writers at reason know this. That's why they're desperately trying to tie it to sheriffs refusing to uphold executive orders and edicts that were blatantly unconstitutional (and have been, since, ruled so).
The pro-abortionists want desperately to paint this as some kind of federal action in the sad hope that the lie they've been telling themselves these past few decades are the truth--that voters stand with them.
But they don't. And they never have. If voters stood with the pro-abortion side there would never have been a need for Roe.
Reason writer: 'Selective enforcement of existing law is the path to libertopia...' Coming from the 'shut up and bake the cake' no less.
Newsflash TooSilly: Arguing backwards from your preferred outcomes is not liberty.
Wholesale abdication of duty is not "prosecutorial discretion" either.
I knew there would be an article like this, and I found it in seconds:
Kim Davis Has No Right to Impose Her View of Marriage on Others
The defiant clerk's defenders dangerously blur the distinction between private action and state action.
JACOB SULLUM | 9.9.2015 12:01 AM
https://reason.com/2015/09/09/kim-davis-has-no-right-to-impose-her-vie/
I was looking that article myself. If we didn't already know that Reason is nothing but a cheerleader for the current leftist thing, this should settle the question.
Ask these same prosecutors what they think of "jury nullification."
Writer Tucille likes it when D.A.’s only enforce laws they like.
How about a prosecutor who only enforces gun laws against homeowners and never against criminals.
Or allows people to steal from cars.
Maybe he would prefer a prosecutor who only charges Democrats.
Or only Republicans .
Our nation is supposed to be a nation of laws, not men.
Subverting the law with selective enforcement is tyranny.
Tuccille advocating that the executive branch ignore the law and seize power in order to implement eugenics policies. Like 1930’s Germany.
If there was any doubt about what Tuccille’s political ideology actually is, this removes all doubt.
Attorney Generals who toe the line are already turning into those who would defame a 10 year old rape victim as a liar. See Ohio.
And wtf. What part of 'states shall make no ex post facto laws' is confusing for R lawyers?
Wtf are you talking about? Who is making ex post facto laws? Be effing specific.
Huh? Who is “defaming a 10 year old rape victim as a liar”? Link? How can you even defame someone anonymous?
The only lies in the context of the 10 year old rape victim are the people falsely claiming she couldn’t get an abortion in Ohio.
Better yet, let's NOT have Civil War #2, and reach a Grand Compromise!
"Team D" will STOP being compassionate with other people's money!
"Team R" will STOP being compassionate with other people's wombs!
Impartial scientific survey says "team D" members are mostly on board with this compromise, BTW!!! See the LATEST below!
STOP THE PRESSES! HOT NEWS FLASH!
INSSSSIGHT (Infallibly Noble, Succulently Scientific SQRLSY-Survey Intelligently Gathered Hot Takes) has conducted in-person surveys of almost 10 million Democrats very recently, and here are the findings! Today’s USA Democrats identify or agree with the below statements at the following rates (please ignore sum total mismatches with 100% due to rounding errors):
‘A) 0.15%: “Marxism is the One True Way, and North Korea is Utopia on Earth!”
‘B) 0.25%: “Antifa, the Lizard People, and BLM are the ONLY ones properly qualified to teach CRT to all of Our Children, all of which MUST be embraced by ALL schools!”
‘C) 0.65%: “The Republican Party must be outlawed ASAP, because they are grooming innocent young people to become Republicans! Also, chimpanzees and monkeys that have been grooming each other need to be prevented from performing ANY further grooming! Everyone knows that grooming is horrible!”
‘D) 2.3%: “Religion (especially Christian religion) must be kept out of the schools and public policy debates! However, the ironclad, unquestionable revelations to Democrats concerning the Earth Mother Gaia, and the facts that higher minimum wages don’t cause unemployment, and that forced-lower rents don’t cause homelessness, may NOT be questioned, because they are compassionate and self-evident, and do NOT come from God, so they are NOT religious beliefs.”
‘E) 17%: “I know that higher minimum wages cause more unemployment, and that forced-lower rents cause homelessness among the poor, but I get SOOOO much pleasure out of punishing the evil Republicans, that I consider the punishment inflicted on the poor, by these Democrat policies, to be just a bit of ‘collateral damage’. And WHY do the Republicans deserve punishment? As revenge for the damage that they do to the poor, by using statist womb control to force them to have larger families. Republicans thus thwart the ‘demographic transition’ for the poor, through policies that encourage ‘the rich will get richer, while the poor will have more children’. So we must PUNISH the Republicans for this! Revenge is ours!”
‘F) 30%: “I know that higher minimum wages cause more unemployment, and that forced-lower rents cause homelessness among the poor, but I can’t find any Democrat politicians that will vote my way on these issues, and I can’t bring myself to vote Republican or Libertarian, because most of them are so pro-life that they want to take over my womb, my wife’s womb, or my girlfriend’s womb.”
‘G) 50%: “I would LOVE to see a Grand Compromise whereby Democrats stops punishing the poor with higher minimum wages AND excessive licensing laws which ultimately cause more unemployment, and with forced-lower rents that ultimately cause homelessness among the poor, and Republicans cease and desist with anti-abortion and anti-birth-control laws that ALSO punish the poor! ALL statist policies that yank the ladders of success away from the poor should be removed! However, Republicans are fanatics who won’t listen to reason. So for now, I’ll keep on voting “D”, and the poor will keep on having more and more children, they’ll vote “D”, out-vote the “R” fanatics, and THEN we can perhaps finally get to a sensible-policies-place!”
“Give a little to get a little”, said a materialistic slutty girlfriend of mine way back when. See https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/love-language-youre-more-likely-170236564.html “If This Is Your Love Language, You're More Likely to Divorce”… Couples treasure the following items, or express their love in the following ways, says this article: ‘1) gifts (presents), ‘2) quality time together, ‘3) acts of service (AKA work… Do the dishes already!), ‘4) words; I love you, etc., ‘5) physical touch (affection).
Beware of #1!!! Materialism, gifts, status symbols, conspicuous consumption!.. Designer this and designer that! “I spent more money on you than you spent on me!” A quick way to fights, broken relationships, and divorces! Achtung, Baby!
Well, I digress. “Give a little to get a little” can make a LOT more sense in politics!!!
Hey, look, assholes, see what the above polling data says!!! Combine categories E, F, and G, and 97% of Democrats would be open to having Republicans give a little, to get a little! “Team R” gives up being “compassionate” with other peoples’ wombs, and “team D” gives up being “compassionate” with other peoples’ money! Only self-righteous assholery stands in our way!!!
That new med just might need to be dialed back a tad.
In other words, you would LOVE to have more control over your personal charity choices, and have "Team D" give up being “compassionate” with other peoples’ money... But your self-righteous "punishment boner" will NOT allow you to give up being “compassionate” with other peoples’ wombs!!! Got it!!!
And then you'll keep right on bitching about run-away power-grabbing by Government Almighty... Has it ever occurred to you that politicians USE our self-righteous "punishment boners" to slip rings through our noses, and yank us all around?