The Time Has Come for a Transpartisan 'Repeal' Caucus
First, undo government harm.

The federal government's decadeslong war on marijuana, one of the most life-mangling policies ever enacted, could be ended with a single sentence: The Controlled Substances Act shall not apply to marijuana.
Put it in a bill, vote on the bill, pass the bill, sign the bill, done. Much of the federal government's drug war law enforcement machinery would grind to a halt. No legislative horse-trading, no Christmas tree–style gifts to favored constituencies, no giving old bureaucracies new responsibilities. Just the simple and urgent removal of the legal justification for grievous government harm.
This elegant approach, redolent of the 21st Amendment's repeal of federal alcohol prohibition, is untenable to big-government lifers like Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.), as Jacob Sullum has repeatedly detailed in these pages. But it's the shortest line to a point where a supermajority of Americans want policy to be. And it's a template that could and should be used, at every level of government, by every flavor of politician.
The internet is filled with listicles (many of them dubiously sourced) of colorfully archaic states' laws, about bouncing pickles or pronouncing Arkansas. A handful of states have law-revision commissions that go hunting for such deadwood in the legal code.
But there are more pressing outrages on the books right now whose speedy removal would reduce state-sanctioned injustice and relieve some of the immiserations of centrally-planned folly. A cross-partisan caucus of politicians, staffers, activists, commentators, and other professionals in the disreputable world of politics could and should band together on a case-by-case basis, identifying bad and harmful laws and regulations on the books, and propose direct legislative repeals.
The "Repeal" Caucus could rally around existing legislation—like the Ending Federal Marijuana Prohibition Act, or the repeal of the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) against Iraq. It could make and popularize the consistent and compelling argument that these anachronistic laws are used to inflict tangible damage on human beings. And then having gained a few victories and built some muscle memory, Repealers could go on to explore the joys of bad-law removal across the superstructure of government.
Among the many laws and regulations ripe for the excision:
- The Jones Act. A perennial libertarian target (oh look, here's another damning Cato Institute study from this week!), this protectionist 1920 law prohibits non-American ships from carrying cargo between two American ports, including far-flung islands in U.S. territories such as Hawaii and Guam. The result? Jacked up prices for basically all goods shipped to those destinations, including comparatively poor Puerto Rico. All to protect the builders and owners of fewer than 100 American ships.Here, let's let Capt. Andrew Heaton explain.
- Similarly, the Foreign Dredge Act of 1906 requires dredging ships to be American-built/owned/manned, thereby making the dredging and improving of U.S. ports considerably more expensive for no good reason at all. Good thing we don't have a supply chain problem!
- The Justice Department's "Equitable Sharing" Program. Most Americans are shocked when they discover that law enforcement can seize, pocket, and sell the money and property of people who are never even charged with a crime. They are more shocked still to learn that cops now seize more money and property through civil forfeiture than the amount Americans report being robbed.As this odious and facially unconstitutional practice has finally come under public scrutiny, and helped produced a series of state-level bans on the practice, a third nasty surprise has come: State and local law enforcement can circumvent bans by partnering with the Justice Department, which then allows "equitable sharing" of the ill-gotten booty with the money-hungry local police force.Under the "First, undo harm" principle of the Repeal Caucus, a first easy legislative step on the federal level is to prohibit federal law enforcement from engaging in or in any way encouraging civil asset forfeiture. (This would, among other things, force the Drug Enforcement Administration to find more legitimate sources of funding.) But there's also a perfectly fine argument, which inspired legislation from then–lame duck Rep. Justin Amash (L–Mich.), to pass a federal ban on the practice in order to secure otherwise-trampled due process rights.
- AUMFs dating back to 1957 (international communism), 1991 (Iraq), 2001 (9/11), and 2002 (Iraq redux). These laws, especially the latter two, are used this day to wage otherwise undeclared warfare across the globe. No self-respecting legislature within a constitutional framework that gives the war-declaration power to Congress should sit back and let some ancient rubber stamp justify today's drone wars.
- Federal Communications Commission (FCC) indecency regulations. It may be a surprise to humans under a certain age, but "it is a violation of federal law to air obscene programming at any time. It is also a violation of federal law to broadcast indecent or profane programming during certain hours." So says the FCC, right there on the agency's website. What qualifies as obscene? "Material that, in context, depicts or describes sexual or excretory organs or activities in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards for the broadcast medium."That this "actionable indecency" standard, created by the FCC in 1978 and punishable by up to two years in prison, does not get prosecuted much these days is no reason for free-speech enthusiasts to be complacent: Public censoriousness, and two-party calls for regulating speech, are on the increase. The indecency standards were created not just pre-World Wide Web, but pre-cable television in any meaningful sense. They were meant to protect young eyes in a scarce media environment that no longer exists. Keeping these regs around at a time of political populism is like bringing a bunch of free-loaded pistols to a barfight.
I'm sure anyone reading this can think of other pieces of rancid, low-hanging legal fruit. The point is less to produce the ultimate libertarian law-removal wishlist (though libertarians, being equal opportunity critics of government misuse of power, tend to have topical ideas and allies all over the spectrum), but rather to start a new transpartisan habit, look for issues with high existing or potential public support, and identify ways to reduce government harm.
If government is the source of existing injustice, you do not need an architect to draft an elaborate new bureaucratic remedy; you just need a good eraser. Don't let central planners be the enemy of the obvious fix.
Repeal Caucus, your time is now.
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Transpartisan
Example: "I'm a left wing commie who identifies as a right-wing corporatist."
dude that's most of the (D) I know.
"I'm a left wing commie who identifies as a right-wing corporatist."
For some reason I imagined that in Phil Hartman's voice.
It works
That perfectly describes the anarcho-communo-fascist brainwashees detailed by The Kleptocracy to infiltrate and neutralize the True Libertarian™ Party of 1972-1976. They added child molesting, terrorist importation and vigilante murder planks and elided the pregnant-women-have-individual-rights plank that satisfied the Supreme Court and attracted gorgeous women voters to the True Libertarian™ Party for an annual increase of 12% per annum—while it lasted.
How about repealing the 1968 Gun Control Act?
I was told by people Much Smarter Than I that before you can legalize marijuana, politicians (and I'm not joking or exaggerating) have to "create a market for it". That's an exact, direct quote.
And 100% of the people who argued that were forward-thinking, well-meaning progressives. 100%.
To be perfectly clear, they were FOR legalization, which is nominally better than the old fuddy-duddy Republican that wants to keep it illegal-- like Kamala Harris... but that is why you can't get it legalized with one sentence.
...politicians (and I'm not joking or exaggerating) have to "create a market for it".
In other words, "we have to make sure that the political class can extract their pound of flesh from it while driving the price up enough that a black market still thrives so that our allies in the police unions still get to bust some (pot)heads."
I've heard this is a reason to vote Dem. But neither Obama nor Biden have even bothered to remove MJ from schedule 1, something they could do by executive order.
So, I was thinking about your "create a market for it" line. I think that's worth listening to and zeroing in on. It's also worth taking as earnest. I think that might be a key insight into a common mindset, and a progressive mindset.
I wonder if to that person the "market" is not the exchange of goods taking place, but the infrastructure around it. The classic image of a market is not the trade, but where the trade takes place. If so, that's worth keeping in mind because that's a major difference in the basic definition of term that really changes the conversation.
But, I don't know. I had never thought of what you said just now, and have never had that said to me. It really reacted with me though and I can now imagine people who talk and think like that.
Markets are spontaneous and created from the ground up, but Statists (busy-body control freaks) can't have that.
We had a market. People invested their votes, treasure and sacred honor in our perfectly good original platform. This caused one or the other looter Kleptocracy halves to lose a moron, so their platform committee copied one of our planks into their platform and a cruel law got repealed. When we finally got 4 million votes and broke the 3% barrier, Trojan horse and 5th column tactics were resorted to. After the Anschluss, ass we have is a Teabertarian party women cross the street to avoid.
This is gibberish Hank.
I wonder if to that person the "market" is not the exchange of goods taking place, but the infrastructure around it.
That sounds like a reasonable interpretation. That "the market" includes not just the buyers and the sellers but all of the regulations "needed" for the transactions to have a legal imprimatur. And there are some that might actually be needed - labeling laws, for instance.
"Put it in a bill, vote on the bill, pass the bill, sign the bill, done. Much of the federal government's drug war law enforcement machinery would grind to a halt."
This is, to put it mildly, fanciful garbage. The end of MJ prohibition would absolutely be a boon. But we have seen what is going on for YEARS now, as States pivot away from MJ policing. They instead police Opioids and "Human Trafficking" (aka Prostitution).
And I won't repost it because I'm too lazy to look it up (for the third time) but at this point in time, studies show that political districts and states which legalized marijuana have not seen a "reduction in jail populations" because, as I've argued for years, the libertarian trope that "our prisons are full of non-violent marijuana offenders" was simply not true. People in prison for marijuana violations were probably going to end up there for something else, and more often than not, whatever Marijuana charges were present on their arrest record were likely tack-on charges for something else.
I don't doubt they haven't seen a reduction of jail populations, but I think your conclusion as to why is not very well founded.
1. Legalization doesn't mean automatic release of people previously convicted for marijuana related offenses.
2. They just find (or invent) other things to put people in jail for.
It's far more #2 than it is #1. If we were putting new people into the prison/jail pipeline for "marijuana violations" and then you turn that spigot off, realistically, you would see a reduction of jail populations because no new prisoners for that offense are being created. So clearly, something else is going on.
Marijuana legalization is a good thing, but our criminal justice system is in more need of reform... it's a larger question of how the system is run, not the picayune problem of getting busted for a bag of weed.
our criminal justice system is in more need of reform...
That is true, but reforming the criminal justice criminal system doesn't necessarily reduce the supply of criminal behavior, it just relocates or redefines it.
Yeah, the state will just create another moral panic. The drug war law enforcement machinery might be reduced, but another machine will come to life. It is a never-ending job to be sure but even if ending marijuana prohibition won't bring about utopia, it still ought to happen.
Awesome! Now do Pelosi:
Feds charge former GOP congressman Stephen Buyer with insider trading after he ‘used information from consulting business clients to bank at least $400,000 in illicit profits.’
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11046619/Ex-US-congressman-9-charged-insider-trading-cases.html
Buyer's big mistake was to continue insider trading once he left office.
Buyer's big mistake was to continue insider trading once he left office.
That and being a "GOP congressman."
Agreed. The legal code is a mess generally speaking. Time to do some housecleaning.
All laws should have an automatic 10-year sunset clause.
Well, I don't know about *all* laws. I don't really want a real-life Purge. But certainly laws that spend money should have some fixed endpoint. This auto-pilot spending nonsense is a disaster.
I think the idea is the legislature renews the laws worth having before they sunset. Not to make murder legal every 10 years.
That's a nice thought. I wonder how well it works in practice when you have a divided Congress and when it comes time to vote on the "renew rule against murder" bill come up, a bunch of progressives attach a gun control amendment to it.
I appreciate the thought behind sunset provisions, but "must pass" legislation is always used by one party or the other to play a game of chicken. It is a weaker mechanism, but I believe it would be less ripe for abuse if every legislator is given the right to force a vote to repeal once per term. He can put as much or as little into it that he wants, but it is an up or down vote, so if he puts in controversial stuff it increases the chance of getting voted down. Starting August of an election year, 10 (or however many are outstanding) proposals must be voted on per day before the House/Senate can engage in the rest of their business (which ensures that uncomfortable votes are taken right before an election). While, technically, it doesn't make it any easier to repeal legislation, it does encourage congressmen to have more of a repeal mindset because it is the one bill they are guaranteed to reach the floor even as the minority party. And because these are not "must pass" bills, can't be amended, and only allow for the removal of text, not modification, it limits avenues to force through unpopular legislation, while also maximizing embarrassment if someone votes to keep an unpopular bill around.
https://twitter.com/TheRealKeean/status/1551597080065388545?t=kf0Ox2U5_1RQ0vrDq-8e6Q&s=19
In other news, the World Economic Forum is calling for the end of private car ownership in the name of saving the world from climate change by reducing the need for green tech resources.
[Link]
Sounds good to me...as long as I can dial up a limo anytime I want and bill somebody else, like most of the WEF folks can.
>>"First, undo harm"
three ambiguous terms. no dice.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/us-actually-sold-6-million-barrels-spr-hunter-biden-tied-china-firm
From September 2021 to July, the Department of Energy (DOE) has awarded three crude oil contracts with a combined value of roughly $464 million to Unipec America, the U.S. trading arm of Chinese state-owned oil company Sinopec, according to a review by The Epoch Times of the DOE documents. A Chinese firm with ties to Hunter Biden had made an investment in the national oil giant.
The sale would tap 5.9 million barrels in total from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to export to the Chinese firm. The latest contract was unveiled on July 10, consisting of 950,000 barrels sold for around $113.5 million.
The two most recent sales to Unipec came out of an emergency drawdown of the U.S. oil stockpile, initiated under President Joe Biden on March 31 in what he said would offset the loss of Russian oil in global markets and tame rising fuel costs at home.
But the Unipec contracts have been a subject of heavy criticism since the firm’s connections to the younger Biden came into focus in recent weeks. With Americans nationwide still reeling from the $5 per gallon gas prices in June, the selling of oil reserves to foreign adversaries such as China is at odds with U.S. energy and security needs, Republican lawmakers and analysts have said.
Reason: Brandon Family Mostly Peaceful Crooks.
Let me know when Hunter starts posting mean tweets. Now that would be front page shit.
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/whats-truly-important-global-revaluation-accelerating
What is core to a system's survival is two-fold: it must have the transparency, accountability (skin in the game) and flexibility described above, and the real-world resources to provide its own essentials.
This is scale-invariant: it describes households, villages, counties and countries.
"World" = anglosphere, Europe, and Japan
https://twitter.com/Newsweek/status/1552001144137842695?t=2iZBfy5gQFOr07SMzHgCfA&s=19
World is "teetering" on edge of global recession, IMF says
[Link]
https://twitter.com/realDailyWire/status/1551690346039492608?t=6aS_91NVUrEalDVs4FqpxA&s=19
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern:
"We will continue to be your single source of truth… Unless you hear it from us it is not the truth."
[Link]
You know Who else claimed to be the single source of truth?
My wife?
Ha!
Like anyone in the uni-party has any desire to actually decrease government. LO-fucking-L.
Don't look now, but they just canceled the Audobon society.
So, the OG racist/speciesist Charles Darwin is next, right? That would resolve a lot this 'women are not men' and 'fish are not bees' malarky. Cancelling the teaching of evolution in schools might be a bit of a rough go.
Isn't "cormorant" problematic too? Not to mention the color.
Alternative definition: a greedy person
So is Planned Parenthood next?
Chief Seattle was a slave owner too.
Which is why it will never happen.
That thinking is so 1990s.
Don't they know what happens to people who try to drain the swamp?
Great idea, but you need people for a caucus. Could you sell this to the Problem Solvers Caucus? That where I would start.
Beware anyone in the government looking to "solve problems".
Nice article, Matt.
cc: soldiermedic
https://thecarousel.substack.com/p/theres-gonna-be-a-war-in-montana
But this is a new thing. Montana has always been the site of land battles—but these warring factions are brand new. The Washington Post presents the risk as one-sided—that angry Trumpists are going to soon resort to violence because, well, that’s what they do when the modern world comes knocking. The media doesn’t notice that Trump flags are being raised in reaction to the rainbow ones, not in spite of them. The anger bubbling up from Three Forks isn’t happening because Montanans, left alone for decades, somehow developed into anachronistic bigots unready for the modern world. It’s happening because Montanans got their sh*t taken. They were intentionally shoved out, left behind. Their music, their signs, their cars, their language—they’re all born from a fresh wound.
Private equity fears nativism because nativism equals economic protectionism—no free access to markets, no distant ownership of local assets, no importation of cheap labor. Blood is thicker than water, and private equity is terrified of relationships it can’t buy. This is why it posts Live Local! on its LoMo buildings and serves frozen versions of authentic Montana cuisine. It needs to placate people just long enough to take over the land, hollow out the existing culture, and replace it with a replica that siphons the locals’ milkshake back to them.
wtf is this - it may single handily be the most insane post about Montana I've read. So many things to digest that I won't get into, but A. No one is cat calling your old wife, B. there's not just people sitting around drinking in droves in trailer parks, C. Bozeman isn't that pretty, D. a riverruns through it is on the blackfoot river (Hint Missoula) E. Threeforks does not look like he described it has a fair number of breweries it's self not the town he describes. F. yes people despise californians here. G - From the way he writes I can't believe he's been here multiple times doesn't seem like he knows anything about the state. H. Really pulling the us of the "N" word in your story and the diverse serving staff - I got news for you MT is pretty much all white so I have a tough time believing this too. Basically this writes as a delusion or fever dream of what you'd hope that you'd find in a place that voted for trump. I'm disappointed this person calls them self a journalist. As Medic can attest to my area in the "west" probably should be where this yahoo hangs out. He'd fit perfectly in this town clutching pearls
Basically this writes as a delusion or fever dream of what you'd hope that you'd find in a place that voted for trump.
The guy left a *catered* family reunion to *fly* from somewhere in the basin to Bozeman *over a positive COVID test*. He pretty clearly puts his personal (lack of) culture of jetsetting and being scared of COVID over family but, who can blame him when the family's culture consists of having someone else cater to them?
The article is terribly full of projection. I agree with your assessment of his fevered dream, but it goes further, projecting a message of "When you start to shoot the evil, white invaders masquerading as saviors, you want to shoot *those* white invaders, not me. I actually am a white savior!", oblivious to the natives' clear message of, "We don't need saving." He, IMO, gets the Big Sky/REIT part right but then acts the exact same as the Big Sky/REIT cult without even realizing it.
It's actually kinda funny because, having traveled to close to a dozen locations between Glacier National Park and Key West in the past 4-5 yrs., I was getting a/the similar sort of 'Color Out of Space'/Capgras Delusion/schizophrenic sense about a lot of places. His take seems to be "Shizophrenia isn't so bad if you could just get rid of the reality and the bad delusions."
I stopped reading at the "An ungoogleable Blood and Soil biker gang thunders through town." paragraph. He decries the lack of amenities at the Sacajawea Hotel and the dichotomy in MT, seemingly oblivious to the disparities between the Ahwahnee (crown jewel of National Park lodges) and Wawona (Intimate Victorian charm, 54 rooms with shared bathrooms) hotels, both located in Yosemite, both served by Aramark (just like every other National Park in the country). What a douche.
Mad - well put, I did pick up on that wedding part too. My response is clouded however because I have lived small town Montana and it's not a haven for biker gangs and yokel locals drinking on the porch. I just am disappointed that this gets to be passed around as gospel on what a non ultra liberal (doesn't have to be conservative) is consider in the hinterlands. It feels as if we are the germanic/frankish/anglo tribes that need culturing from the great roman empire in their eyes.
cc: everyone who isn't a totalitarian leftist
https://twitter.com/JoeBiden/status/1551993265473323010?t=51cr24G_ZjlhhxoCvOmVEA&s=19
You can’t be pro-insurrection and pro-cop.
You can’t be pro-insurrection and pro-democracy.
You can’t be pro-insurrection and pro-American.
[Video]
cc: everyone who isn't a totalitarian leftist
https://twitter.com/Breaking911/status/1552070868259508226?t=pp6KhnZvTXhUj0hTaYNURA&s=19
#BREAKING: Biden's DOJ Opens Investigation Into Pres. Trump For Alleged Attempt To Overturn 2020 Election: Report
[Link]
Wow.
Remember how oUtRaGeD Reason was thar Trump would so threaten democracy by asking Ukraine to investigate the corruption that Biden himself bragged about?
I expect, if they even mention this DOJ "investigation", tepid skepticism with heavy emphasis on the "to be sure"s of how bad "authoritarian" Trump is, and how any doubt of the 2020 election is just a crazy conspiracy theory.
This is banana republic shit.
Well I don't know Nardz. If it's fair game to investigate Obama, or Hillary, after they have left office, why not Trump?
Haven't we consistently said around here that people in positions of power deserve to be scrutinized?
Think of it this way. If the DOJ investigating Trump leads a President DeSantis in 2025 to say "you tried investigating my pal Trump so I will retaliate by investigating Biden and Hillary and Clapper and everyone else", would you view that tradeoff as a good one?
I knew jeff would defend this. The political prosecution of political enemies over clever readings of law. Ignore the head of the J6 committee objected way back in 2005. He has him now.
Fat authoritarian fuck.
Comparing it to clear and known crimes for the son searching for vague readings of a law. Lol.
Haven't we consistently said around here that people in positions of power deserve to be scrutinized?
Allow me to translate your own bullshit back to you, this would be called the "Don't say Hunter Biden" defense. No. We distinctly have *not* *consistently* said around here that people in positions of power deserve to be scrutinized.
And what office was Hunter Biden elected to again?
You didn't say 'office' or 'elected'. You don't think any President's... The President's Bag Man should be investigated?
I think that anyone who breaks a law, a law that is considered a just law anyway, should be held accountable according to the judicial process. Whether or not that person holds a position of power or not. That includes Hunter Biden. If Hunter Biden broke the law on any matter, he ought to be held accountable.
I think that people who hold positions of power deserve extra scrutiny because of the power that they hold. So I am absolutely fine with investigating Trump over what he did in 2020. I am absolutely fine with investigating Joe Biden with any potential corrupt connections he may have had. Go ahead and look at every detail of their lives, even if no law has been broken. They ought to be held to a higher standard because they are invested with so much power.
What I am not fine with, is investigating family members of powerful people with the extra scrutiny reserved for people who hold official power. Because the family members did not choose to be related to powerful people. So it is not fair to drag their entire lives through the press. That is as much true for Hunter Biden as it is for Barron Trump or for Jenna Bush.
So if Hunter Biden broke the law, send him to jail.
If Joe Biden did some shady shit, let's hear all about it, even if no law was broken.
If Hunter Biden did some shady shit, as long as no law was broken, and as long as there was no connection with the powerful people who do deserve the scrutiny afforded to powerful people, that's really none of our business, because he wasn't the one elected to anything.
Clear enough?
And how would holding accountable people in positions of power be called "don't say hunter biden"?
There's that selective stupidity about Mott-and-Bailey again!
I don't even know what you are referring to here.
Seriously, every time I hear this from Reason the abject historical, geographical, and physical stupidity only serves to convince me that Reason and Cato are the wrong people to be listening to about national or global economics. I like Heaton, but that video is as bad, politically, as any retardation spouted by John Oliver.
* Federal Communications Commission (FCC) indecency regulations. It may be a surprise to humans under a certain age, but "it is a violation of federal law to air obscene programming at any time. It is also a violation of federal law to broadcast indecent or profane programming during certain hours."
Where does Reason stand on repealing the Communications Decency Act?
Why Paul, do you mean *all* of the CDA or *just* the part that protects people for censoring and blocking offensive material?
I'm not sure how the CDA powerpoint is structured. If I hit 'delete' on the top frame, does it remove all the associated sub-frames?
More news from the sedition front.
https://archive.ph/qx9PK
See, this is the type of stuff that deserves more attention. Not the oafs walking around with Viking helmets. The guys devising plots, some of which even thought was illegal, to deploy "fake electors" to Congress so as to throw the certification of the EC vote into doubt.
But we gotta throw grandma in jail first... then we'll get to that.
After 1876, and certainly after the Electoral Count Act, I thought it was up to Congress to decide which putative electors were real and which were fake.
If you want to put people on trial for supposedly being fake electors, then you're on the horns of a dilemma. Either the jury has to take orders from Congress as to which electors are fake, which abrogates the right to jury trial - or the jury must be authorized to disagree with Congress about which electors are real and fake, which would abrogate Congressional prerogatives and make the election results more confusing.
The Electoral Count Act actually specifies who might count as potential electors from a state. It does not permit random people to show up and say "hi, I'm an elector!" and require that Congress take them seriously. They have to be people who were certified by some official state body - governor, legislature, etc. - to be the official electors from the state, and the record of that certification transmitted to the President of the Senate, by a certain timetable. Those are the only electors that Congress is permitted to consider. In the present case the fake electors met none of the requirements of the Act. In fact the Act says that if Congress receives only one set of properly certified results from a state by the appropriate deadline, then Congress has no choice but to accept those results as valid. And that was the case in 2020.
So how do you solve the dilemma I mentioned? Should Congress decide guilt in criminal cases, or should juries second-guess the Congressional count?
You’ve just gone way above Lefty Jeffy’s pay-grade. He’s sent his handlers a request for the appropriate response, but they rarely respond to his questions. See, other than his am email, they don’t want to talk to his dumbass either.
At this point I am not necessarily convinced that anyone ought to be put on trial. I am not sure if a law has been broken. But I do think that more people ought to be aware of what actually transpired in 2020 with regards to the fake electors scheme.
Well, in that case I suppose I misunderstood your point. I beg your pardon.
Gosh... Surely you don't mean to suggest looters would stoop to anything underhanded to increase the rate at which they can order people robbed and killed, do you?
Shocking, isn't it?
Jeff with his vague legal concepts to go after political opponents. Despite objectors in 2005 and 2017. Lol.
The wording you propose it not so elegant. I hate when provisions are unconsolidated, and you'd have to do a lifetime of reading to find out the sentence in Chapter 1 is suerseded by one in Chapter 109. No, you want to repeal the application of the Controlled Substances Act, you'd better go in an find every reference in the US Code to cannabis and delete it. And then add cannabis to the list of substances up front that are "not controlled". And then make sure any descriptions that would apply to cannabinoids that would lead to controls on them are also deleted.
Fuck this "nothwithstanding" crap.
"The Controlled Substances Act shall not apply to marijuana."
Or illegal migrants or assex or food trucks.
Toll roads, Kenny G, ... the list is long.
New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern:
"We will continue to be your single source of truth… Unless you hear it from us it is not the truth"
https://twitter.com/CitizenFreePres/status/155156084343468441
Jeff must be hard as a rock.
Matt's History teacher needs to be on a suicide watch list. The Coolidge Administration continued pushing Chinese prohibitionism in 1925, when the Hague Convention of 1912 in its Chapter IV--Indian Hemp, Article 11, declared the (threats and murder) provisions of Chapter V "shall apply to Indian Hemp and the resin prepared from it." After Judy Garland sang "La Cucaracha," Congress moved to put treaty "teeth" into this cartel plot and Hoover appointee Anslinger began shooting kids to save them. Q.E.D.
Well, if there's something that is truly bipartisan nowadays, it's more money for the military.
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/07/26/democrats-defense-spending-military-00048041
In fact, it was by using foreign looter Kleptocracies to undermine the Bill of Rights that Nixon violated the Second Amendment and Section 8 by signing the Nixon-Brezhnev Treaty stopping the USA (not the communist dictatorship) from deploying ABM protection against nuclear weapons attacks. The 1925 Hague Convention frightened the Austro-Hungarian-German pharma cartels into starting WW1. The opium glut that followed China's prohibitionist revolution sparked Balkan Wars in opium-producing regions as signatures accumulated on the Convention whose purpose was to make some production and trade a crime. (https://tinyurl.com/56e9ft4a)
Good news, the wife-beater is sinking in the polls.
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/07/26/greitens-drops-to-third-place-in-missouri-senate-gop-primary-after-allegations-of-domestic-abuse-00047813
Pure corruption
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/deeper-dive-allegations-sabotage-within-fbis-hunter-biden-probe
And? Grassley is on TEAM RED (arghh)!
— Lefty Jeffy
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/were-very-angry-fire-stricken-liberals-freak-after-ca-militia-group-provides-disaster-aid
When the militia arrived in the small Sierra foothills town of Mariposa, California, to assist with evacuation efforts amid a fast-spreading wildfire, not all residents were pleased by the appearance of ordinary citizens dressed in military fatigues.
Over the weekend, about 150 California State Militia 2nd Regiment members, including 20 local ones and others from surrounding counties, assisted with evacuations efforts. The group also fed dozens of displaced households.
"We're part of the community.
"We're watching our own community burn down, and even though a lot of the members that came to help, they're spread out, we're all part of the same unit, and this is what we do," militia member Daniel Latner, who lives in Mariposa County, told The Mercury News.
Even as Oak Fire inched closer to the town of Mariposa, destroying 55 homes and other structures, some residents weren't appreciative of militia support.
"The last thing I'm going to do is take a free tri-tip sandwich from a right-wing extremist group," said one resident, who asked not to be named because she feared provoking "armed and dangerous" people.
"We're very angry that they would choose to come in at a time of real gravity to try to turn this into a political move," said the woman, who works remotely and accused the group of "trying to recruit people in a disaster."
The Mariposa Sheriff's Office on Sunday addressed public concerns about the militia supporting the community:
"We had received multiple notifications inquiring why we had 'activated that militia,'" the office said in a Facebook post.
"The militia has not been activated or requested to act for any purpose by the Sheriff's Office or any agency working the Oak Fire."
"We are not unsupportive of community groups helping those affected by the Oak Fire ... they are acting on their own courteous accord," the post continued.
"We appreciate their efforts and any ... efforts of other private groups or entities helping our community."
In a county where about 40% of the people voted Democrat in the last presidential election and nearly 60% for the Republican Party, not all residents are reluctant to receive help from militia members.
It appears that liberals would rather burn, starve, or freeze than take evacuation assistance from someone on the other side of the political aisle... Tolerance and acceptance indeed
It appears that liberals would rather burn, starve, or freeze than take evacuation assistance from someone on the other side of the political aisle... Tolerance and acceptance indeed
No. This would be too ethical or principled of them. They'd rather get rescued, then refuse a sandwich (maybe), then walk over to the media tent to anonymously make sure everyone knows they refused the sandwich, and phone up the Sheriff's Office to complain. These people wouldn't even board a flight to Canada to avoid 'those types of people'.
I made $30k in just 5 weeks working part-time right from my apartment. When I lost my last business I got tired right away and luckily I found this job online and with that I am able to start reaping lots right through my house. Anyone can achieve this top level career and make more money on-line by:-
Reading this article:>> https://oldprofits.blogspot.com/
Remember that day the 'feds' were given the power to control substances by the people (US Constitution)???
Yeah; me neither....
F'En Nazi's.
This elegant approach...is untenable to big-government lifers like Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.)
Wow, that sure doesn't sound very pro-choice. I wonder if this 0is consistent with his stance on abortion?
Thank you Matt, for your article advocating some libertarian policy, rather than the Reason articles from the past years (after you were editor) which read more like Yahoo news article about something the government is addressing, without the libertarian policy solution or viewpoint. I hope the other authors learn from you. And thanks to your Mom, who no doubt made you a better writer.
Why caucus? For more than ten years now, I have advocated that both houses of Congress and every chamber of every state legislature should have a "standing" (permanent) repeals committee.
With such committees populated by whole bunches of legislators hungry to show they're "doing something", they'd not only have the aforementioned salutary effect of cleaning out bad law, but they'd be driven to do so.