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hugo

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Everything posted by hugo

  1. Just heard on Hannitty that Gates was arrested after he pursued the officer and continued to verbally harass the officer as the officer was leaving. Obviously, the officer was satisfied that Gates was the lawful resident.
  2. Yes, and the fact that he had a Harvard ID and was in a house owned by Harvard would indicate he probably had a right to be there. There is no doubt that Gates acted stupidly, there was still no need to arrest him. At most they could have handcuffed him, sat him in the back of the car and spent a few minutes verifying he was the rightful residence. Let me say though that the charge was not tresspassing, or burglary, and I have seen no evidence the officer was not certain of Gates right to be in the home.
  3. There is no evidence that the cop was not certain that Gates was the resident of the home. Any ID , including a drivers license, can be fraudulent. I guess you are in favor of everyone being required by law to have three forms of ID on them at all times. Even in the privacy of their own home. It is sad how far down the road to serfdom we have traveled where a man has to worry about being dragged from his own property and thrown in the clink because he did not have the "right" ID. Quick search of the county tax records would verify the owner of the home. A lot quicker than hauling someone to jail.
  4. Officer: I am going to arrest you. There has been a great deal of burglaries by Harvard professors lately.
  5. No, a cop does not get to determine that. A jury gets to determine that, if the case is even strong enough to get to court. In this case, the charge was deemed without merit and quickly dropped.
  6. IWS can correct me if I am wrong, but I am betting police officers work off of alternative ID's quite frequently. Last I checked it was not against the law to not have a drivers license. I have read nothing indicating that the officer was worried that the ID was possibly fraudulant.
  7. By the time the officer arrested Gates he knew that Gates was the resident of the home. The officer was the source of what was provoking Gates. All the officer had to do was leave.
  8. Better to be old than dead. Have a good one.
  9. Gates did give him his identification. Gates was in his own yard and was a threat to no one. The only thing riling him up was the officers presence. All the officer had to do was leave.
  10. It is the Supreme Court that has turned the Constitution into an almost worthless document. A "living" contract is no contract at all.
  11. Walter Williams is the greatest living American.
  12. Exploiting public ignorance By Walter Williams | How can political commentators, politicians and academics get away with statements like "Reagan budget deficits," "Clinton budget surplus," "Bush budget deficits" or "Obama's tax increases"? The only answer is that they, or the people who believe such statements, are ignorant, conniving or just plain stupid. Article I, Section 7 of the U.S. Constitution reads: "All bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with amendments as on other Bills." A president has no power to raise or lower taxes. He can propose tax measures or veto them but since Congress can ignore presidential proposals and override a presidential veto, it has the ultimate taxing power. The same principle applies to spending. A president cannot spend a dime that Congress does not first appropriate. As such, presidents cannot be held responsible for budget deficits or surpluses. That means that credit for a budget surplus or blame for budget deficits rests on the congressional majority at the time. Thinking about today's massive deficits, we might ask: Where in the U.S. Constitution is Congress given the authority to do anything about the economy? Between 1787 and 1930, we have had both mild and severe economic downturns that have ranged from one to seven years. During that time there was no thought that Congress should enact New Deal legislation or stimulus packages along with massive corporate handouts. It took the Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt administrations to massively intervene in the economy. As a result, they turned what might have been a two or three-year sharp downturn into a 16-year depression that ended in 1946. How they accomplished that is covered very well in a book authored by Jim Powell titled "FDR's Folly." Here's my question: Were the presidents in office and congresses assembled from 1787 to 1930 ignorant of their constitutional authority to manage and save the economy? If you asked President Obama or a congressman to cite the specific constitutional authority for the bailouts, handouts and corporate takeover, I'd bet the rent money that they would say that their authority lies in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution that reads: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Impost, Excises to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defense and general Welfare of the United States." They'd tell you that their authority comes from the Constitution's "general welfare" clause. James Madison, the father of our constitution, explained, "If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the general welfare, the government is no longer a limited one possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one subject to particular exceptions." He later added, "With respect to the two words 'general welfare,' I have always regarded them as qualified by the detail of powers connected with them. To take them in a literal and unlimited sense would be a metamorphosis of the Constitution into a character which there is a host of proofs was not contemplated by its creators." Thomas Jefferson said, "Congress has not unlimited powers to provide for the general welfare, but only those specifically enumerated." That means only those powers listed. The Constitution provides, through Article V, a means by which the Constitution can be altered. My question to my fellow Americans whether they are liberal or conservative: Has the Constitution been amended to permit Congress to manage the economy? I'd also ask that question to members of the U.S. Supreme Court. I personally know of no such amendment. What we're witnessing today is nothing less than a massive escalation in White House and congressional thuggery. Secure in the knowledge that the American people are compliant and willing to cast off the limitations imposed on Washington by the nation's founders, future administrations are probably going to be even more emboldened than Obama and the current Congress.
  13. Yes, under the progressive income tax inflation raises taxes faster than the inflation rate.
  14. I believe all the officer had to do was leave. The only provocation to Mr. Gates was the officer.
  15. My comment is just a comment on the general attitude on many Americans who want to gain from government what they will not achieve on their own. The minimum wage needs to be abolished. Of course, from the article: Can you imagine paying a bunch of zit faced kids in a pizza parlor $9.50 an hour.
  16. Why healthcare is too expensive II.
  17. I just hope my taxes ain't paying for any of it.
  18. Sarah Palin when asked her views on Hayek; "She's a pretty good actress."
  19. Oh, Obama, won't you give me a Mercedes-Benz.
  20. The international diversity police in action:
  21. She could probably be Kendra's next door neighbor.
  22. In the long run the ones who are suffering most are minority children who are being taught they cannot succeed. Therefore, they don't.
  23. Lysander Spooner: Barry Goldwater, from his 1964 speech accepting the Republican Party's nomination. I fear most Americans no longer understand freedom. Ron Paul:
  24. Women stink. Annoying creatures.
  25. What is the difference between a pizza and a Jew? A pizza does not scream when you put it in the oven.
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