No; not The
Marshall Tucker Band song.
There was a made
for T.V. movie that debuted in 1981 on NBC. Buddy
Ebson played John Vogelin, who had property that the
government wanted but he refused to sell. The government told him
that he'd be put off his property one way or the other & he told
them to go to hell. The movie was called Fire
on the Mountain.
I watched it twice (it
was re-ran a few years later) when I was a kid but
haven't seen it since. It stuck with me though. It struck me deeply
at the time & I'm sure I'd feel the same if I saw it again. I
recall everyone who watched it with me feeling the same way to one
extent or another. In fact I know very few people who wouldn't have
been rooting for "ol' Jed Clampett" when the gub'mint tried
to kick him off his land. But it was simply a story about an old man
who wanted to spend the few years that he had left on his own
property & an uncaring government trying to force him off.
It was a good
movie. Damn shame I can't find a copy of it now, especially in
light of recent events.
I assume that
you're heard the sorted details of Kelo
v. New London. I also assume that you've seen the
reactions. Say
Uncle has been following the eminent domain issue for some time
& he
took things pretty hard (as we all should have).
Others had a
more defiant way of expressing their disapproval with
the notion that all property belongs to the government. Still others
are just plain pissed.
Me? I'm
disappointed in the courts as I am every time they screw something
up. I wasn't surprised though. None of us should have been. This
particular part of the path started a long time ago; roughly the time
when it was societally accepted that the government can charge
you rent impose protection money taxes on
your property annually & force you to seek permission for any
changes you want made to your property through various zoning laws &
building permit schemes. Pissed off at SCOTUS? Ya damn skippy. But no
one should be surprised at this. It's just the next logical step in
the path we've taken.
Now let's look
at some other steps that should be obvious. They're not ideal steps
for anyone involved, but I fear they're unavoidable. There will be
someone, perhaps several someones at different locations in different
times, who simply refuse to give up their homes for whatever reason.
The papers will portray them (posthumously of course) as extremists
or criminals or in some other negative light. About ten of us will
remember them for a few months then forget they ever existed. Kevin
pointed out that society is just too apathetic to make a stand.
Mr.
du Toit spoke a while back of what it'd take to push people into
action. I think he put it correctly that it's not just
one thing but several that usually get people off their asses. He
also makes the point that property rights are usually at the heart of
such actions. but Say Uncle makes an equally valid point:
Which brings us
back to a
comment Kevin made to one
of his posts:
" 'I wonder
how many Carl
Dregas it'll take.'
A lot more than there will be.
Remember Marvin Heemeyer?
Pretty much nobody else does either."
A lot more than there will be.
Remember Marvin Heemeyer?
Pretty much nobody else does either."
I've got another
name for you: Andrew
Mickel. Ring a bell? He was just convicted in April of
killing a cop in 2002. He killed the cop to make a political
statement about the infringement of our civil liberties by the
government. He issn't right wing though; he seems to be a left
leaning anti-corporation type libertarian. & that is probably why
you didn't hear much about him in the press - he
was too close to being one of theirs.
I don't condone
what Mickel did even though I understand the frustration which led to
his actions. But Mickel being wrong isn't the point; the point is
that someone acted against government (albeit wrongfully) & very
few people took enough notice to remember his name let alone consider
the merits or lack thereof in his actions.
Randy Weaver. A
lot of gun nuts remember him for much the same reason Harry Potter
was famous before he even attended the Wizarding School; he was the
one who lived. He was attacked by the federal government & he
survived (although his son & wife were murdered during the
ordeal).
David Koresh &
Elian Gonzales also come to mind when we think of heavy handedness by
the government, but Koresh was the one who fought back, so we
remember him posthumously. & honestly the press carried so many
stories filled with allegations of child molestation that many gun
nuts don't want to remember him as they think he's a bad mark
on us all.
Of course
there's also Timothy McVeigh. He's remembered, but as a definite bad
example. His actions put the government in the role of the victim
with the individual in the role of villain.
But how many
folks remember the
Bonus Army? Hell, how many people have ever even heard
of the Bonus Army? At the time it generated enough public sentiment
to be a factor in electing the Great Socialist to office but now I
doubt 1 in 100 people would know anything about them.
So any examples
of people taking on the government are forgotten, unless they put the
government in a desirable role. Let's face it - individuals are
losing the PR war. The press is too sympathetic to government
expansion as long as it's in line with their way of thinking. If a
person who kills a cop or two gets caught with Marx's work in his
home then he barely gets mentioned, but if that same person were
caught
with Randy Weaver's books then he's a right wing extremist.
I think it's
safe to presume that any use of force against the government will not
generate a public outcry on your behalf. Odds are you won't be
remembered a week after you're dead; maybe less time if American Idol
is having finals. If you are it'll be because the press succeeded in
painting you as a horrible person.
There will be
people who do resist government over eminent domain, gun control or a
host of other issues. What will happen is when someone takes a stand
the papers will run elaborate stories on the brave cop who was
brutally murdered & left behind two small kids, & go on to
mention how a John
Ross novel ("a popular cult author amongst
right wing extremists") was found on the same block as the
person who senselessly murdered the cop. Just look closely at the
news & you may catch a glimpse of them. There won't be detailed
stories about the person's multi-year struggle with the government,
or the questionable nature of the law being enforced or the method
used to enforce them, just all the dirt that can possibly be found or
implied on the person in question.
Gun owners don't
have a good reputation. We own guns. That's usually enough to put us
on the wrong foot with the press. There won't be any PR favors done
on our account. So don't look for them. In fact expect the opposite.
If you try to protect your life or your property by force against
criminals you usually spend too much time reading negative critiques
of your actions - & that's against habitual criminals. If the
habitual criminal has a government badge then you can kiss your 10
minute spot on Oprah good-bye.
Why am I
spending so much time talking about image & public perception?
Because I think that half the gun nuts out there believe that if they
barricade themselves in their house that word will spread & the
Militia will come to their rescue. Hell, I'd like to believe
that. I'd like to believe my bank account has several more
zeros on the right side of the decimal point than I remember. But
wishing does not make it so. The press will have any & all
skeletons out of your closet so fast it'd make Paris Hilton look like
a slow moving nun. What the press can't find it will allege. &
any person who thinks about assisting you will have second thoughts
when it hears the anonymous source recount how you told them about
your secret desire to rape wounded puppies.
Still certain
people will reach a point where they either make a stand or turn tail
& flee. About 1 in 1,000,000 will make a stand. & I cannot
say that I won't sympathize with them, I just know I probably won't
be in a position to materially help them. If I ever reach that point
I know it'll be my & my shadow. That's the grim reality we face;
divide & conquer is the government's most effective strategy
against us both philosophically & materially.
In Fire on the
Mountain there was a sympathetic character. He was fighting an
impossible battle against overwhelming odds with Right on his side.
He died. Anyone making a stand against government would be lucky to
generate a millionth of the sympathy that Ebson's character did. But
they will most likely die, albeit not as nobly as Ebson's character.
I'm pissed about
Kelo. It was a slap in the face to anyone who dared read the 5th
amendment's Takings Clause. & there are some things I will take a
stand over. But I rent. I rent because I see it as less pretentious.
Paying yearly protection money to a government is not "owning"
property to me. Neither is begging leave to build on said property &
then having my work inspected. I rent because it's honest. It gives
me no allusions. I do not own the property I live on just as I
wouldn't really own the property I claimed to own. In my case the
landlord owns the property I rent, whereas if I bought something I'd
be in the landlord's position of thinking I owned it when in
actuality the government is merely letting me tend its property for
it.
So Kelo won't
directly affect me. But it hurts just the same as it takes us one
step closer to a Marxist view of property Rights. It's not a
surprising step but it's not one I feel good about us taking.
"In this
sense, the theory of the Communists may be summed up in the single
sentence: Abolition of private property"
That's from
Marx's The
Communist Manifesto.
Here's another
excerpt from that same piece which may put things into perspective:
"...Nevertheless,
in most advanced countries, the following will be pretty generally
applicable.
1. Abolition
of property in land and application of all rents of land to public
purposes." Check.
"2. A
heavy progressive or graduated income tax." Check.
"3.
Abolition of all rights of inheritance." Working on it.
"4.
Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and rebels."
Working on it; see Asset Forfeiture for more detail.
"5.
Centralization of credit in the banks of the state, by means of a
national bank with state capital and an exclusive monopoly."
Let's call this one almost done with just some final tweaking left.
"6.
Centralization of the means of communication and transport in the
hands of the state." FCC, FAA & TSA have it under
control.
"7.
Extension of factories and instruments of production owned by the
state; the bringing into cultivation of waste lands, and the
improvement of the soil generally in accordance with a common plan."
We've got our best people on that.
"8.
Equal obligation of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies,
especially for agriculture." Not yet, but we have some ideas
about how best to approach those things. See Americorps.
"9.
Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries; gradual
abolition of all the distinction between town and country by a more
equable distribution of the populace over the country." We
like to call it "urban sprawl".
"10.
Free education for all children in public schools. Abolition of
children's factory labor in its present form. Combination of
education with industrial production, etc." Check.
What SCOTUS did
with Kelo was merely to reaffirm the goal of Marxism in relation to
property while setting Locke
into high rpm mode.
It's been very
gradual. Incremental is the popular phrase. But I fear that Marx has
won. No; we're not completely communist or even completely socialist.
But we have all the essential building blocks of such a system in
place. We just need a push or two in a few instances to take us the
rest of the way.
The main idea of
Rand's Atlas Shrugged was that if the ones who society leeched off of
the most would go on strike eventually society would become
disarrayed. If you’re doing 90% of the work at a company but
only getting 2% of the net, by going on strike you force the company
to realize your value & hopefully they'll reflect that in their
next offer. I feel that Rand was overly optimistic. While there's a
desire on some level to say "to hell with it" & let the
country get by without my efforts the truth is the government has too
much reserve. For the attrition brought on by non-participation to
take effect it'd have to be on a massive scale & even then it'd
take decades. Similarly a John Ross style revolution would be
ineffective. Achieving it on a large enough scale to be effective
would prove impossible & ultimately it would just fuel the
governments inclination to dissolve any pretense of liberty we have.
So what to do
about Kelo? Part of me says to do what I do; rent. Stop playing the
real estate game under such rules. But there simply wouldn't be
enough people to make any sort of impact. The dozens or even hundreds
that sold their homes to rent a place would be quickly replaced by
people eager to buy into the illusion of owning something. &
chances are with government assisted loans.
Passing laws on
the local level has been suggested, but here's the problem: even if
you do get an acceptable law passed, the very next legislative term
could see it reversed. An acknowledgement of property rights in a
constitution is the best bet we'd have against governmental disregard
for our property. But that's been tried before. It'd be just as silly
as England making confrontational crimes illegal again. If they
couldn't read the parchment on the wall yesterday what makes you
think they will read it tomorrow?
Go buy a couple
hundred rounds of ammo. Then shoot it at a safe shooting range. Try
to do this at least once a month if not once a week. While you're
shooting I want you to do something that should be very unpleasant.
Think about what it would take for you to say "no farther"
& defend yourself against governmental intrusion. Don't think
about killing some faceless jackbooted thug to protect your children;
think about Joe Blow from two blocks over. You went to high school
with him & heard he just had a baby girl. Now think about him
with the badge on coming to take away your guns, your house, whatever
that last straw would be for you. Not because he wants to but because
that’s what his job is & he believes it’s proper.
He just wants to get it over with quickly & peacefully & go
home to see how his new daughter is doing. Now think about it just
being you against this friend of yours with a newborn baby at home.
Now think about him not just coming with the badge, but a court order
& the full blessing of government on a state & federal level.
& don't think it'd be just you & him; it'd be just you
alright, but with about 5 to 25 others just like your old school
chum. That's what you should think about before talking mightily
about taking it to the streets. Think about it just once, &
remember vividly any conclusions you came to. That's the position
you'd be in if you did draw a final line around something. If more
than one in ten could pull the trigger on a paper target while merely
think about those things & the implications I'd be surprised.
Still, buy the
ammo & practice. If for no other reason than it's an enjoyable
way to not think about things like Kelo. Course I do have one idea;
since prevention is one of the most important aspects of the 2nd
amendment we should work with that.
April 15th is
Buy A Gun day. November 19th is National Ammo day. Let's make June
23rd American Range Trip day. Bringing some ART into the world would
be appropriate, especially on a date which 5 people so artfully
dodged the plain text of their controlling document. There’s a
catch though - since 2006 would be the 215th anniversary of the Bill
of Rights (if they'd have survived that is) let’s say you must
expend at least 215 rounds downrange. In 2007 it’d be 216
rounds & so on with each new year. Any firearm chambered for any
cartridge is cool, but I'd be much happier if you had at least one
.30 rifle (bolt or gas operated) on the line.
I'm pessimistic
about this or any other action having any positive effect on the
nation as a whole, but as with too many things in this world,
sometimes it's preferable to do something, even if it's in vain, than
to do nothing.
Course if anyone
finds a copy of Fire on the Mountain on DVD for sale let me know. I
could use a good movie right now. I think we all could.