“Flex Your Rights”

Flex Your Rights is “a new organization devoted to teaching US residents how to exercise their remaining constitutional rights during encounters with police officers.”

And, Durham, NC, resident Maurice McKellar Jr. recently put that knowledge to work during a recent traffic stop:

Although McKellar was absolutely within his rights to refuse such a warrantless search, that’s when things began to go bad. According to McKellar's complaint, instead of accepting his refusal to consent, Hargro responded by calling for back-up. Four more troopers arrived at the scene, along with a drug-sniffing dog. McKellar three more times refused to consent, at which point Hargro placed him under arrest for careless and reckless driving and speeding. [...]

On June 12 he filed a negligence claim against the Highway Patrol’s parent agency, the North Carolina Department of Crime Control and Public Safety, claiming that he was unjustly punished for exercising his constitutional rights. The state agency was negligent, McKellar argued, because it failed to properly train Trooper Hargro. Because McKellar filed his claim with the state Industrial Commission, which is set up to hear workers compensation cases and tort claims alleging negligent actions by state employees, he could be awarded up to $500,000 for “humiliation, emotional distress, physical pain, and mental suffering.” [...]

I think Steven Silverman of Flex Your Rights sums it up best: “He had nothing to lose and everything to gain by doing so. And he is doing the right thing in filing a lawsuit. Suing North Carolina for big bucks could help reform the system. It would certainly give the state an incentive to follow the Constitution.”

“My silence is better than yours”

Experimentalist composer John Cage is famous for his piece 4’33”, which is just silence of just that length. Recently, Mike Batt composed a piece of minute-long silence for an album. But, Cage’s lawyers didn't take kindly to that.

Mike Batt, the man behind the Wombles and Vanessa Mae, has put a silent 60-second track on the album of his latest classical chart-topping protégés, the Planets. This has enraged representatives of the avant-garde, experimentalist composer John Cage, who died in 1992. The silence on his group’s album clearly sounds uncannily like 4’33”, the silence composed by Cage in his prime. [...]

Stupid lawyers. (Link from Adam Shand’s Word Up mailing list)

LP on Dept of Homeland Security

From the Libertarian Party mailing list comes a fairly scathing view of Bush’s new Dept of Homeland Security:

“We challenge every American to name one government agency that has solved the problem for which it was created,” said Steve Dasbach, Libertarian Party executive director. “The Education Department hasn't improved education, the Housing Department has produced only slums, and the Labor Department has never created a job. So why should anyone expect a new security agency to make America more secure?”

[...]

  • The Education Department has cost taxpayers $550 billion since it was created in 1980, yet student scores on ACT and SAT tests are still lower than in 1970.
  • The Department of Energy was initiated in 1977 to stabilize energy prices and to promote America's energy independence from foreign suppliers — yet neither of these two goals has been achieved.
  • The Agriculture Department funnels billions of welfare dollars to corporate farms and even pays farmers not to grow crops.
  • The Veterans Department, elevated to Cabinet status in 1989, was supposed to provide health care and other services to military veterans. Yet the system of VA hospitals is so bad that 90 percent of eligible veterans choose private health care instead, according to a recent Cato Institute analysis.

[...]

They make a good point, though — off the top of my head, it’s hard to think of many government agencies that have solved the problems for which they were created.