September 15, 2007

"Too Many Laws Create Entitled Special Interests,
and Eventually Anarchy!"

by Ron Ewart, President
National Association of Rural Landowners
© Copyright September 15, 2007 - All Rights Reserved

How can a nation of free people, whose foundation of law is the U. S. Constitution, a relatively simple and easy to understand document, wrap themselves up tight in the chains of hundreds of thousands of laws, thereby surrendering their very freedom that our Constitution promises?  When a nation writes too many laws, it makes otherwise lawful citizens into lawbreakers.  Now every American citizen is breaking one or more laws, daily and they have no idea they are doing it.  
 
In "The Tyranny of Good Intentions", Paul Craig Roberts and Lawrence M. Stratton write:   “The U.S. Code, which contains all federal statutes, occupies 56,009 single-spaced pages. Its 47 volumes take up nine feet of shelf space. An annotated version, which attempts to bring order out of chaos, is three feet long and has 230 hardcover volumes and 36 paperback supplements. Administrative lawmaking under statutes fill up the 207-volume Code of Federal Regulations, which spans 21 feet of shelf space and contains more than 134,488 pages of regulatory law. … Federal law is further augmented by more than 2,756 volumes of judicial precedent, taking up 160 yards of law library shelving.”
Can you be certain you’re not breaking one of those laws?

During the Clinton years alone, as James Bovard noted in "Feeling Your Pain", “Federal agencies issued more than 25,000 new regulations—criminalizing everything from reliable toilets to snuff advertisements on race cars.” And Bovard wrote that before Clinton’s final year in office, the federal government issued more than 100,000 pages of new regulations.  That’s just federal.  Lets not forget all the laws passed by states and local governments.
 
But the major evil of too many laws is the competing special interests that lobby the legislatures or file lawsuits in the courts to get them special treatment under the laws, creating special classes of people.   Take Washington State for example.  They passed a Growth Management Act (GMA) back in 1991 that is supposed to guide local governments on how to manage growth.  The Act contains thirteen (13) goals, only one of which is protecting the environment.  But since most local governments are lobbied (or sued) incessantly by environmental groups, the GMA goal to protect the environment has the highest priority, always.   One of the 13 goals under the GMA is to protect property rights.  Protecting property rights  is rarely considered in local government decisions on growth management.
 
Now all these laws don't hurt large developers or corporations.  They just cut deals with local governments to get what they want.  The farmers of Washington State have just won a decision in the state supreme court that makes them virtually exempt from many of the wetland and water course buffers required under the GMA.  In contrast, the environmentalists and the Indian tribes use the GMA to get what they want by suing everybody.  They either sue a local government, or they take their case to one of the state's Growth Management Hearings Boards (GMHB) formed under the GMA.   GMHB's are made up of a few un-elected individuals, appointed by the governor, and it is their job to adjudicate disputes arising out of the GMA.  Most of the GMHB decisions fly in the face of common sense, property rights, or even the other 12 goals of the GMA, except the almighty environmental goal.  It reigns supreme.
 
So who gets trampled among the developers, the farmers, the environmentalists and the Indian tribes?  Small rural landowners.  Thus, the developers, the farmers, the environmental groups and the Indian tribes become special interests under the GMA, at the expense of the small rural landowner.  The giant developers (usually timber companies) have huge chunks of land they can set aside for open space, while the balance of their land is developed into high-dense, highly-profitable urban communities, in compliance with un-American Smart Growth policies that have come out of the United Nations and codified into law by presidential executive orders (Clinton).  The farmers get special treatment because the wide buffers required for wetland and water courses under so-called Best Available Science (an oxymoron if there ever was one) would use up so much of their land they couldn't grow any crops and would go out of business.   Meanwhile, the environmentalists sue everybody to get what they want, which is unreasonable environmental protection, paid for by everyone else but the environmentalist. 
 
But what about the small rural landowner?  What concessions does he get under the GMA?  Little to none!  Why?  Because he is an un-represented, disenfranchised minority that the three branches of government and special interests can ignore, wholesale.  Environmental protection ordinances fall disproportionately on rural landowners, while special interests (developers, corporations, farmers, environmentalists and the Indian tribes) jockey in the legislatures and the courts for relief from those very same ordinances.  The city folk remain virtually unscathed by it all.
 
By just sheer numbers, the more laws that are written, (no matter whom they effect)  the less likely the entire population will even know about the laws, or understand them, or know of their consequences or penalties for violation, much less be in compliance with them.  And yet, under the law, ignorance of the law is not a defense.
 
Many laws are written at the insistence of lobbying or special interest groups with very narrow and purposely hidden agendas. (i.e. Corporations, developers, farmers, environmentalists and Indian tribes) The rural landowners never have an opportunity for real input to the process that affects them the most.  City-born partisan politics often compromise a new law into meaningless, often conflicting legislation, leaving loopholes over which lawyers can argue for decades.
 
In the final analysis, extending legislating and law creation to its absurdity, one arrives at a point where there are so many laws that no one is in compliance and we end up losing our ability to enforce any of them.  We become in fact, lawless in a chaotic nightmare of our own making.   Special interests use the system to protect their turf.  Equal protection under the law becomes meaningless.
 
Thus, the only answer is not in complexity, but in simplicity and fewer laws. Yes, a complex society needs laws to maintain "reasonable" societal order.  But as laws increase, after a certain point, order begins to break down under its own weight, as people try to comply with often conflicting and confusing codes, ordinances, regulations and acts.  For example, how many Americans are in strict compliance with the Internal Revenue Service code?  It's a joke.  No, it's a monster injustice.   And worse, the more laws there are, the more opportunities for emotionally and financially draining lawsuits between aggrieved parties, egged on by lawyers who make their living off of human weaknesses and interpreting laws that no one else can understand.
 
There is an inviolate law in nature.  Complexity in organisms can lead to the emergence of order.  Biological evolution and diversity of life on Earth is a result of that law.  However, it has also been shown that too much complexity in these organisms, in almost all cases, leads to chaos and finally extinction.
 
Ultimately, if we continue on the path we tread, all Americans, but especially the small rural landowner, will be snared in an inescapable spiderweb of law, after law, after law. 
 
Too many laws create competing special interests who lobby the system to entrench their own little worlds, while the un-represented are left out in the cold.  Too many laws create victims who inadvertently violate one or more laws and spend their life's savings trying to defend themselves against an intransigent, all-powerful and abusive government.  Too many laws leads to powerful, entitled special interests and victims who have no power.
 
But since we are bent on our own destruction, we will continue to pass law, after law, after law.  As in the story of the person crying wolf too many times, too many laws will lead to wholesale non-compliance, and a country of laws will collapse under a billion pages of laws that just about everyone will ignore.  A condition that will eventually lead to anarchy.

 
"Rightful liberty is unobstructed action according to our will, within limits drawn around us by the equal rights of others.  I do not add 'within the limits of the law', because law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the God-given rights of the individual."   Thomas Jefferson
 

Your religion comes at a price and you willingly give hundreds or even thousands of dollars a year to your church in the hopes of salvation in the after life.  But freedom comes at a price too and if you are not willing to pay that price, you will most surely lose that freedom in this life.  Salvation is ethereal.  Freedom is real and tangible, until you lose it.  But a church without parishioners and their monetary offerings is nothing but an empty shell without force or effect.  And so it is in the fight to preserve, protect and defend freedom, in this life.
 
How incongruous it is that freedom is worth far less than salvation in an after life.  Perhaps we should start a church.  We could call it:
 

"The Church of Precious Liberty"

May be then our coffers would be filled and we would have the tools to vigorously fight for the greatest of all gifts from our creator, freedom and liberty, in this life.

 Ron Ewart, President
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF RURAL LANDOWNERS
P. O. Box 1031, Issaquah, WA  98027
425 222-4742 or 1 800 682-7848
(Fax No. 425 222-4743)
Website: www.narlo.org


"THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF RURAL LANDOWNERS"
 
The National Association of Rural Landowners (NARLO) is a non-profit corporation, duly licensed in the State of Washington.  It was formed in response to draconian land use ordinances that were passed by King County in Washington State (Seattle) in the late Fall of 2004, after vociferous opposition from rural landowners.  NARLO's mission is to begin the long process of restoring, preserving and protecting Constitutional property rights and returning this country to a Constitutional Republic.  Government has done a great job of dividing us up into little battle groups where we are essentially impotent at a national level.  We will change all that with the noisy voices and the vast wealth tied up in the land of the American rural landowner.  The land is our power, if we will just use that power, before we lose it.  We welcome donations and volunteers who believe as we do, that government abuses against rural landowners have gone on for far too long and a day of reckoning is at hand.  To learn more, visit our website at www.narlo.org.
 
President Roosevelt, in his 1933 inaugural address said, “…. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself”.  I maintain that the only thing we have to fear is unbridled government.  The only way unbridled government can exist is if WE THE PEOPLE allow it. 
   

Good Neighbor Committee
P.O. Box 155 - La Salle, CO  80645
info@goodneighborlaw.com

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