Civil Liberties
Related: About this forumFor once I agree with Rand Paul. I also don't think Loretta Lynch should be Attorney General
Cross-posted at DailyKos.com, progressiveamericanthought.blogspot.com and danriker.blogspot.com
By Dan Riker
I have more reasons than Paul cited. First, what he talked about.
He is opposing her because she supports the current laws allowing civil forfeiture of property when the owner has not been convicted of a crime. The Huffington Post reports that in her role as U.S. Attorney in New York she has seized about $13 million in private property. Her office once held $447,000 in private property for two years without ever charging the owner with a crime. When questioned before the Senate committee considering her nomination for Attorney General, she said she supports the current law.
I agree with Paul. This may be the only area of agreement with him. There are so many other areas of disagreement between us, I certainly would not vote for him. But I applaud his position here.
Now, here are my principal reasons for opposing her confirmation.
In other testimony before the committee, she said she supports the death penalty, saying she believes it deters crime. There is a world of evidence collected over many years that disputes that belief. There was evidence in England when there public hangings that the hangings actually caused more crime. We are among the greatest users of the death penalty, in company with China, North Korea, Yemen, and Iran. Isn't that wonderful company to be among? It is time for this nation to join with other civilized nations and ban this barbaric practice. Maybe the Supreme Court will do the right thing this term and end its use in the United States forever.
Lynch also says she opposes the legalization of marijuana. I have questions whether extensive use of it may lead to various kinds of health problems, but current scientific studies of marijuana use do not support my concern. There is plenty of hard evidence that cigarettes are far worse for our health and they are legal. And the same is true about alcohol and it is legal in much of the country. We tried outlawing it and we created organized crime.
We created the drug cartels and a huge prison industry by declaring a war on drugs. It has been the longest war in our history and our least successful. We have more than tripled the number of people in prison since 1985 when mandatory prison sentences for drug offenses were made federal law, and most of those people are in prison for non-violent drug offenses. And nothing we have done has stopped the use of drugs. It just has increased the cost.
When I was in law school back in the 1970s, one of the assigned books in criminal law was then already a classic, The Limits of the Criminal Sanction, by Herbert L. Packer, a professor at the Stanford University School of Law. My copy of this book, first published in 1968, was the 76th printing. That shows it was widely read, particularly in law schools. I have to believe that Loretta Lynch has read it. It is a very scholarly analysis of criminal law. His fundamental thesis was that the greater the penalty applied to a criminal offense, the more valuable success in that crime became. And it was especially true when it came to illegal drugs.
He wrote that the use of criminal law to try to control the use of narcotics and other drugs was the greatest example of the misuse of the criminal sanction. "A clearer case of misapplication of the criminal sanction would be difficult to imagine."
Just before that sentence he lists the results of reliance on the criminal sanction to control drugs - and keep in mind, this was written in 1968 before mandatory prison sentences and many of the other expansions of the war on drugs.
"The results of this reliance on the criminal sanction have included the following:
(1) Several hundred thousand people (ed. now more than 2 million), the overwhelming majority of whom have been primarily users rather than traffickers, have been subjected to severe criminal punishment.
(2) An immensely profitable illegal traffic in narcotics and other forbidden drugs has developed.
(3) This illegal traffic has contributed significantly to the growth and prosperity of organized criminal groups.
(4) A substantial number of all acquisitive crimes - burglary, robbery, auto theft, other forms of larceny - have been committed by drug users in order to get the wherewithal to pay the artificially high prices charged for drugs on the illegal market.
(5) Billions of dollars and a significant proportion of total law enforcement resources have been expended in all stages of the criminal process.
(6) A disturbingly large number of undesirable police practices - unconstitutional searches and seizures, entrapment, electronic surveillance - have become habitual because of the great difficulty that attends the detection of narcotics offenses.
(7) The burden of enforcement has fallen primarily on the urban poor, especially Negroes and Mexican-Americans.
(8) Research on the causes, effects, and cures of drug use has been stultified.
(9) The medical profession has been intimidated into neglecting its accustomed role of relieving this form of human misery.
(10) A large and well-entrenched enforcement bureaucracy has developed a vested interest in the status quo, and has effectively thwarted all but the most marginal reforms.
(11) Legislative invocations of the criminal sanction have automatically and unthinkingly been extended from narcotics to marijuana to the flood of new mind-altering drugs that have appeared in recent years, thereby compounding the preexisting problem."[ii]
As a prosecutor, Ms. Lynch has been outstanding. That is a crime-fighting job, not a law-making one. The role of Attorney General is different. Yes, there is crime-fighting, but there also is law-making, or, at least law-influencing. For example, the present Attorney General has stopped enforcement of federal laws against marijuana in states where it has been legalized. That is an act of discretion, but also of common sense.
The Attorney General of the United States is the leading legal administrative official of the United States and has great influence over legislation and over how existing laws are enforced. It is very important that someone hold this position with a forward-looking view, not one based on the past, refusing to see and acknowledge the wrongness of the war on drugs.
One of the greatest mistakes of our past has been the War on Drugs, including the criminalization of marijuana. No sensible person can expect to enforce a law against a plant that can be grown under artificial light in anyone's closet without violating the Constitution in wholesale amounts.
The legalization, or at least de-criminalization of marijuana would save millions of people from criminal records and prison sentences that ruin their lives, and, at the same time, save billions of dollars in law enforcement and prison costs. It also would eliminate a major source of profit of the drug cartels.
Our Attorney General needs to have better judgment that what Loretta Lynch has displayed.
Packer, Herbert L. The Limits of the Criminal Sanction. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1968. p. 333.
[ii] Ibid. pp 332-333
GeorgeGist
(25,430 posts)msongs
(70,178 posts)mike_c
(36,333 posts)Their judgement has proven inadequate to the job.
progressoid
(50,747 posts)Is it her singing? Or her hair? Or her clothes?
jimruymen
(22 posts)Loretta Lynch has a storied history of screwing over the little guy for her coporate benefactors. Sound familiar?
rhett o rick
(55,981 posts)in the bunch.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)rhett o rick
(55,981 posts)Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)In the thread you link to, no one troubled to quote the actual statute that the Supreme Court was required to apply. The workers' right to overtime pay arose under the Fair Labor Standards Act. Unfortunately, the Act had been amended to provide that there is no right to overtime pay for time spent in
The workers were spending time in a security check before leaving the facility. It was time the employer required them to spend, and it benefited the employer rather than them, so they thought they should be compensated for it -- but the security check was "postliminary" to their principal activity, so Congress had taken it out of the FLSA.
More complete explanation here.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)It's most emphatically not the job of SCOTUS to overrule Congress just because it thinks Congress has made a mistake. For many years before and during the New Deal, the Court majority did that in striking down various social-welfare legislation (prohibitions on child labor and the like). The Court from that era would have overruled Congress on the very existence of the FLSA -- the entire statute would have been set aside, leaving no workers anywhere with any legal right to overtime pay.
Today, that line of cases is almost universally viewed as wrong. We elect Congress to make the laws. The Court can't "overrule" Congress except for the protection of rights under the Constitution (and even that exception has its critics). The current Supreme Court has departed from that understanding at times, for example in eviscerating the Voting Rights Act, and has been justifiably criticized for it.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)Or that the interpretation of that law is Constitutional?
I believe there's an Amendment in there someplace regarding that.
"Neither slavery no involuntary servitude ...."
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)The Constitution has never been interpreted to require private employers to do anything of the sort (to pay overtime, to maintain safe workplaces, to not hire children, etc.). All those things are illegal only because of statutes.
You refer to "the law allowing wage theft". What you call wage theft was perfectly legal until 1938, when the Fair Labor Standards Act became law. It was amended in 1947 to include the language I quoted. The overall effect is that the Act, as amended, requires overtime pay for certain required activities but not for others. Just as Congress has the power to decline to require overtime pay at all (the choice it made for the first century and a half under the Constitution), it has the power to require overtime pay for some activities but not for others. Congress could repeal the entire FLSA tomorrow without violating the Constitution.
The situation at that Amazon facility is not involuntary servitude because the workers aren't legally compelled to work there. "Economic circumstances forced me to take this job so it's involuntary and hence unconstitutional" has never been accepted as an interpretation of the Thirteenth Amendment, and with good reason.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)An evil corporation (Democratic Underground LLC) is getting people to do its work without pay. Work without pay is involuntary servitude. This is what brave men died at Gettysburg to stop!
The serious answer to your post is that courts have never interpreted "involuntary" the way you do. It refers only to a legal compulsion. It excludes cases where the person has agreed to do something.
Issues have been raised about whether the Thirteenth Amendment is violated by compulsory jury duty or by military conscription. Both involve coercion by the government and are not based on any voluntary act of the person involved.
In the Amazon case, by contrast, the government is not compelling anyone to do anything. In fact, it's the workers who want to involve the government's power, asking it to compel the staffing company to pay them for the screening time.
Furthermore, the workers have all voluntarily agreed to work there. Each of them is free to say "I don't voluntarily agree to spend time going through this screening procedure," but in that case the company is free to say "Then you're fired." The Thirteenth Amendment does not mean that someone can take a job with a private employer but refuse to perform some of the duties of that job.
I realize you're not saying that they should be able to refuse, only that they should be paid for the time they spend. I personally think they should be paid. But we have to recognize that their legal right comes only from the FLSA, and that it was amended to exclude activities like the security screening. The answer is still to persuade Congress to change the law, rather than to criticize Obama or his Supreme Court appointees.
merrily
(45,251 posts)I don't know what satisfaction people get from their wholly voluntary service on the MIRT team, but failure to volunteer for MIRT is not the same at all as telling their employer they are not going to participate in security measures unless they get paid overtime for it.
The shame here may well be on Congress, rather than the Justices. However, that is a separate issue from comparing a job that enables people to feed their kids to volunteering for MIRT.
Adam051188
(711 posts)...is enough information for me to know that she will continue the class wars begun in the fifties and sixties.
merrily
(45,251 posts)rich people, by the rich people and for the rich people.
i should have states "continued the counter-offensive of the american fascists against the Roosevelt's socialists"
mountain grammy
(27,276 posts)for most of the reasons stated above. I think Obama appointed her to avoid a fight, and that's just wrong.
Fuddnik
(8,846 posts)project_bluebook
(411 posts)Cryptoad
(8,254 posts)Liberal_Stalwart71
(20,450 posts)who have been jailed due to simple possession.
Release them FIRST, wipe their criminal records CLEAN, then let's talk legalization.
We all know why racist Rand Paul doesn't support Loretta Lynch. His arguments against her is a smokescreen.
And when DUers champion Rand Paul because they think he shares their views for some noble cause, I know this place has become something I don't recognize anymore.
Fucking ridiculous!!
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)What the OP actually said:
What you wrote:
The OP shouldn't even have needed to say that he disagreed with Rand Paul on so many other things. What's "fucking ridiculous" to my mind is that, even when the OP bent over backward to point that out, someone comes along and bashes him for allegedly championing Rand Paul.
You know, there are issues on which right-wingers disagree with each other. Immigration is one. As another example, we may well see wingnuts on both sides of the TPP/fast-track vote. They can't all be wrong. More generally, DUers can agree with a particular issue position without thereby "championing" a politician who articulated it.
Liberal_Stalwart71
(20,450 posts)a racist fuck, he can go to hell!
You can call me all kinds of names. Insult me all you want.
Rand Paul and his pappy are racists! Period! And people who agree with ANYTHING they have to say should be ashamed of themselves.
Case closed!
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)My response to people who make arguments like yours:
https://www.google.com/search?q=kennedy+cape+wind&sitesearch=democraticunderground.com#q=kennedy+koch+%22Cape+Wind%22+site:democraticunderground.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/23/us/koch-brother-wages-12-year-fight-over-wind-farm.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
OSTERVILLE, Mass. If the vast wind farm proposed for Nantucket Sound is ever built, William I. Koch will have a spectacular view of it.
Of course, that is the last thing he wants. Mr. Koch, a billionaire industrialist who made his fortune in fossil fuels and whose better-known brothers underwrite conservative political causes, has been fighting the wind farm, called Cape Wind, for more than a decade, donating about $5 million and leading an adversarial group against it. He believes that Cape Winds 130 industrial turbines would not only create what he calls visual pollution but also increase the cost of electricity for everyone.
Now, as if placing a bet on the outcome of the battle, Mr. Koch, 73, who has owned an exclusive summer compound here for years, has acquired an even grander one Rachel Mellons 26-acre waterfront estate in the gated community of Oyster Harbors, for $19.5 million. He has also bought the nearby 12-plus-acre Dupont estate. All of this adds up to a prime perch over Nantucket Sound...
...Mr. Koch is not the only opponent of Cape Wind. The late Senator Edward M. Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat, whose Hyannis family compound also looked out on Nantucket Sound, opposed the project too...
Or:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/30/murdoch-bloomberg-testify_n_745499.html
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/jun/15/news/la-pn-murdoch-bloomberg-applaud-obama-immigration-order-20120615
June 15, 2012|By Kim Geiger
WASHINGTON President Obamas decision to allow some young illegal immigrants to work legally in the United States drew applause from business leaders across the political spectrum.
Business leaders have long argued that the United States current immigration policy makes the country less competitive.
Rupert Murdoch, chairman and chief executive of News Corp., joined Alcoa Chief Executive Klaus Kleinfeld and Viacom Chief Executive Philippe Dauman in issuing a full-throated endorsement of the presidents new policy.
We hope this prompts Congress to reach agreement on common-sense immigration policies that reflect American labor market needs and American values, the group said in a joint statement. Young people who had no choice over coming to this country, have grown up here and now want to become productive members of our society should not be treated like criminals....
Liberal_Stalwart71
(20,450 posts)support a racist. And if you do, please do not write to me, o.k. Do not post to me if you follow this fucking racist. PERIOD!
Welcome to ignore
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)During the Clinton administration, a Democratic club in Greenwich Village hosted a debate about NAFTA. I was one of the "Anti" speakers, representing the Sierra Club.
During the question period, one audience member was invoking this associational fallacy. I pointed out (to this very liberal gathering) that you could either support NAFTA and side with Newt Gingrich, or oppose it and side with Pat Buchanan.
As for Rand Paul, I haven't followed him closely, but I think that in 2014 he gave the Etch-A-Sketch a shake on foreign policy. He had started off as an opponent of U.S. military intervention (echoing his father, who voted against the Iraq War Resolution). Realizing that he needed to be more militaristic if he wanted to win the Republican nomination, he pivoted hard right, contradicting what he'd said just a few months earlier. If my memory on this is correct, then one could today paraphrase my NAFTA argument without even needing to find two different right-wingers -- whichever position you took, pro or con, would put you in agreement with something Rand Paul said.
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...accused of "supporting him"
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)Strange that a self-declared "liberal stalwart" wouldn't oppose someone who holds
such illiberal positions...
Liberal_Stalwart71
(20,450 posts)JustAnotherGen
(33,570 posts)Lets do that first, reinstate their voting rights if they have lost them - then we can talk legalization.
It's fair.
We know if we are asked to be polite and "wait" - it will never happen. Those folks will rot in prison another 20 years if we don't demand it up front.