The Right Opinion
Attacks on Freedom
Something's happened to America, and it isn't good. It's become easier to get into trouble. We've become a nation of a million rules. Not the kind of bottom-up rules that people generate through voluntary associations. Those are fine. I mean imposed, top-down rules formed in the brains of meddling bureaucrats who think they know better than we how to manage our lives.
Cross them, and we are in trouble.
The National Marine Fishery Service (NMFS) received an anonymous fax that a seafood shipment to Alabama from David McNab contained "undersized lobster tails" and was improperly packed in clear plastic bags, rather than the cardboard boxes allegedly required under Honduran law. When the $4 million shipment arrived, NMFS agents seized it. McNab served eight years in prison, even though the Honduran government informed the court that the regulation requiring cardboard boxes had been repealed.
How about this one? Four kindergartners -- yes, 5-year-old boys -- played cops and robbers at Wilson Elementary in New Jersey. One yelled: "Boom! I have a bazooka, and I want to shoot you." He did not, of course, have a bazooka. Nevertheless, all four boys were suspended from school for three days for "making threats," a violation of their school district's zero-tolerance policy. School Principal Georgia Baumann said, "We cannot take any of these statements in a light manner." District Superintendent William Bauer said: "This is a no-tolerance policy. We're very firm on weapons and threats."
Give me a break.
Here's another: Ansche Hedgepeth, 12, committed this heinous crime: She left school in Washington, D.C., entered a Metrorail station to head home and ate a French fry. An undercover officer arrested her, confiscating her jacket, backpack and shoelaces. She was handcuffed and taken to the Juvenile Processing Center. Only after three hours in custody was the 12-year-old released into her mother's custody. The chief of Metro Transit Police said: "We really do believe in zero-tolerance. Anyone taken into custody has to be handcuffed for officer safety." She was sentenced to community service and now carries an arrest record. Washington's Metro has since rescinded its zero-tolerance policy.
Keith John Sampson, a student-employee at Indiana-Purdue University Indianapolis, had the temerity to read "Notre Dame Versus the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan" during breaks on the job. One student complained because the book's cover depicted the Klan. The university then found Sampson guilty of racial harassment! Thankfully, a great organization, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), came to his defense and got his school record cleared.
Palo Alto, Calif., ordered Kay Leibrand, a grandmother, to lower her carefully trimmed hedges. Leibrand argued that no one's vision was obstructed and asked the code officer to take a look. He refused. Then the city dispatched two police officers. They arrested her, loaded her into a patrol car in front of her neighbors and hauled her down to the station.
In 2001, honor student Lindsay Brown parked her car in the wrong spot at her high school. A county police officer looked inside and saw a kitchen knife -- a butter knife with a rounded tip. Because Lindsay was on school property, she had violated the zero-tolerance policy for knives. She was arrested, handcuffed and hauled off to county jail where she spent nine hours on a felony weapons possession charge. School Principal Fred Bode told a local paper, "A weapon is a weapon."
Congress creates, on average, one new crime every week. Federal agencies create thousands more -- so many, in fact that the Congressional Research Service itself said that merely counting them would be impossible.
This is a bad trend. As Lao Tsu said, "The more laws and order are made prominent, the more thieves and robbers there will be."
(John Stossel is host of "Stossel" on the Fox Business Network. He's the author of "Give Me a Break" and of "Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity.")
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8 Comments
CharlieEcho
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 5:14 AM
Luckily there are still a few people and places in this great country that use common sense and know when a law has been broken. But, how do you know when and if you have run into one of those people with wisdom. A crime is a crime, a mistake is a mistake. A wise person will know the difference. Then again we see many criminals set free or not even prosecuted. We live in difficult times. I used to think right and wrong would be a simple thing to teach. Perhaps we need ten basic laws to follow. Ten commandments.
kevin
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 11:15 AM
I'm waiting to be arrested for watering my lawn everyday instead of the city's every other day code - even though I have well water not city water.Or maybe because the dogs are outside without a leash....even though we have a electric fence.Or maybe because my garden is 40x50 and property is not zoned commercial....even though I don't sell anything.Government is out of control.
Todd Mac
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 1:52 PM
Kevin- My gawd man rein it in! You are outta control! If you are in Chicago better not take your Second Amendment Right with you to the garage or the patio or yard, and take all of your guns apart except one, or Daley will getcha! Carry on my friend. I'll be over here clinging to my guns and religion, waiting on November to get here.
Hugh Doss
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 3:01 PM
Obviously liberals making bad decisions. They have no judgement (common sense). Thank God most of our educators and police officers do.
Caseace
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 6:06 PM
John Stossell, are you getting lazy or what? This had to be the easiest column you have ever written! Formula For Stupid Laws:Rules + Regulations (Enforced by Bureaucrats) - Common Sense = Uneven Heavy Handed Results.
Abu Nudnik
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 7:12 PM
"Congress creates, on average, one new crime every week"and the DOJ sues the State of Arizona for passing a law to enforce laws Congress has no stomach to enforce.
Robert USN Ret
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 7:46 PM
Butter knives? Yeah that could be a sort of weapon. Not allowed in a "zero tolerance" zone, hmmm? Intereting! How do they feel about pens and pencils? In some focus specific training (military) one is taught that "there is always a weapon available." How about the ubiquitos pen, or pencil? One can kill, or disable another human quicker with a pencil than with a butter knife. Yes, and how many pens and pencils proliferate in the "zero tolerance" zones? There are others, many other examples of common things becoming weapons. A credit card (or plastic ID card),can be quite deadly-- and on, and on."Any strength carried to extreme becomes a weakness."Stossel is quite correct. Now the end game has become ludicrous, and dangerous to the safety of the public! I guess lawmakers must make laws, hmm?
Howard Last
Wednesday, July 14, 2010 at 9:02 PM
A few years back a youngster at an airport was told by a TSA (Thousands Standing Around) officer he could not take his G.I. Joe figure on the plane because it had a rifle. The rifle was plastic and about 2 inches long. When I was a child all my friends had cap guns. We would use them when we played cowboys and indians (oops native americans).