Philosophy of Law & Government 
                            
                                - Principles
                                            of Government
- Essential Principles for the Conservation of
                                        Liberty
- Philosophy
                                            of Government Compared
- Citizen Compact
- New
                                            Constitutional Proposal 
                        
                            ESSENTIAL PRINCIPLES  FOR
                                    THE  
                                    CONSERVATION OF LIBERTY 
                        
                         by Joel M. Skousen
                        
 INTRODUCTION
                        
 WHY DO PEOPLE FAIL TO PRESERVE LIBERTY?
                        
 WHY DO PEOPLE HAVE SUCH A DIFFICULT TIME RECOGNIZING ITS LOSS?
                        
 In response to these difficult questions regarding the loss of liberty,
                            I have felt compelled to author this booklet. All free men need to determine
                            just what are the essential principles that are necessary to conserve
                            and defend individual, family, and group liberty from the slow, cancerous
                            destruction of socialist, collectivist, and totalitarian tendencies
                            of man.
                        
 The primal importance of this work lies in its fundamental premise:
                            that there exists certain fundamental rights (life, liberty, ownership,
                            and self-defense) that all men possess by virtue of their God-given
                            standing as free-agents here on earth, which are superior to any government,
                            constitution, or law which may be enacted by man to the contrary. While
                            this idea is certainly not unique among the annals of jurisprudence,
                            it has always been a rather nebulous idea that has found little consistent
                            implementation in constitutional law. In all the many and varied attempts
                            to define and construct a free society, this is the single most pressing
                            issue upon which men have rarely been able to agree. Fundamental rights
                            are difficult to define and even more difficult to list without fear
                            of leaving something out, or worse yet, including things that are not
                            true rights, but benefits or privileges granted by misguided governments.
                        
 Even the attempt by George Mason and other founding fathers of the
                            American Constitution, to make a listing or "Bill of Rights"
                            was limited to the worst abuses current at that time. The essential
                            corollary rights and economic freedoms that they failed to specifically
                            mention were some of the first fundamental rights to be lost to a hostile
                            20th century Supreme Court.
                        
 This work is an exposition and commentary on essential principles--those
                            fundamental expressions of doctrine that support a comprehensive philosophy.
                            In this case, the subject is liberty and the principles that I will
                            attempt to illuminate and clarify are the fundamental and basic doctrines
                            which, by either God-given mandate, or by time honored irrefutability,
                            have been shown to be absolutely essential to the preservation of freedom.
                            It is my basic purpose to establish the universal doctrines which lead
                            to the establishment of proper civil governments and just law.
                        
                        
 HOW DO THE PRINCIPLES OF LIBERTY DIFFER FROM A CONSTITUTION?
                        
 Both a document of fundamental principles, and a constitution are
                            necessary to establish and preserve liberty. The principles are built
                            upon the foundation of the fundamental rights of man and establish the
                            doctrinal justification for earthly law and governments. A constitution
                            establishes the STRUCTURE OF GOVERNMENT and the general LAWMAKING POWERS
                            OF THE NATION which, when properly formed, should both enable and restrict
                            governmental power to the defense of those fundamental rights. In short,
                            a constitution is a LAW GOVERNING LAWMAKING. A constitution should not
                            contain specific laws or statutes, but rather only the laws which govern
                                and restrict the specific lawmaking process. The only exception
                            to this is where certain specific laws are included that the founders
                            desire to come under the restrictive amendment powers of the constitution.
                        
 Some have questioned the need to declare these principles, stating
                            that all such principles are found in the Constitution of the United
                            States of America, generally considered the greatest constitution of
                            liberty yet devised. But this is not true. Almost no principles are
                            enunciated within the text of the Constitution, although it is very
                            clear that specific principles and ideas guided the majority of the
                            Founders in their deliberations. But there were also many false principles
                            and bad ideas declared during the constitutional debates, some of which
                            found their way into constitutional language or compromises.
                        
 Other times, true principles had to be obscured in general language
                            so as not to offend the states who desired to uphold the institution
                            of slavery, one of the most flagrant violations of the fundamental rights
                            of man. The ultimate evidence of this intent to violate fundamental
                            rights was the failure of the first Congress to ratify one of the proposed
                            amendments, originally included in the "Bill of Rights" which
                            would have made the "bill of rights" binding upon the States
                            as well as the Federal Government.
                        
 Most of the representatives had a strong distrust for national government,
                            and felt at the same time a high degree of trust in the willingness
                            of the states to protect people's rights. After all, it was leaders
                            in the separate states or colonies that had risen to fight British tyranny
                            . This trust in the benevolence of the states was a natural, but somewhat
                            naive assumption reflecting their own trust in themselves--the representatives
                            of the States who were forming the new Constitution. They failed to
                            see into the future, however, the inevitable rise of influence based
                            politicians, rather than statesmen, who would rise to the temptation
                            of buying votes with benefits and suppressing the rights of some in
                            order to favor others. Some of state representatives voted against this
                            amendment not only for its inherent implication of distrust for state
                            governments, but because it would have prohibited certain acts inherent
                            in slavery. In modern times, it has become obvious that state legislatures
                            are as prone to violate fundamental rights as the Federal government.
                        
 The naive notion that certain forms of government regulation and control
                            are acceptable as long as they are done at the "local level"
                            is flawed and dangerous. State governments have become filled with large,
                            imposing bureaucracies, and an even larger percentage of unprincipled
                            politicians (especially Governors) buying votes with benefits and paying
                            off political debts with government jobs and lucrative contracts for
                            friends. Neither do state officials and legislators campaign on the
                            wide range of political issues and ideas that Congressmen do--the only
                            positions directly relevant to State offices are local city--county--state
                            issues which tend to revolve around what each legislator has "done
                            for his constituency". Certainly this is a part of national politics
                            as well, but at least there exists a myriad of higher issues that can
                            raise the national debate to the level of universal principles more
                            easily.
                        
 Only the clear enunciation of the fundamental rights of man--rights
                            which no man, or government can rightfully violate (even at the "local"
                            level) will stand as a permanent bulwark against the slow erosion of
                            liberty.
                        
 Let me clarify at the outset that this work is not attempting to discredit
                            what I consider the inspired work of the majority of the America's constitutional
                            founding fathers. My purpose is to clarify the work of those who really
                            understood liberty, and reestablish the correct principles they did
                            discover by rewording them in more formidable language that cannot be
                            so easily reinterpreted by those with bad intent. I will also attempt
                            to elucidate the errors of compromise that were made due to the "political
                            realities" of 1779, and track the history of judicial interpretation
                            which began to erode the American Constitution from its very inception.
                        
 The American system of government never was designed or intended
                                to be a democracy. It was specifically designed as a constitutionally
                                    limited, representative federation of sovereign states--a restrictive
                            type of REPUBLIC, where the powers of majority rule were exercised by
                            and through elected representatives, and were limited to specific
                            constitutionally delegated authority that protected the fundamental
                            rights of all, including minorities (except slaves), from improper majority
                            rule. The Supreme Court would not have been able to take such license
                            with the constitutional wording had the founders been more precise in
                            their language, and had established a primal document on principles
                            such as the one you are about to read. Of course, if they had, the constitution
                            would in all probability never been ratified by the states--there were
                            too many vested interest involved in violating a few fundamental rights
                            (especially slavery).
                        
 THE KEY TO LIBERTY IS THE UNIVERSAL RECOGNITION OF TRUE FUNDAMENTAL
                                RIGHTS BY THE PEOPLE THEMSELVES, COUPLED WITH A WILL TO DEFEND THOSE
                                RIGHTS BY FORCE OF ARMS.
                        
 These principles are only a strong deterrent to judicial and legislative
                            misconduct where there exists sufficient historical background of democratic
                                and majoritarian tyranny engraved upon the minds of a sufficiently
                            large portion of the populace to cause them to be ever vigilant
                            and distrustful of democracy. Unfortunately this is very difficult to
                            achieve and maintain because the errors and damage from socialism and
                            democracy are hidden errors, often appearing as failures of the free
                            market. It takes a highly educated and wise majority of people to be
                            able to sift through the obscuration of pseudo-educated liberals who
                            throw out benign appearing and lofty concepts of compassion that secretly
                            destroy other's rights. The psychological enticements of these corrupting
                            philosophies will be discussed in more detail later.
                        
 The principles are not, in and of themselves, a specific list of prohibitions
                            on evil forms of law or government--though they can be used to produce
                            such a list. What the principles accomplish is to establish the legitimate
                            basis for a government association (the defense of fundamental rights),
                            and thereby requires that all government actions be justified as a defense
                            of one or more of the fundamental rights of man. They also provide a
                            short concise learnable set of ideas that can help people recognize
                            bad law more easily. We must never underestimate the importance of keeping
                            a simple set of mental tools before the common citizen so he can easily
                            recall them to mind, and employ them to dismantle and analyze the ever-increasing
                            sophistication and sophistry of modern law and judicial interpretation.
                        
 A good constitution should make clear reference to fundamental rights
                            as the ultimate purpose of constitutional law, though the listing of
                            fundamental rights must be beyond political confirmation, as
                            I will discuss later. Thus, the existence of the principles, when acknowledged
                            as the ultimate authority by its citizens, requires that constitutional
                            interpreters look back to the fundamentals for their interpretive substance,
                            which makes obvious distortions of constitutional law much more difficult.
                        
 Even with all this, the ultimate defense against the erosion of liberty
                            has to reside in the personal arms of those free spirits who cherish
                            liberty above indolence, pleasure and government enticements. A well
                            armed citizenry is thus the only ultimate deterrence to both democratic
                            or totalitarian tyranny, as long as it is coupled with the wisdom and
                            zeal to know how to use the right of self-defense appropriately. And
                            in the final analysis, as we are now observing throughout the western
                            world, none of this makes any difference in the real world if people
                            are too complacent and pleased with their worldly security to defend
                            what is universally right for all. I fear we only see a fervor to fight
                            for individual benefits and divisive ethnic interests in the modern
                            world--all masked in the "sacred" name of preserving democracy.--that
                            doctrinal anesthetic that puts men's mind to sleep with the illusory
                            promise of equal rewards and benefits for all. Nothing could be more
                            preposterous than that illusion, and nothing more deadly to the natural
                            incentives of man to rise above his weaknesses.
                        
 FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS ARE NOT SUBJECT TO POLITICAL CONFIRMATION:
                        
 Fundamental Rights are those rights that we can derive from a universal non-conflicting criteria that allows all men to excercise their maximum free will without infringing on others rights, equally claimed, nor forcing others to serve their needs.  These non conflicting rights are
                            inviolable, and superior to all forms of human government, and therefore NOT SUBJECT TO POLITICAL CONFIRMATION. This is a radically new
                            concept to those schooled to believe that the highest form of justice
                            comes by democratic means. It becomes clear, under the concept of "inviolable
                            rights" that fundamental rights should never be subject to ratification,
                            even in a constitution, though they should be recognized and referred
                            to by it. To do so would subordinate one's fundamental rights to the
                            will of a majority--those who will vote for such fundamental rights,
                            or worse yet, to deny them legal status by voting against them.
                        
 The latter case is very likely due to the fact that the fundamental
                            rights prohibit popular government welfare schemes by holding the right
                            to private property, among others, inviolate. Most of the constitutional
                            founders did not favor democracy, knowing that raw, unlimited democracy
                            could be totalitarian in nature. Their views were vividly confirmed
                            as the world watched the tyrannical excesses of the democratic French
                            revolution, a few years later. The clear historical propensity of democratic
                            majorities to vote themselves benefits from other people's pockets was
                            the prime reason why they selected a representative form of democracy
                            (the Republic) and put strict limits upon the exercise of majority rule
                            powers. As Jefferson put it, there was a necessity to "bind government
                            down with the chains of the Constitution."
                        
 The requirement that elected representatives, rather than the people directly, have legislative
                            powers is the
                            essential element that constitutes a representative Republic. It is a tacit recognition
                            that a fair amount of education and sophistication is necessary to sift
                            through the sometimes difficult and subtle issues involved in making
                            laws. But because of the potential for personal corruption in leaders,
                            as well as other foibles of man (intellectual arrogance, excessive deference
                            to people etc.) it is never enough to trust even a majority of representatives
                            to safeguard fundamental liberties. The genius of the original American
                            system was to actually limit the majoritarian powers of the people's
                            representatives. This way, even a bad or corrupt majority could not
                            make an unjust law--such laws were either prohibited outright by the
                            constitution or put off-limits by the "enumerated powers"
                            clause (that the government only possesses specific enumerated powers,
                            and nothing more). If strictly construed, it leaves no room for government
                            to assume new powers. If it isn't specifically listed, they can't do
                            it, no matter how popular. But sometimes bad law (especially of the
                            social spending variety) become so popular that the representatives
                            are pressed upon to amend the constitution to add such powers to the
                            enumerated list. This is why it is clearly not a sufficient safeguard
                            to place one's fundamental rights under the ratification and amendment
                            process of a constitution.
                        
 Most Americans labor under the mistaken assumption that our Constitution
                            safeguards all fundamental rights in the Bill of Rights. But this is
                            not true. The founders were very fearful of making a list, concerned
                            that something might be left out. So they left all "residual rights"
                            to either the States or the individuals--a dangerous piece of general
                            wording. Naturally the states took all the rest since no single individual
                            has the power to demand and defend his residual rights, not being as
                            powerful as an organized institution. At the same time, through poor
                            education, we have almost universally lost all recognition of fundamental
                            rights. No formal criteria or definition is found in the Constitution.
                            Perhaps, even worse, people have also become accustomed to view existing
                            law or interpretations of law as if they are the absolute "law
                            of the land," rather than look to the Constitution--or beyond--to
                            the ultimate law, in order to judge the validity of any law. There is
                            a further sense of futility when one sees official injustice fortified
                            and ratified by the very courts whose original function was to be a
                            safeguard against such oppression.
                        
 In a judicial sense, another purpose in recognizing the supremacy
                            of fundamental rights over statutory law, even exceeding constitutional
                            interpretation, is to reduce the propensity of government officials
                            to rely upon former legal precedents to justify the continued suppression
                            of such rights. This declaration of rights puts all government officials
                            on notice that all laws which violate fundamental rights are simply
                            null and void, and that the burden is upon government to prove that
                            such laws are in accord with fundamental rights. Most importantly, public
                            officials should be aware that they are PERSONALLY LIABLE for any infringement
                            of another's rights, and that men may ultimately and rightfully defend
                            their fundamental rights with appropriate force, when no practical or
                            fair legal recourse is possible.
                        
 NATURAL RIGHTS OR GOD GIVEN RIGHTS:
                        
 The occasional reference I have or will make to the ultimate sovereignty
                            of God over man is not meant as a coercive statement which one must
                            accept prior to accepting these principles and fundamental rights of
                            man. The principles and rights listed are sufficiently self-evident
                            that a man who chooses not to accept God may still accept them as "natural
                            rights." They are protected regardless of their recognition of
                            the source, though I have personally chosen to recognize God as the
                            ultimate sovereign and giver of basic freedom---though nowhere in the scriptures do we find a clear listing of fundamental rights.  God champions liberty in principle but leaves it to man to find the inspiration to properly implement righteous law.
                        
 In like manner, we could attempt to justify the recognition of family
                            sovereignty based upon the "nature of man" which indicates
                            that the family unit is the most practical way to raise children. I
                            have chosen the theological basis that God is the spiritual creator
                            and father of all mankind, and thus has the ultimate right to delegate
                            that trust to parents, and to require an ultimate accounting of that
                            trust. Once again, each is free to choose the basis for evidence of
                            sovereignty as he sees fit. However, only the most enduring doctrine
                            will produce sufficient fire in the minds of men to cause them to fight
                            for these rights amid increasing democratic tyranny.
                        
 FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS:
                        
 You will note that I have not used the traditional words "inalienable
                            rights." The reason is simple. The founders used the word (incorrectly,
                            I believe) to mean that government could not rightfully violate those
                            rights. But the word "inalienable" comes from a flawed religious doctrine that implies that man cannot give away or alienate from himself anything given from God---such as rights. This, however,
                            is not true, as applied to fundamental rights. A person CAN give up
                            these rights, as long as it is done under the terms of voluntarily contract.
                        
 One may enter into a contract, for example, to put himself into a
                            non-free condition. This does not constitute slavery when it is done
                            voluntarily, although the results may appear similar. We do it, to a
                            degree, every time we sign a mortgage where we place our income and
                            our property in jeopardy for a specific time. Or, as in a prepaid contract
                            for performance, (where one accepts a large sum of money advance of
                            performance), one would be obligating himself to serve the other party
                            till the contractual obligation is complete. This is a type of temporary
                            bondage we enter into voluntarily because we receive mutual benefits.
                            These other benefits compensate for our temporary lack of freedom. In
                            other words, we choose to temporarily trade some of our freedom of action
                            in order to gain other benefits. Whether such exchanges for "rights"
                            for benefits are done wisely is another question, but the freedom to
                            do so is clear.
                        
 The key to understanding what constitutes a true fundamental right
                            is to focus on this essential criteria:  for a right to be true, it must be non-conflicting with all others simultaneously claiming such right, and must not require that anyone else serve your needs in exercising that right.
                        
 FALSE RIGHTS: There are many false rights being promulgated
                            in today's society, mostly due to the politician's attempt to entice
                            voters to view benefits as if they were rights. Three of the most popular
                            are the so-called "right" to a job, "right" to medical
                            care or the "right" to an education. Let us apply these claims
                            to the definition of a true fundamental right and see if they qualify.
                            Remember that the main criteria that determines whether or not an action
                            or state of being is protected as a right is whether or
                            not all men can simultaneously possess the "right"
                            in question without compelling anyone to perform a service in their
                                behalf.
                        
 In the case of education, we cannot all receive an education without
                            compelling someone to teach, provide the facilities, the curriculum
                            and the books. Thus education, through others' efforts, must be a benefit
                            based upon contractual mutual obligations, and not a right--no matter
                            how essential it is deemed by the users thereof. On the other hand,
                            self-education would be a right as long as no one was compelled to assist
                            you involuntarily.
                        
 As to the "right" to a job, we may ask, in like manner,
                            if all people can claim a right to a job without compelling someone
                            to provide that job and the money for a salary. Obviously not. In reality,
                            a job is the exclusive property of the employer who owns the money and
                            the facilities. The labor portion of the job is the exclusive property
                            of the laborer. The negotiations as to the rate of exchange for the
                            owner's money and the laborer's efforts must be left to the arena of
                            free contract. Neither has a "right" to attach the others'
                            property or effort--each can only voluntarily exchange what he owns
                            for what he perceives the other offers in return.
                        
 Medical care can never be a fundamental right, either, as it would
                            clearly force doctors, nurses and hospital owners to become slaves to
                            those who demand the benefit. You may think they are not slaves because
                            they are being highly paid. But if you, the patients, are not paying,
                            then someone else is, and that person (even if a group of taxpayers)
                            are partially enslaved for the beneficiary's sake. Someone is always
                            partially enslaved whenever the direct beneficiary of any service doesn't
                            have to pay, and someone else or some group is not voluntarily paying
                            the bill.
                        
 A more complete analysis of all the fundamental rights of man are
                            given in the next section
                        
 THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS OF MAN:
                        
 FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT #1: LIFE
                        
 The RIGHT TO LIFE itself from conception to natural death
                                except as a consequence for a crime against the rights of others.
                        
 This most basic of all rights, the RIGHT TO LIFE, is defined as broadly
                            as possible in order to preserve innocent life from external attack.
                            After much contemplation, I believe that life should be protected FROM
                            CONCEPTION since there is, at the very least, a unique life IN THE FORMATION
                            PROCESS. While others would attempt to deny any "right to life"
                            to the fetus because of lack of full and positive scientific proof of
                            "independent life", it is my belief that where there is doubt,
                            or where error is probable, relative to life, we ought to ERR IN DEFERENCE
                            TO LIFE, not against it.
                        
 Some also dwell on the fact that there is doubt as to when the fetus
                            becomes independent life from the mother. But even a new born baby is
                            not fully independent to sustain life. It would seem more appropriate
                            to base one's protection of life from conception based upon the fact
                            that unique life, a separate and distinct entity from the mother and
                            father, is IN THE FORMATION PROCESS. It is not particularly relevant
                            whether it is independent yet of the mother or not.
                        
 ABORTION: Let's consider the case of abortion carefully. As
                            in all the most difficult cases of law, we are faced with an apparent
                            conflict of rights here, between the mother and the child. But upon
                            close analysis, there is no such conflict, for each party to the conflict
                            is exercising rights during different time frames. First, both mother
                            and father, under voluntary circumstances, have already exercised their
                            right when they chose to engage in marital relations--which was previous
                            to the new child's existence. Like all other rights involving positive
                            acts, freedom may, and usually does, become linked to consequences
                            which the acting parties are bound to accept as part of the responsibility
                            for those actions as they affect others. This is always true where an
                            innocent third party is directly affected by such an act. In this case,
                            because a child has been engendered, the parents are both obligated
                            (not just the mother) to the engendered child in nurturing him or her
                            to the point of self-sufficiency.
                        
 Since the child is the innocent affected party, being engendered by
                            the acts of others, his right to preservation must be held superior
                            to any desires of the parent or parents to terminate the pregnancy,
                            especially for reasons of mere personal convenience. There is no right
                            to terminate the pregnancy any more than there is a right to terminate
                            any other voluntary contract or involuntary consequence of a responsible
                            act which affects an innocent third party. Therefore, there is no "right"
                            to an abortion of convenience, though there may exist some circumstances
                            where the prosecution of this violation of the right to life can be
                            distinguishable both in seriousness and intent from murder.
                        
 There are certain instances where there IS a legitimate conflict between
                            the rights of the mother and those of the fetus. In the rare case
                            where the life of the mother is clearly in danger due to the pregnancy,
                            the mother, having a fully developed existence in life already, should
                            be accorded the superior standing.
                        
 The cases involving rape, involuntary incest or other violations of
                            rights of the mother, which results in pregnancy, are not so clear.
                            What is clear is that where there is no attributable responsibility
                            for the pregnancy to the mother, she cannot be forced to bear
                            the consequences. Put another way, the fetus is a direct result
                            of a crime, though not a knowing participant in the criminal act. The
                            fetus is still as innocent as the violated woman and thus does not necessarily
                            deserve to lose its standing to the right to life. Here then is a clear
                            conflict of simultaneous rights. But the resolution of the problem
                                is not so conflicting. In most cases the fetus is acting upon the
                            mother in a manner which is only inconvenient and laborious, and yet
                            on the other hand, an abortion against the fetus would be FATAL. The
                            fact that she has previously been wronged does not necessarily justify
                            the killing of the fetus, especially when the mother is not facing a
                            commensurate conflict to her right to life.
                        
 Most arguments surrounding this issue stem from desires to be rid
                            of any remembrances of the evil act. Though I do not want to denigrate
                            the reality of such emotional pain, I believe it is resolvable in almost
                            all cases without abortion. While I would clearly favor the bearing
                            of the child, with the option of placing the baby in an adoptive home,
                            I would not favor the prosecution of a mother who chose not to bear
                            the child in this case. Because there are such closely conflicting rights,
                            it ought to be left as a matter of conscience, leaving the final judgment
                            to God. This is an example of an area of legitimate difference between
                            people who still agree on these basic principles.
                        
 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: As to other ramifications of this right
                            to life, this right may be placed in jeopardy when a person is engaged
                            in violating another's rights. The second part of the statement stipulates
                            the essential condition upon which one may lose his life involuntarily.
                            The right of self-defense can sometimes justifiably end another's life
                            or a capital crime may be punishable by death after prosecution by the
                            due process of legitimate authority, as determined by constitutional
                            law.
                        
 This first fundamental right does not preclude the use of capital
                            punishment. All of the fundamental rights of man are only valid insofar
                            as one is not acting to violate another's right. Since one clearly has
                            the right to defend oneself to whatever degree necessary to eliminate
                            the threat, the possibility of death being meted out as the consequence
                            for aggression is also clear. One cannot claim all of his fundamental
                            rights while in the process of destroying another's rights. That is
                            why treason is usually a capital crime when acting to destroy a government
                            which is legitimately defending fundamental rights. Revolution against
                                a tyrannical government, however, is not treasonous.
                        
 The larger question in capital cases surfaces when the aggressor is
                            caught after the fact, and he is no longer in the act of aggression.
                            Death can and should be applied insofar as the criminal is still a threat
                            to the right to life of others. It is clearly the most complete deterrent
                            to this person acting again to violate another's life. Surety
                            about a criminal's future disposition to do evil is difficult to determine
                            except by multiple, competent witnesses to such threats. However, a
                            fairly clear predisposition to criminality is demonstrated by the occurrence
                            of a second offense. Imprisonment should only be used for criminals
                            with clear remedial potential and should be self supporting by the labor
                            of the inmates so as not to act as a violation of the property rights
                            of law abiding citizens.
                        
 There are certain COROLLARY RIGHTS TO LIFE that are
                            related to man's innate characteristics surrounding life: the ability
                            to think, believe, and reason--all in some ways distinguishable from
                            rudimentary life itself. Every person has a right to his own mind, to
                            believe, reason and think as he wishes. Only his actions based upon
                            those thoughts can bring him into conflict with others, and make him
                            subject to consequences. In reality it is nearly impossible to deprive
                            a person of his beliefs, or his thoughts. Therefore, one may ask, why
                            state them as rights if they can't be violated?
                        
 The answer is found mainly in the grave dangers associated with new
                            developments of mind control. The use of mind altering drugs and electronic
                            manipulation of certain physical and emotional characteristics of the
                            body are becoming more prevalent in totalitarian societies. Such physical
                            threats, or other involuntary bombardments or harassment of the mind
                            are a violation of the following corollary rights to life. However,
                            the use of psychological devices to induce a response to advertising
                            is not a violation since it is not involuntary. If you choose to watch
                            television programming and its advertising, you shouldn't complain if
                            you are affected by them. Open public advertisements, especially on
                            public highway systems does not qualify as strictly voluntary and can
                            be regulated, since one cannot easily avoid looking at it.
                        
 COROLLARY RIGHTS:
                        
 A. The right of free THOUGHT and JUDGMENT on the
                                individual worth of ideas, people and things.
                        
 The very essence of freedom is the ability of men to make judgments
                            concerning the relative merits of the ideas, people and things we encounter
                            in life. Man is not completely self-sufficient and is therefore constantly
                            searching for favorable items to enhance and provide for life. Despite
                            our reluctance to accept the judgmental nature of our minds, we do,
                            in fact, make thousands of judgments automatically each day. Our minds
                            classify everything we see, hear, and feel about people, ideas and things,
                            within seconds of input, without much conscious effort. Because there
                            is a natural tendency from insecure elements of society to demonstrate
                            hostility toward this freedom of judgment, it must be duly protected
                            by law. Let me take a few moments to explain the nature of this hostility,
                            that is rooted in socialist thought:
                        
 EGALITARIAN HOSTILITY TO PERSONAL JUDGMENT:
                        
 It is essential to your understanding of the threat to freedom to
                            realize how socialism is made appealing to the majority. It all centers
                            around the concept of judgment, and how the socialist breeds envy against
                            those that have achieved high results. That inequality exists is undeniable.
                            It will always exist because no two people are or ever will be exactly
                            alike. Whether such inequality came about by just or unjust means is
                            the only proper question.
                        
 The underlying assumption of socialism is egalitarianism--that all
                            men are equal, and since we do not now have equal results it must have
                            been due to exploitation. Let us analyze this proposition against the
                            concept of RELATIVE INDIVIDUAL WORTH.
                        
 Every individual is unique, possessing different capabilities and
                            personal characteristics that vary from time to time according to the
                            correctness of one's thoughts, desires and actions. The sum total of
                            all these characteristics and skills determines our TOTAL TRUE WORTH.
                            The concept of truth worth is powerful. It brings to mind immediately
                            questions of "what am I really worth, as a person." Each person
                            has a fairly good idea, at any given moment, what his true worth is
                            relative to two things: how he compares himself to others and how he
                            compares to what he thinks he SHOULD be. Each person is in a constant
                            struggle to get others to recognize his worth AT LEAST AS HIGH as he
                            esteems himself. Note that very few people protest being esteemed higher
                            than how they perceive their own true worth.
                        
 If you doubt that people possess such a concept of total true worth,
                            try treating someone who you esteem highly as if he were of little worth.
                            His negative reaction to such treatment should be enough to convince
                            you.
                        
 One's total true worth is really a composite of numerous specific
                            worths in different talents and skills plus a vital factor reflecting
                            one's general moral character. In other words, people may possess high
                            worth in numerous skills and yet be so offensive in personal character
                            that hardly anyone will accord them high TOTAL worth.
                        
 Not all people are honest enough to accept their low true worth as
                            a reflection of their own failures or weaknesses. Rationalization and
                            excusing of one's weaknesses, or blaming them on childhood abuse or
                            environmental influence are common everywhere. There are legitimate
                            ways to improve one's worth, but most people are enticed into the new
                            and popular social doctrines proclaiming that "I'm OK and You're
                            OK"--everyone accept us as we are. This is like a mutual compact
                            of blindness where everybody sees, but pretends not to see, or at least,
                            not to tell. It is only a game for fools and manipulators who make money
                            by telling people what they want to hear.
                        
 The more people become intimidated into playing like they never judge
                            another's worth (which is impossible) the more people feel they have
                            a "right" not to be judged. This is dangerous. People stop
                            changing and improving. People begin playing games with reality, trying
                            to alter people's perception of true worth instead of working to improve.
                            One of the most common games is where people try to cover up their low
                            worth in one area of character by promoting and emphasizing some other
                            more narrow, but successful skill or worth they possess. For example,
                            some high ranking military or government officers with low character
                            have found great difficulty in maintaining any respect after retirement,
                            when their rank is no longer visible. They fail to realize that their
                            previous honors may only have been an illusion based upon respect for
                            the rank--not the person. These are the type that in desperation to
                            hold onto their former prestige get very offended, even after retirement,
                            if you do not address them by their former rank. They may keep symbols
                            and titles on their mailbox, on their cars, and on every wall of the
                            house just to ensure that the illusion of honor is maintained.
                        
 People with low or partially low true worth, who fear the consequences
                            of others' free judgment (concerning them), are the first to embrace
                            the doctrine of egalitarian socialism. The doctrine of egalitarianism
                            has been growing across academic and religious circles for many years.
                            As mentioned before, the egalitarian proclaims that "all men are
                            created equal" and that any inequality of men is due to exploitation
                            and prejudice. The concept that all men were "created equal"
                            or that they will ever be absolutely equal is patently false. Not even
                            the egalitarian academics believe it, having presumed that they are
                            wise enough to set themselves up above others as world planners. Jefferson
                            didn't even believe that when he wrote it in the Declaration of Independence.
                            He took George Mason's phrase "all men are created equally free
                            and independent" and shortened it, perhaps assuming that everyone
                            would know he was referring to equal freedom before the law and God,
                            rather than absolute equality. But poor public education (which Jefferson
                            promoted) quickly ensured that these essential assumptions were lost
                            from public consciousness
                        
 Egalitarianism possesses a high degree of hostility to personal judgments
                            of others. It has even obtained a large foothold within the Christian
                            community out of a false understanding of Matthew, Chapter 7, verse
                            1: "Judge not that ye be not judged." But is it clear from
                            the wording alone that it is not a blanket prohibition against judgment,
                            which is mentally impossible, but rather a severe caution against IMPROPER
                            judgment. In the ultimate sense the correct interpretation must be construed
                            even more narrowly, since it is obvious that even if a man judged unrighteously,
                            God would not stoop to return unrighteous judgment upon him. I believe
                            the word judgment here refers to ultimate CONDEMNATION of the soul of
                            man, which must be left to God. In other words, he that condemns totally,
                            and unjustly, shall also be condemned.
                        
 But all of this points to a major feature relating to freedom of judgment:
                            just as in the free market of economics, we demand our right to judge
                            the value of a product and offer value accordingly, so there is an identical
                            free market in the judgment of other people and their relative worth.
                            That is what you do when you judge the relative worth of another's service
                            potential. Services are the reflection of our desire to work together
                            in the sharing of specialized skills--as a way of improving our leverage
                            over the insecurities of life. The fact that specialization exists as
                            a natural outgrowth of free labor is prima facia evidence of the innate
                            inequality of man. In reality, it is a blessing, not a curse, due to
                            the wide variety of labor tasks needed in the world.
                        
 When you are bidding for labor or a service, you are actually bidding
                            for at least a portion of that person. You are making a judgment mostly
                            pertaining to his specific worth related to the service, but his total
                                true worth can also play a large role. Many an employer has selected
                            a man of lower specific skill as a welder, for example, because he manifests
                            a good personality, is honest and appears to have a stable personal
                            family life. While others may protest vigorously that their personal
                            life has nothing to do with their welding skill, the employer would
                            disagree, as is his right. He doesn't want the hassle of hiring people
                            every month or so. The more stable the lifestyle of a person, the more
                            cost efficient is his investment in the laborer. Simply because the
                            employer may not be able to legally define what he views as "a
                            stable lifestyle" does not detract from the reality that he can
                            recognize things that he believes, even subconsciously, are representative
                            of stability. That brings us to class judgments.
                        
 
                        
 CLASS JUDGMENTS:
                        
 A person's mind, as part of its self-protective function, classifies
                            certain characteristics he views in others as good or bad, safe or dangerous,
                            etc. We place people who share common characteristics with others into
                            generalized groups, or classes, to facilitate quick recognition of those
                            same traits if they should appear again in someone else. This is what
                            constitutes a "class judgment." Everyone makes them, even
                            those who try their best not to consciously recognize that fact.
                        
 Class judgments are not necessarily evil. They can be either good,
                            bad or in between, depending on the accuracy of the person making the
                            judgment. Being open minded or non-prejudicial is not fooling oneself
                            into thinking he doesn't make class judgments, but in consciously being
                            open to new input, and constantly "cross checking" with other
                            input to either confirm or revise one's opinions. A fair minded person
                            always recognizes that no matter how consistent certain classes of people
                            seem to be, there are always exceptions, inducing him to keep an open
                            mind.
                        
 Personnel managers and employers use highly sophisticated class judgments
                            constantly to enhance their ability to select new employees. When a
                            certain manner or way of dress shows a history of instability, a competent
                            personnel manager consciously or subconsciously begins to avoid selecting
                            those types for interviews. While some may protest that he is forming
                            prejudices, let us remember that his time to interview and make decisions
                            is limited. When an employer is prohibited from making class judgments,
                            such as requesting a certain class of people from an employment agency,
                            he is robbed of his time, which is money, which is property; the ownership
                            of which is a fundamental right. He is then forced to interview many
                            more people than he normally would if he were free to pre-select generalized
                            classes of applicants that, by experience, promise a higher rate of
                            success.
                        
 THE RIGHT TO MAKE PRIVATE DISCRIMINATIONS: The benefits of
                            making class judgment are clear to the person who is busy and far outweigh
                            the mistakes that occur in closed-minded people. But no one has a right
                            to demand that he or she be judged according to any certain standard--this
                            is always a matter of conversion and negotiation. You have to convince
                            others of your worth. Even though some won't give you the time to do
                            so, you do not own his time and cannot force anyone to give you an interview--no
                            matter how "unfair" you think it is. You can always go elsewhere
                            and usually find someone who is willing to recognize your true worth.
                            Remember that people of really high worth are rare and high worth employers
                            are always on the look out for them. The trouble comes when a person
                            may have high general character worth, but he is seeking a common job
                            where there is a lot of equally qualified competition. It is easy to
                            get lost in a big sea, no matter how valuable you may be. So upgrade
                            your skills and find a smaller niche.
                        
 There is a reason why anti-discrimination laws are damaging to minorities
                            in the long term. The more government tries to force employers to hire
                            minorities, the more strongly employers are convinced minorities are
                            an undesirable class of employees. Even if government prohibits the
                            free exercise of judgment, it can never stop people from making those
                            judgments in their mind. When government tries to enforce equality of
                            results in the name of "opportunity", freedom of choice is
                            quickly replaced by reverse discrimination.
                        
 Unfortunately, the more the judgment process is driven underground,
                            the more mistakes people make in those judgments. Eventually both employers
                            and minorities are harmed as business suffers from bad employment decisions
                            and other employees become hostile to the reverse discrimination, widely
                            mandated by liberal courts.
                        
 Laws which deny to a person the right to act upon his class judgments,
                            especially concerning race, and gender have wide acceptance. But whether
                            or not you agree or disagree that a person can come to some rational,
                            general distinctions about people relative to race, religion, or sex,
                            is irrelevant. The essential point relative to freedom is whether or
                            not it is proper for government to restrict private judgments
                            in this or any other area where no rights are violated. Once we allow
                            government, by law, to attack some judgments, there is no way
                            to protect any other class judgment from attack.
                        
 When government has the arbitrary power (and it is ARBITRARY) to select
                            which class judgments are evil and which are acceptable, there is absolutely
                            nothing to prohibit politicians from expanding that list to protect
                            fat people, crazy people, aids infected homosexuals or Marxists from
                            private class judgments. Note that while the principles of liberty allow
                            people the freedom to engage in private, voluntary evil practices, it
                            also protects the right of others to judge them as evil, even
                            for their private acts, and to exclude them from employment or association.
                            Neither does the public sector have to accept all forms of conduct.
                            Like any other association, it can set down guidelines and rules of
                            conduct based upon the limits of the originating by-laws agreed to by
                            the majority of citizens. Nobody has a "right" to a government
                            job any more than a private one.
                        
 The favorite target for the prohibition of our right to make discriminatory
                            class judgments involves labor. Labor unions, feminists, homosexuals,
                            and every other purveyor of false minority rights has been in a desperate
                            struggle to use the power of government to make it illegal, first to
                            judge by classes (but only their class) in the selection of labor
                            for jobs. Jobs are first improperly defined as a right, which
                            they are not. Next, they assert that no one can be denied a "right"
                            because of race, color or creed. But that is a non-sequitor. A true
                            right cannot be abridged for anyone--whether by race or any other reason,
                            except aggression against the rights of others. But the real point is
                            that a job, as previously explained, is NOT a right of the worker. It
                            belongs to the EMPLOYER as an extension of his property rights. The
                            only right the laborer has is to offer or withhold his labor--which
                            he can do regardless of his race, color or creed.
                        
 Thus, while it is almost impossible, short of damaging or drugging
                            the mind, to stop a person from making judgments, man has sought, by
                            use of improper law to stop the exercise of free judgment. When the
                            exercise of free judgment, even when discriminatory, is prohibited,
                            the essence of free thought is lost as well. In the final analysis,
                            the prohibition of the exercise of free judgment is generally a violation
                            of the following rights involving freedom of action.
                        
 FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT #2: LIBERTY
                        
 To ACT without external or prior restraint when those actions
                                    are not in direct and harmful conflict with the rights of others. 
                        
 This is the basic law of freedom--the right to do anything in the
                            pursuit of "life, liberty, and happiness", including that
                            which others may think dangerous, or harmful to SELF, as long as others'
                            fundamental rights are not infringed in the process.
                        
 I want to make it perfectly clear that I do not condone or approve
                            of the evil actions that some persons perform with their freedom to
                            act, but we must clearly defend their freedom to fail, to make wrong
                            or even evil choices, so long as others are not compelled to participate.
                            The price of freedom is that we must allow people the liberty, within
                            these bounds, to make poor judgments.
                        
 Incidentally, the foregoing explains why freedom is not a utopian
                            system except when the average true worth of the citizens of such a
                            society is high. Why? Freedom is the NON-SYSTEM which, by individual
                            negotiations for worth, allocates (over time) to each product,
                            service, person or idea the results most correctly correlated to
                                its actual true worth.
                        
 What is the self-regulating nature of this negotiation for worth?
                            The fact that nobody minds getting rated higher than how he perceives
                            worth, but that he will vigorously protest when rated lower. In the
                            absence of legalized coercion by private or government sources, each
                            person acting as the guardian of his own worth tends to force all values
                            to eventually move toward their actual worth. All deviations from true
                            worth are temporary and will adjust towards reality over time.
                        
 Let me emphasize again, if the man of high worth cannot convince a
                            prospective employer of that worth, or cannot get a fair hearing, he
                            searches for another who will. If he runs out of time or money and cannot
                            afford to wait, he may accept a low paying job temporarily, but he will
                            be inwardly searching for more reward for his worth. All of this leads
                            to higher supply and demand of things and people of value in society--leading
                            to higher efficiency and prosperity to all. Any other forced system
                            of restricted free judgment leads to lower supply of both competency
                            and quality of people and products, with a commensurate higher price
                            for diminishing quality.
                        
 The result is that when people's true worth, as a whole, is high (which
                            includes an assessment of their character) freedom produces magnificent
                            results. Where low true worth is predominant, either generally, or in
                            major classes of persons, freedom will produce justifiable class differences
                            at best, and justifiable failure at worst--in either case, freedom allocates
                            the highest degree of justice according to real worth.
                        
 That is why freedom ultimately only works well with good, moral people.
                            That statement is not a license to demand that we enforce righteousness
                            upon everyone, but it is a warning of ultimate consequences for a nation
                            that disregards divine promptings and warnings that come to all through
                            conscience.
                        
 The key to the success of liberty, given these human liabilities,
                            is not in surrounding men with regulatory edicts which subject all actions
                            and desires to prior restraint and control of others, but in the vigorous
                            prosecution (just consequences for their actions) when they cross that
                            delicate line between voluntary, self-degenerate practices and harmful
                            consequences to others. And I think the punishments ought to be very
                            severe for harm done under the influence of drugs or alcohol--especially
                            for second offenses.
                        
 Additionally, I do not wish to concentrate on the adverse consequences
                            of freedom except to point out that one must be willing to accept a
                            fair amount of "victimless" consequences of man's poor judgment
                            in order to preserve the freedom of those who exercise good judgment.
                            Private drunkards will fail to care for their families properly and
                            children will suffer. But governments must be limited in their ability
                            to intrude, except in cases of verifiable abuse. To do otherwise, that
                            is, to give GOVERNMENT the power to decide what is good exercise of
                            freedom and what is not--in the absence of visible and harmful damage
                            to others--is to court totalitarian control. One of the most pervasive
                            evils of our day is the government notion that it has the right to protect
                            us from ourselves, even when no victims are caused. I will cover this
                            in more detail under the right to self-responsibility.
                        
 VIOLATIONS OF GOD'S LAWS: Some Christians have mistakenly tried
                            to make the point that there are no victimless crimes, and that we therefore
                            ought to have government control of self-debasing acts between consenting
                            adults. Certainly God commands that people abstain from these immoral
                            acts--why shouldn't government? While it is probably true that personal
                            corruption eventually affects others, especially the family, the law
                            can only "see" what is tangibly visible and distinguishable
                            from proper acts. When we allow law to enter the domain of judgment
                            over voluntary acts (that do not violate the right of any other) , there
                            is NO WAY TO DISTINGUISH (in law) those acts from other voluntary
                            acts without giving government the dangerous and arbitrary powers of
                            specifying which are "approved" or "disapproved"
                            actions. That kind of power can work against good morals as well--especially
                            when immoral people become a majority, or at least rise to positions
                            of power.
                        
 I wish to again emphasize the extreme danger here: In order to vest
                            in a ruling body the POWER to declare certain voluntary acts illegal
                            when no victim is clearly distinguishable, when no direct harm or
                                damage (to fundamental rights) is claimed by any individual, one
                            has to allow that ruling body, presumably elected by the majority of
                            citizens, the power to JUDGE ALL VALUES, and to attack those
                            out of favor with "public policy" edicts. Christians, who
                            are the most frequent champions of such government power, should realize
                            that vesting such a power in the majority allows for the possibility
                            that other persons opposing Christian moral values may someday gain
                            the majority and use that same power to declare Christian values
                            illegal or against "public policy." That may happen sooner
                            than we think.
                        
 Before you dismiss this presumption out of hand, think carefully whether
                            we, even today, possess such a majority. I personally don't believe
                            we have such a majority. Even if we did,
                        
 we should never take upon ourselves majority rule powers which
                                we would be unwilling to allow others to equally exercise, should they
                                become the majority. 
                        
 This way all are protected. Most active Christians have become concerned
                            because Christian values and prayers have been outlawed from public
                            schools. But they forget, that the real evil is that these are not "our"
                            schools--they are government schools, which take everyone's tax money
                            (which is wrong) and thus any values promulgated will always be at the
                            expense of others left out or undermined. The solution is not for one
                            majority to force their values upon anyone else, but to let each faction
                            support the kind of schooling values they want. Let all schools, public
                            and private be funded only by user fees--then everyone is free to pay
                            for the education values they want. Then no one can complain that his
                            personal values are not represented by his own money. As you can see,
                            law can be either good or evil. It has no virtue in and of itself. Let
                            us wisely consider and limit its potential use by evil men.
                        
 The Bob Jones University controversy is a case in point--a perfect
                            example of how the government is beginning to declare certain religious
                            tenets in violation of the beliefs of the majority. The US Government
                            specifically singled Bob Jones out for attack because it had a policy
                            which the government believed would not find wide support from other
                            churches and schools. Each student attending the university signed a
                            contract agreeing that they would not participate in interracial dating
                            as a condition of their attendance. Whether you agree with the religious
                            tenets such agreements were based upon is irrelevant. What is relevant
                            is that this was an example of a miniature covenant society which chose,
                            by UNANIMOUS CONSENT, to enforce a different standard of conduct than
                            the world around them. There was no harm to any person, not even to
                            the minorities that attended. No minority brought suit against the school
                            since they were all there by prior agreement with the policy. Those
                            that didn't like the policy simply went elsewhere for an education.
                            They recognized no "right" to be educated at Bob Jones. The
                            US Treasury Department (IRS) attacked its tax exempt status, claiming
                            its racial policies were a violation of national "public policy."
                            Most other Christian faiths were wise enough to support Bob Jones, knowing
                            that if the government won its case, "public policy" hostility
                            could easily spread to encompass "fundamentalist" Christians,
                            then mainline Christians, and traditional Jews. The government won its
                            case, and now the evil precedent is strengthened...ready to strike again
                            at the next denomination that opposes the "public will."
                        
 USING STRONG DETERRENTS FOR EVIL BEHAVIOR: How, then, does
                            a society of partially righteous people protect themselves from the
                            slow and pervasive evils of consenting immoral acts? Part of the answer
                            is to allow consenting evils, but to vigorous prosecute the participants
                            when they cross that line where they begin to visibly and harmfully
                            affect others. This involves the use of harsh punishments as
                            a deterrent. Since people realize that their faculties are slowed and
                            impaired by the use of alcohol and marijuana, and that the risk is high
                            of making mistakes that could injure others while under the influence,
                            these persons would be most reluctant to use those substances, in the
                            presence of heavy potential penalties. I'm not referring to the token
                            slap on the wrist such as drunk drivers presently receive. I would support
                            very serious consequences, such as treble damages for property damage,
                            and loss of driving privileges as long as the victim was permanently
                            impaired--which could be for life! I would even evoke the death penalty
                            for multiple offenders involving the death of another. This would act
                            as a much more effective deterrent to the harmful results of consenting
                            evil actions than the present costly and ineffective prohibition on
                            sales.
                        
 PRIOR RESTRAINT. I am opposed to giving prohibition powers
                            of prior restraint to the untrustworthy and amoral state. Prior restraint
                            is only appropriate when IMMINENT threat to life or property is present.
                            Under this doctrine, a driver of a vehicle could still be stopped and
                            arrested for driving "under the influence" of either alcohol
                            or drugs, since his lack of coherence constitutes an imminent threat
                            to life and property. Imminent means it could happen at any time--a
                            clear and present danger.
                        
 MORAL LEADERSHIP ENCOURAGED; Another part of the answer comes
                            from understanding the proper role of leaders in a principled, constitutional
                            system. In brief, while government is prohibited from enjoining voluntary
                            acts, good or evil, leaders are not prohibition from leading and guiding
                            their constituency away from evil. There is no principle of good government
                            that mandates that government leaders cannot pray in public, sermonize,
                            or in any other way lead--as long as no coercion or public tax funds
                            are used to directly subsidize such beliefs (other than the leader's
                            own salary). Leaders are hired to lead (within the bounds of constitutional
                            limits)--not to poll the constituents on each issue. If the people don't
                            like that brand of leadership, they vote for someone else or use the
                            impeachment process for removal in the case of severe violations of
                            law or abuse of power. But while in office, the leader must be free
                            to speak his will. Only a leader's actions on behalf of government power
                            are limited.
                        
 COVENANT SOCIETIES: The most effective answer to the question
                            of isolating consenting evils comes from the establishment of COVENANT
                            SOCIETIES. This document of principles provides for the establishment
                            of mini-sovereign states, called "covenant societies" which
                            effectively allows for people of strict and uniform beliefs to join
                            together, by prior unanimous agreement, in the enforcement of higher
                                laws than the national government could enforce--consenting moral
                            views, if you will.
                        
 This then, is the proper way for the various religious denominations
                            to have the high moral societies they wish, and it does not require
                            that others be coerced to believe and live as we may wish. The reason
                            these covenant societies are justified in legislating personal morals
                            is that such societies are formed by initial UNANIMOUS consent. Since
                            ALL agree to abide by the higher moral restrictions, and the associated
                            penalties, they can be rightfully enforced. The right to form covenant
                            societies is merely an extension of the right to contract.
                        
 However, by the nature of the diversity of people and belief
                            on the NATIONAL level, the initial unanimous citizen compact of the
                            nation (the Constitution) must be broad enough to encompass all non-coercive
                            beliefs, allowing competition and freedom to determine which values
                            will prosper. That is why these principles do not attempt to define
                            any particular faith or statement of belief, other than to provide a
                            non-coercive, platform of universal laws and rights which allows for
                            all men to pursue religious freedom. This is the same standard the founders
                            of the US Constitution followed. While most were devoutly religious,
                            they did not see the need to force God down the throat of non believers.
                            So, while God is not mentioned in the Constitution, they still attempted
                            to give the people the Godly form of the universal law of liberty.
                        
 This way all good men possessing diverse beliefs can unanimously agree
                            and rely upon these principles for a peaceful existence, each having
                            the level of protection from evil that he desires, and all being protected
                            from compulsion and aggression by others, both foreign and domestic.
                        
 FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT #3: OWNERSHIP
                        
  TO OWN, DISPOSE OF, AND CONTROL ALL PROPERTY AND ASSETS
                                WHICH ARE EARNED BY THE HONEST FULFILLMENT OF VOLUNTARY CONTRACTS, RECEIVED
                                AS A GIFT, INHERITED, OR EARNED IN PROPORTION TO THE APPLICATION OF
                                ONE'S LABOR TO UNOWNED PROPERTY.
                        
 The above stated right is generally regarded in the classical sense
                            as the right of PROPERTY. I have chosen to designate it with the term
                            ownership since property in the modern sense usually connotes land,
                            which is an essential but only partial form of ownership.
                        
 It is of some interest that, in man, there is only a partial hostility
                            toward ownership. The basic nature of man manifests a tendency to want
                            to keep the product of his labor. Our labor in this insecure world is
                            sufficiently laborious to preclude any casual disregard for work. It
                            is therefore only natural that man does not wish to labor in vain. The
                            concept of wanting to retain the value of the product of labor seems
                            to be innate with man as long as the effort is difficult. In fact, the
                            larger the price in effort and risk, the more dear becomes one's sense
                            of ownership.
                        
 So everyone loves the concept of ownership--for himself. It is YOUR
                            ownership that is up for grabs--at least among unenlightened men. Men
                            and women who have become wise in an understanding of the "golden
                            rule" do not seem to manifest this type of selfish resentment.
                            They understand that hostility toward another's ownership will ultimately
                            undermine their own. Once again, let's take a closer look at why socialism
                            is hostile to ownership.
                        
 SOCIALISM AND OWNERSHIP:
                        
 The politics of envy as practiced in every dispensation of time (by
                            collectivist intellectuals) is to accentuate the inequality of ownership
                            of man; obscure the relationship between ownership, effort and true
                            worth; and hype the rhetoric of exploitation. For the socialists, there
                            are always sufficient examples in the free world of legal, but amoral,
                            exploitation to fuel the fires of class resentment (although the most
                            notable examples usually occur under government protected monopolies
                            or in the presence of other official intervention inhibiting the expansion
                            mechanism of the free market--such as early feudalism).
                        
 Socialism gains most of its adherents with the initial attraction
                            and claim that it provides a "more just" distribution of the
                            products of "society"--albeit by coercion rather than by voluntary
                            mechanisms. Upon close inspection however, it can be shown that socialism
                            is always a violator of justice, when viewed in the context of
                            universal and fundamental rights.
                        
 The illusion whereby socialism successfully blames freedom for all
                            the ills of society works like this: In the exercise of economic freedoms,
                            man is often tempted to be lazy, speculate, gamble, and/or extend himself
                            beyond his real capabilities. The natural consequences of such errors
                            of judgment, ignorance and greed lead to occasional economic problems,
                            often engulfing innocent investors. These problems are not cyclical,
                            as many economic texts ignorantly assert. They occur in direct proportion
                            to the enlightenment, morality, and character of the free populace.
                            This is to say that a highly experienced, enlightened and moral society,
                            working with the maximum incentives of freedom, and listening to the
                            warnings of conscience, would experience few, if any, economic reversals
                            short of nature's unpredictable intervention.
                        
 On the other hand, people UNschooled in these essential principles
                            of liberty look to the highest immediate power for relief of their problems
                            which results in controls and regulations which, in turn, distort the
                            economy. With each distortion of the natural incentives of man to work
                            and produce, some dislocation of employment and entrepreneurship occurs.
                            The economic hardship of unemployment, if sufficiently widespread, induces
                            special interest groups to call for direct government welfare compensation
                            which in turn causes further distortions in the economy as the productive
                            class is burdened with more taxes. These increased taxes, coercively
                            derived, to pay for such wealth transfers are, in essence, a violation
                            of ownership rights, and a "tax" on a producer's existence.
                            It is like an employer having to hire other people who do no work.
                        
 GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION AND DEPRESSIONS: Here is where socialism produces
                            injustices in the name of justice. Much of the original dislocation
                            and slowdown of economic growth came first from government induced but
                            false economic growth (usually through fiat money or credit expansion.)
                            Then, due either to inflationary fears or outright conspiracy to foreclose
                            on speculative property, the government cuts back on phony monetary
                            expansion and adds more regulations and controls. Depression comes and
                            the "free market" is to blame. It is, partially, for being
                            stupid enough to go along with government "easy money and credit".
                            In any case, the socialist points to every new unemployed person as
                            if he were the product of the failures of the free market, rather than
                            from the intervention of government. And, in reality, it looks like
                            that is true. Every unemployed person can look to an individual employer
                            who severed his job ties. Thus, in the act of championing the cause
                            of the "unemployed" and calling for welfare transfer payments,
                            which increases taxes (or inflation), the socialist induces greater
                            unemployment, which in turn is made to appear the failure of the free
                            market. These mechanisms are so subtle, diverse, and hidden that only
                            the most well-trained Austrian (free market) Economists can trace them
                            effectively. The common person becomes a sucker for every false economic
                            excuse thrown before him.
                        
 AFFECTS ON MARGINAL BUSINESSES: In reality, at any given time in a
                            free economy, there are thousands of marginal businesses in existence
                            at the periphery of the job market. It is upon these new, or old marginal
                            businesses that new taxes and regulations impact most. Most of these
                            new business endeavors also happen to be the prime source of new jobs.
                            But their failure to stay alive is complex, and never obviously attributable
                            to a few dollars more in taxes or a few more regulations. Government
                            deficit spending may deny him loans at reasonable interest rates. Inflation
                            may eat away at profits which he cannot tolerate amid more efficient
                            competition. Much of the time, it is simply the discouragement of all
                            the paper work necessary to stay in business, acting as an unpaid government
                            tax collector for the IRS, or being an unwilling benefit provider for
                            the unemployed, that makes good people quit or retire early.
                        
 But for whatever reason, each portion of government intervention takes
                            its toll upon growth, and provides MORE VICTIMS than BENEFICIARIES,
                            of welfare and transfer payments. The ratio of jobs destroyed to jobs
                            provided by government is always a negative relationship,
                            in the range of at least 1.2 to 1, and as high as 3 to 1 depending upon
                            the bureaucratic overload and the disincentives to production as viewed
                            by the employers.
                        
 It is in this concept of higher net victims than beneficiaries
                             that we disprove the so-called "justice" of socialism.
                            The ultimate proof that this phenomena of higher victims to beneficiaries
                            is not transitory, but an inherent propensity of socialism, is found
                            in the utter lack of historical success of any fully socialized economy
                            and the disastrous correlation between the degree of socialism in any
                            mixed economy and its economic problems. Even from the highly touted
                            pragmatic view of end results, we can also demonstrate that socialism
                            is, in fact, incapable of sustaining net production in society, and
                            that it ALWAYS degenerates into a net consuming society. There are virtually
                            no historical examples, either past or present, of fully developed socialist
                            societies that are net producers (the ability to produce net growth
                            with no further indebtedness).
                        
 There is no free market government today, and virtually all governments
                            are increasing their debt load each year. Even those partially socialized
                            nations such as the United States, Taiwan, Korea, and Hong Kong are
                            feeding upon the high net production of the remaining private section,
                            which IN SPITE OF the negative effects of socialist taxation and regulation,
                            continues to show an overall net production. But the government sector
                            in each nation continues to increase indebtedness. The demand for increased
                            benefits never diminishes voluntarily Worst of all, in all mixed-socialist
                            economies, the governments are all heading inexorably toward bankruptcy.
                            Some have been able to slow the march into debt but once heavily socialized,
                            no one has been able to reverse it. Insofar as governments continue
                            to apply more controls and government spending, rather than less, couple
                            with increased welfare, and social benefits, the resulting economic
                            deterioration is inevitable.
                        
 Only the presence of a continual flow of western capital from net
                            producing nations keeps the other socialist nations under the appearance
                            of viability. What happens when the mixed economies like the United
                            States reach the point where it becomes a net consumer and can no longer
                            bail itself out? Interestingly enough countries don't collapse economically--the
                            people (when the borders are sealed) just keep on working at a subsistence
                            level. What always happens, eventually, is war and destruction--that's
                            the irrevocable lesson of history.
                        
                        
 THE LEGAL PRETENSES OF COLLECTIVISM:
                        
 The ability of the socialist to obscure the violation of ownership
                            rights is enhanced by the use of government to do the violating. If
                            a neighbor were to come to my house and demand, at the point of a gun,
                            a monthly sum of money for his personal welfare and support, he would
                            be viewed as an extortioner and thief. When he and the majority of other
                            benefit-hungry people go to the legislature to accomplish the same thing
                            by the rule of law, suddenly we who resist such expropriation of lawful
                            ownership are viewed as criminals.
                        
 In like manner, modern governments rarely admit to open expropriation
                            of property. They simply obscure the theft by calling it taxation in
                            support of our "duty" as citizens. In reality, the official
                            view of property rights is that they are secure to the individual only
                            insofar as they do not conflict with the "public good." In
                            other words, property rights become subordinated to public needs, which
                            are INFINITE. Such public "needs" become arbitrary when "public"
                            ceases to be defined as ALL the people, and comes to be viewed as satisfaction
                            of some minority need, as if that minority represented all of us in
                            that same "potential" situation.
                        
 Here again is another fallacious case of so-called "shared rights."
                            The government claims both private and public sectors have a "compelling
                            interest" in these property rights. But the only pertinent question
                            is who has the ULTIMATE INTEREST. I don't care who has a passive interest
                            in my affairs, I only want to know who has the ULTIMATE authority if
                            there is a conflict in that interest. If the state has the ultimate
                            authority, then I possess no rights--only a PRIVILEGE granted me by
                            the government, as long as it doesn't need what I am using.
                        
 EMINENT DOMAIN: I am so concerned about the subtle and slow
                            erosion of ownership rights, that after long and careful deliberations,
                            I have concluded that legitimate ownership to property and assets must
                            be held as near to absolutely inviolate from forced confiscation as
                            possible. The concept of "eminent domain" is very dangerous,
                            and almost presupposes that government has the highest, or most "eminent"
                            claim on property. This must not be allowed. At best, the government
                            can be given very limited and specific powers of taking, but never general
                            powers of taking for the ever-expandable "public good". Now,
                            before you go into a frenzy of questions about how we could possibly
                            have such orderly roads and bridges without the power to 'TAKE' property
                            by force, albeit with compensation, let me state the basic danger.
                        
 What difference is there in FACT (not degree) between the full subordination
                            of private property to "public needs", and a little bit
                                of taking? There is none, really, except the voluntary willingness
                            of government powers to be "reasonable"--which is dangerous
                            to rely upon.
                        
 There is simply no way to distinguish, in law, the progression from
                            a little bit of "taking" for "reasonable" purposes
                            and a lot of taking of property for unreasonable purposes. As long as
                            government possesses ultimate authority to declare some taking by eminent
                            domain as "reasonable", there are no ultimate rights reserved
                            to the owners of property. It is just that simple. The 1984 Supreme
                            Court decision upholding the Hawaii statutes providing for the forced
                            transfer of private land holdings to other PRIVATE owners for the "public
                            good" is an ample demonstration of this inevitable progression
                            from selective use of "eminent domain" to total eventual confiscation.
                        
 Do not be dissuaded from the danger inherent in this situation by
                            some small, historical view that local leaders have heretofore been
                            reasonable. That isn't the point. First, the leaders legally do not
                            have to be reasonable at all, as long as they at least declare that
                            what they do is in the "best interest" of the public. Almost
                            anything can be justified by the "public interest" or "reasonable"
                            standard if the judicial system becomes packed by political "yes-men."
                            Second, even if leaders are fully accountable to the majority of citizens
                            as to their reasonableness, it is not even within the rightful purview
                            of the majority to determine what is the "reasonable" taking
                            of another's property. That is for the owner to decide either by initial
                            unanimous consent to constitutional provisions for taking or in a voluntary
                            form of contractual citizenship where they specifically cede some limited
                            property rights.
                        
 Without entering into a necessarily long treatise explaining how an
                            orderly transportation system can be derived through a system of inviolate
                            property rights, I would encourage you to consider that the development
                            of the so-called "order" in which we now live took place not
                            at any single time, in a stroke of a master planner's pen, but one decision
                            at a time, mostly by free choice, as man made a conscious attempt to
                            harmonize what went before with the future. For that matter, there is
                            still a lot of order to be worked out. Though the free market always
                            takes longer than the power of arbitrary government edicts, the results
                            are always more just.
                        
 With all that said, I am fully aware that there are not a few greedy
                            people that would see that their property is the key piece necessary
                            to finish a long highway project--perhaps one that passes through a
                            narrow canyon, where no other route is possible--who would set the price
                            astronomical high sufficient either to deny the viability of the project
                            or even worse to have their price acceded to and set off simultaneously
                            a wave of hatred all property rights, or even a contagious fever of
                            greed on the part of others hoping to do the same in the future. One
                            solution is to make some carefully controlled concessions to public
                            taking with compensation in the citizen covenant, whereby all signers
                            agree to yield property rights in exchange for market value compensation
                            for a very specific list of things (such as major transportation and
                            utility corridors, as narrowly defined as practicable, with the burden
                            of proof upon the government to demonstrate that they have selected
                            the route with the least infringement upon existing developed property).
                        
 I would never suggest any broad "public purpose" language
                            as a compromise. Property rights are simple too critical to liberty.
                            This same type of restricted taking of property with compensation could
                            be written into a constitution, but it would be a more dangerous compromise
                            since once you crack open the door of government takings, it is nearly
                            impossible to restrain it from constant erosion. Certainly, placing
                            it in a constitutional framework with stiff amendment requirements (at
                            least 2/3 majority), rather and in ordinary statutory law will help
                            hold the line.
                        
 While we, the living, have trouble looking at what exists and envisioning
                            how it could be reproduced without the coercion of property rights,
                            it can be done, with only few exceptions--where the terrain is so unique,
                            and where it leads to few or no alternative transportation and utility
                            route, or where critical water rights, are concerned. The secret of
                            resolving much of the current planning problems involving critical resources
                            is found partially in the necessity of all citizens and officials to
                            know IN ADVANCE  the strict limits of public takings of property,
                            and the full nature of compensation required. Thus all levels of government
                            are forced to plan further ahead and choose with greater foresight optimum
                            areas for critical public works and other areas for alternative development
                            when the costs or the obstacles of an ideal area are too high.
                        
 In roads for example, I would limit the power of taking to only major
                            highways. These are the only ones where fast speeds and zig-zags around
                            property holdouts would be very difficult to implement efficiently without
                            the power of taking with compensation. In the case of smaller, slower
                            roads, those who won't ever sell rarely hold up progress since there
                            are very few instances where only a single route is possible, or when
                            the road can't wait to go through later on after the person holding
                            out passes away or moves on. Even in such cases, if the cause is just,
                            do not forget the power of persuasion generated by wide public support
                            for community projects that do not involve wrongful taxing authority.
                            Nothing adds insult to eminent domain injury more than having to pay
                            through increased taxes and bonding for the taking of your own land.
                        
 WATER RIGHTS: In the delicate area of water rights, I feel it is a
                            general necessity to make water rights highly divisible and flexible
                            so as to accommodate the maximum use of critical water supplies to the
                            most users that increasing technology can apply them to. This is particularly
                            applicable to dry locations where water is a scare resource. But I feel
                            it important to restrict these public controls of water rights to the
                            very minimum required to deal with drinking and crop irrigation functions.
                        
 First, when a river crosses numerous different property boundaries,
                            the water rights of the flow at any given time should be equally distributed
                            among the properties along the entire length of the river combined with
                            some factor involving the amount of agricultural land physically connected
                            to the river, out to a specified limit. When such a rule is applied
                            uniformly and equally to all adjacent river owners, they are then free
                            to sell unused portions of their water rights to other users not directly
                            connected to the river. Distant cities would either have to own some
                            river property or negotiate with river property owners to secure water
                            from such a source.
                        
 Second, when a water source does not exit a property, except on rare
                            overflow conditions, the water rights should be not subject to any public
                            allocation. Natural lakes should also be in the full control of the
                            property owners without public say. However, man-made lakes should be
                            subject to approval of the structural elements of the dam in order to
                            protect the rights to life and property of the landholders downstream
                            of such a dam. In any case, no government body overseeing a 'public
                            safety' issue such as this should have the right to prevail in a dispute,
                            when all of the other owners downstream (whose rights would be affected
                            by a breakage) agree in writing to allow the dam above them. This is
                            based on the universal principle that people should always have the
                            right to accept agreed upon risks without government interference.
                        
 Third, fish and wildlife rights should be limited in their ability
                            to impinge upon property rights. A case can be made for the public right
                            to maintain "free passage" for fish and other aquatic wildlife
                            up and down a river or lake to which their were native. But their should
                            be no "free passage" allowed for members of the public who
                            wish to hunt or fish. This would allow excessive access of the public
                            to private property and would make it nearly impossible for an owner
                            to secure his property against unwanted intrusion. Thus the public would
                            be free to fish and hunt by contractual agreement or by the public purchase
                            of access (if done with an appropriate use fee and no general tax funds).
                            Naturally, since barriers would not be allowed to be erected that prohibited
                            fish movement (dams without fish ladders, for example), the public would
                            still have fishing privileges, though more limited than present.
                        
 WELL WATER: Well water, where it was drawn from a water table that
                            can be demonstrated to affect other well water users, would have to
                            be controlled by either a contractual association of well users or a
                            representative body of such users. It is never proper for a broad based
                            public regulatory body to regulate something that can be controlled
                            by a legal association of the property owners directly affected. I understand
                            that no one is perfectly able to determine the limits of an underlying
                            water table, but certainly there are situations where it could be determined
                            without a reasonable doubt that a certain well or well would not have
                            adverse affect beyond a certain general range. For example, a ranch
                            that occupies an entire valley with its own aquifer table should not
                            be subject to state or county well permits. For a ranch the size of
                            the King ranch in Texas (hundreds of miles square) an unlimited well
                            access would be appropriate, we may presume within 25 miles of its boundaries.
                            This would generally ensure that other adjacent owners would not be
                            adversely affected by the unlimited water use within the larger ranch's
                            core area. Border areas would be subject to regulation as to number
                            of wells and amounts pumped. The burden of proof in taking regulatory
                            control of well use should be on the agency--not on the well user to
                            prove he isn't affecting someone else.
                        
 TAKINGS BY CONTROL and REGULATION NOT ALLOWED: Note carefully the
                            completeness of the ownership statement in the statement of property
                            rights and principles. It is not enough to have title alone. One must
                            have the control of the property and the right to dispose
                            of it. Many land-use laws today have violated the value of property
                            by allowing someone to maintain title and pay the taxes but deny the
                            owner the right to build on it, farm it, mine it, or sell it. Even those
                            land-use laws that allow such uses still require prior approval, with
                            the land-use authority holding the ultimate authority. Not infrequently
                            such ultimate authority results in outright denial of use--the same
                            as if the property had been taken--only THE OWNER STILL PAYS THE TAXES.
                            Obviously, ownership is a liability under those conditions, not an asset.
                            Such actions are totally prohibited by the foregoing statement of rights
                            except where the use of property would infringe on another's right.
                            For example, burning noxious or hazardous materials on one's own property
                            could be a direct violation of another's property rights if harmful
                            fumes were to travel across property lines and cause illness or air
                            pollution. The same would apply to toxic chemical or fertilizer leakage
                            into a stream that passes through other's property or into the water
                            table.
                        
 NO SUCH THINGS AS "VISUAL RIGHTS". On the other hand, unsightly
                            visual uses of construction on property would not be a violation of
                            another's rights, since no one can possess a right to a particular view,
                            whether scenic or otherwise. The reason is simple. A view can be seen
                            by numerous separate property owners at once. Each person cannot possess
                            the same rights to that view simultaneously with the others. There is
                            no way that the law can arbitrate between differences of opinion on
                            the relative merits of a shack, for example, on someone's property.
                            A shack to one person may be another's "historical relic."
                        
 Furthermore, even if all other surrounding owners could agree on the
                            merits of a view, to be given the power to control the view, would require
                            the power to control the physical elements constituting that view--meaning
                            the private property itself. That would give every property owner control
                            rights to every other property around him, within view, which would
                            be an impossible situation of interminable conflict.
                        
 That is precisely why, in the relatively new area of law dealing with
                            protecting scenic areas, no rights are really afforded either to the
                            surrounding property owners or the public. All effective powers go to
                            the arbitrary, appointed commissions (panels of laymen and "experts")
                            who make the final decisions. Do not be fooled by the environmentalist
                            promotion that the "public" controls the view under scenic
                            protection laws. The "public" may have input to the authorities,
                            but only the ultimate authority has any power. Such a commission or
                            panel has full power to totally disregard the public input, which is
                            never uniform anyway. For purposes of political justification, however,
                            these panels can always find or induce someone to provide "public
                            input" which matches whatever outcome the commission wants to enforce.
                        
 There are no scenic rights except to he who owns the property on which
                            the scene exists. To state otherwise would give every traveler conflicting
                            rights with every other traveler over every piece of land deemed too
                            pretty for private ownership.
                        
 The ultimate result of the absolute protection of property rights
                            is that new property buyers would make their purchases with the full
                            realization that whatever view surrounds them can change, and that they
                            cannot control that change without either outright purchase or restrictive
                            covenants signed beforehand by all area property owners. The restrictive
                            covenant is nothing less than a partial form of a covenant society,
                            covering little more than aesthetic aspects of property rights.
                        
 In the final analysis, remember that without ownership rights, few
                            other rights exist. How can one act with any autonomy if he does not
                            own or control the property upon which such action rests? How can one
                            contract if nothing is owned? Without ownership there is no way of establishing
                            or maintaining the concept of just possession. Without a sense of possession,
                            men lose the incentive to work.
                        
 COROLLARY RIGHTS to FREEDOM OF ACTION that are dependent upon
                            property rights:
                        
 INTRODUCTION: There are many corollary rights relating to the freedom
                            to act, which are limited to participation in property rights. Throughout
                            the following discussion of corollary rights, you will note the use
                            of the word "contractual property." This simply refers to
                            property which, by either verbal or written contract or permission,
                            you have use or control.
                        
 Under these principles, "public" property would refer to
                            the property owned by the association of all the citizens who have formed
                            a certain government entity, whether city, county, state, or nation.
                            Each level of government can, like any other association, purchase and
                            hold property as long as it is done without coercion, and only by the
                            use of the funds of the covenant members themselves.
                        
 Under this contractual concept, public property is not free, nor is
                            it able to be used in an uncontrolled manner. Since it is governed like
                            an association, there are rules and by-laws which establish some type
                            of representative majority rule. That body, in accordance with the bylaws,
                            can set rules pertaining to the use of that property, including limits
                            to any of the following rights, which are always dependent upon property
                            use rights.
                        
                            -  To BE FREE FROM BEING ACTED UPON or involuntarily influenced,
                                        in a harmful manner, when on one's own or contractual property and
                                        not directly and harmfully affecting the rights of others.
                        
                        
 This conditional right, which is the reciprocal expression of the
                            freedom to ACT--declares one's freedom from being ACTED UPON when not
                            interfering with others. In this fundamental right is found the essential
                            justification for all laws prohibiting aggression and compulsion by
                            either individuals or government when one is acting within his own sovereign
                            area of ownership or control, and other's rights are not infringed.
                        
 It is carefully worded so as to preclude the false interpretation
                            which would lead one to believe he has the "right" to make
                            all other human beings disappear from the face of the earth "because
                            they are influencing me." Such influence must be harmful, and against
                            your rights (not will or desires alone) while on your own, or contractual
                                property.
                        
 In the case of public property, one does not have all the same
                            rights that may be possessed on one's own private property. When on
                            any contractual property (including public property or in any activity
                            governed by the rules of an association or contract) one has only as
                            many rights as have been contracted for, or retained while under that
                            temporary jurisdiction.
                        
 For example, under a proper governmental association, public roads
                            could exist as long as they were developed by voluntary contractual
                            principles (using user fees and specific road taxes). Those paying the
                            appropriate individual toll or yearly fee, to use the roads, would be
                            considered contractual owners, and would have the right to not be involuntarily
                            and harmfully influenced from such a vantage point, as long as the contract
                            for participation in the public system did not preclude such rights.
                        
 Here is how this would work in a few specific areas: This principle
                            could prohibit the showing of outdoor drive-in movies where persons,
                            not contracting to view the show, could accidentally view material that
                            would be directly harmful to them, or their children. An objection could
                            be lodged against a theater showing sexually explicit material since
                            it can be demonstrated to be harmful to the proper moral development
                            of children, and even harmful to adults who wish to maintain a mind
                            free from corrupting thoughts or memories. Even if it could not be "proven"
                            to be harmful, property rights include the protection to be free from
                            acted upon adversely by other's actions. Certain sexually explicit material
                            is acting adversely upon those who do not wish to view it. This is especially
                            an appropriate objection when the offender can easily avoid or ameliorate
                            the unwanted intrusion.
                        
 JUDGMENT ON CERTAIN MORAL CONFLICTS: It is not my intent to delve
                            here into the difficulties of determining in law what constitutes "explicitly
                            harmful sexual material." As in this case, there are aspects of
                            prosecution such as the determination of "harm" and "intent"
                            which must remain in the realm of judgment, since they cannot be explicitly
                            defined in words alone. It is true that such concepts can be guided
                            by legal criteria, but the ultimate judgment will probably always remain
                            in human hands, imperfect as they are. That is why we still have to
                            have judges in law, though we try to avoid giving them wide discretion.
                            If sexually explicit material could not be legally shown to be harmful,
                            those objecting, or who still believe it harmful even in the absence
                            of legal proof, would have to seek the protective exclusion found only
                            in a smaller covenant society, were high levels of protection
                            from voluntary influence can be had by mutual agreement
                        
 Liberty can best be preserved in these areas requiring human judgment
                            if the specific determination of what is harmful influence is made at
                            the local level, by an elected judge, and where those judgments are
                            not given any judicial weight outside the local jurisdiction, and where
                            private viewing of such materials is not infringed. This allows a majority
                            in a local community, through the exercise of their franchise (voting
                            for a judge), to indirectly influence a portion of the rule of law (the
                            determination of "harm"), without being subjected to uniform
                            federal or state interpretations, other than general constitutional
                            restraints on the protection of private actions.
                        
 This is not to say that LOCAL majorities should be given unlimited
                            license to make any law, as if it possessed some virtue by being only
                            local in scope. As I expressed earlier, there are many types of law
                            which are violations of fundamental rights whether they occur at the
                            local or national level. Here we are referring to those areas of law
                            (such as judgments on "harm") which are valid exercises of
                            majoritarian law, and recognize that certain aspects of those laws cannot
                            be totally defined by words, thereby necessitating human judgment by
                            local courts of law.
                        
 As long as the majority and minority opinions do not become excessively
                            divergent, communities do tend to coexist in peace without falling back
                            on the more exclusive covenant societies. The latter are more protective
                            of uniform beliefs but are more difficult to form since they require
                            initial unanimous consent.
                        
 Certain minorities will "vote with their feet" (that is,
                            move away) if they have serious disagreements with the standards constituting
                            what is harmful, and if they are unsuccessful in gaining the assent
                            of the courts selected by the majority. Thus, the ultimate protection
                            of liberty is gained by the freedom to set up a unanimous covenant society
                            for the absolute protection of certain non-compulsive moral values not
                            held by the society at large.
                        
 This concept provides the least conflict between different moral values
                            since each major group representing different moral values would tend
                            to seek their own local autonomy rather than compel others to meet
                                their own particular standards. When conflict is reduced and free
                            competition is encouraged, the several groups are more inclined to cooperate
                            in areas of common concern--if a national structure exists that allows
                            for fair and proportional representation on national issues.
                        
 The foregoing discussion of control over an outdoor theater is not
                            a contradiction with the discussion on scenic "rights", wherein
                            I concluded that no one can "own a scene" not on his own property.
                            In the "scenic pollution" conflict of a neighbor building
                            a shack, no rights are violated since there is no right to a view, nor
                            was there any direct damage to the person himself, moral or otherwise.
                            Now, there are those who claim he has been directly damaged by lower
                            property values. But the so-called "damage to property values"
                            argument is fallacious since there is no right to a certain value of
                            a property. Values are matters of opinion, not fact. They are determined
                            by the free negotiations between other prospective buyers and the owner.
                            The potential buyer is a third party, may or may not see it as a detraction
                            of value to this or other neighboring properties for sale. And it cannot
                            meet the test of being both direct and harmful to any victim, even the
                            prospective buyer since the third party buyer doesn't own the shack
                            or the property next door. If he doesn't like it, he can buy property
                            elsewhere, or lower his bid to reflect his poor assessment.
                        
 There is no way to determine fixed property values in law--therefore
                            they are not adjudicable. However, in the case of the drive-in theater,
                            the damage is direct since sexually explicit material can adversely
                            and directly affect the development of a child, and even the emotional
                            stability of some adults. If the offending shack had obscene words painted
                            on it, one might have cause to declare it directly harmful, but not
                            the shack itself, since the relative beauty or lack thereof of a building
                            cannot be shown to be adversely damaging to the neighbor's mind.
                        
 In a similar manner, billboards can be regulated--but not on
                            the normal basis that they are "ugly". Even if that were the
                            case, nothing can be regulated because of beauty--as subject far too
                            subjective for public judgment. But when billboards can be seen and
                            read beyond property boundaries they touch upon the right of others
                            not to be unduly or adversely influenced or acted upon on their own
                            or contractual property. So morally offensive materials would be subject
                            to regulation. Size or placement would only be an issue of traffic safety.
                            Potential distraction of certain types of lighting, or wild movements
                            could be regulated if an adverse threat to contractual obligations of
                            the roadway could be proven.
                        
 The laws defending fundamental rights should be uniform throughout
                            the nation, being set by the constitution, but individual localities
                            are free to make more explicit or restrictive standards in the area
                            of non-coercive values if done by initial unanimous consent of all citizens
                            in the local community. Lacking unanimous consent, legislation by lawmakers
                            and judgment by the courts is limited to defining and restricting harmful
                            acts to individual and family rights. We must remember that judgment,
                            in the absence of any unanimous local citizen agreement, is strictly
                            limited to protecting fundamental and contractual rights, determining
                            whether direct harm or intent to harm has occurred, and providing just
                            consequences for the guilty and restitution to the victims.
                        
 This potential conflict between liberty and harmful influence upon
                            others is one of the difficult areas in law to properly resolve. By
                            deferring toward liberty when in doubt, and only exercising legal judgment
                            where harm is clear, we hopefully avoid any real substantive conflicts
                            in an open, majority ruled community. What moral value conflicts still
                            remain are then best resolved by smaller subdivisions of the community
                            being formed, under the unanimous consent provisions of the law, to
                            clearly prohibit undesired conduct within areas under the new subdivision's
                            jurisdiction.
                        
 THE RIGHT NOT TO BE ACTED UPON (continued):
                        
 SELF RESPONSIBILITY FOR RISK
                        
                            - To be solely RESPONSIBLE for one's own health, life, education and
                                safety. It is, therefore, not the right or duty of other men, whether
                                by individual or government force, to coerce men to act in any way
                                they may deem BENEFICIAL for another's welfare, when failure or refusal
                                to so act will not directly or harmfully affect others' rights outside
                                covenant and contractual relationships.
                        
                        
 In this principle we find one of the simple "self-evident"
                            truths about life. Almost everyone would agree that we should all be
                            free to accept responsibility for our actions. /But there are many well-meaning
                            individuals who have taken it upon themselves to act as the almighty
                            protectors of mankind. In this, I am not referring to those who desire
                            to protect people from the compulsion and aggression of others, but
                            those who arrogate to themselves the power to protect people from themselves--using
                            the coercive power of government.
                        
 They busy themselves in attempts to keep people from doing things
                            which they may deem unwise and foolish--which is commendable, but only
                            in the voluntary sector. However, when voluntary awareness programs
                            fail, or a major accident happens, they often go to government crying
                            for a new law mandating that people be forced to do something that presumably
                            would ensure such an accident never happens again.
                        
 Worse yet, when government agencies hire a full time employee as a
                            fire Marshall or safety officer, for example, each fire or accident
                            in the community becomes a reflection on his job performance. Thus the
                            nature of the responsibility induces the officer to go before elected
                            officials and request additional codes and regulations to control what
                            he feels are unsafe private actions. Freedom becomes the code enforcer's
                            "enemy" and he, unknowingly, becomes freedoms worst enemy.
                        
 Laws such as motorcycle helmet requirements, mandatory seat belt use,
                            and building codes are all violations of this principle. Conservatives
                            have a most difficult time seeing the evil in these laws, simply because
                            they involve safety habits which most of us do voluntarily anyway. Besides,
                            they appear so "beneficial."
                        
 We tend to confuse one fundamental aspect of law when we support health
                            and safety legislation that we view as beneficial. We confuse our feelings
                            of support for the beneficial action being mandated, with the
                            fact that it is IMPROPER TO MANDATE such actions BY
                                    LAW.
                        
 People say, "I wear seat belts, and I think everyone should,"
                            which may be true. But there is a distinct and very real difference
                            between saying everyone SHOULD versus MUST, UNDER PENALTY
                                    OF LAW. We fail to remember that the artificial penalties for
                            transgressing a law inflicts pain and suffering and very real damage,
                            in the form of fines or even potential imprisonment if one resists on
                            principle.
                        
 Thus, we must never use law as a means of coercing people to do
                                things that we simply feel are beneficial for them. Once we enter
                            that arena, where we give government the power to determine what is
                            BENEFICIAL for people, we have opened the floodgates for virtual total
                            control of our lives--all in the name of health, life, safety and good
                            judgment--all violations of the fundamental right to be responsible
                            for our own safety.
                        
 Remember that being responsible for our own safety means the requirement
                            of accepting the CONSEQUENCES of one's own poor judgment, and as a society
                            of having the courage to see people's bad judgment hurt them without
                                    rushing to the legislature to stop personal freedom to fail.
                            That means, frankly, that mistakes will occur and that it is our own
                            responsibility to accept those consequences. The presence of occasional
                            consequences is what causes most people to learn by their errors. Judgment
                            increases and people become more wise. The more that government intrudes
                            to "ensure" private safety, the more non-thinking people depend
                            on that supervision, and the poorer their judgments become. Do not take
                            lightly this concept of deteriorating personal judgment in the face
                            of excess codling. It is similar to the unarrestable evil that comes
                            upon society as it shield's people's bad judgment in health and financial
                            matters with welfare and disability payments.
                        
 In all of this, I am not denying the legitimate role of government
                            in restricting those private actions which damage other people's rights.
                            That is the proper role of government. But, as a general rule, I prefer
                            deterrence for private bad judgment through letting people suffer the
                            consequences without a government safety net, or "a priori"
                            restraint upon liberty. Additionally, the same restrictions upon government's
                            intrusion upon family risks apply here as well in order to keep a clear
                            demarcation between family sovereignty and government delegated powers
                            protecting fundamental rights. Some suffer of wives and children must
                            be tolerated in society to shield liberty as a whole from the "ought-a-be-a-law"
                            crowd who would eventually attempt to "license" parents according
                            to some "pristine" sociological model.
                        
 My final point on this right is to clarify the language which says
                            that it is not the right or duty of men to coerce others to do what
                            they deem beneficial WHEN REFUSAL OR FAILURE TO DO SO WILL NOT HARM
                            OTHERS OUTSIDE OF COVENANT AND CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIPS.
                        
 The emphasized wording provides the essential test that restricts
                            a group of citizens, even if in a majority, from imposing their will
                            upon others. Simply put, if refusal to do the recommended or mandated
                            action does not directly and harmfully affect members of that majority,
                            they have no right to mandate such action.
                        
 Fluoridation of water supplies provides an ideal example. In
                            this case, if I fail to fluoridate my teeth, and I get additional cavities,
                            this in no way harms another or affects the rights of any other person.
                            Since failure to fluoridate does not directly affect other members of
                            the majority, the majority has no right to legislate its view of what
                            is beneficial for my water supply. This is properly done under voluntary
                            contract rights in a association of private water users, or by unanimous
                            consent of public system users.
                        
 Do not be tempted to rely on the flawed argument that government
                                welfare services are increased as people neglect to take care of themselves.
                            Because government illegally improperly attempts to use tax money to
                            give health care to certain persons, in no way gives government the
                            power to start regulating everyone. A one-sided contract, however
                                    well intentioned is not binding, nor gives that person control over
                                    another. It's like a person who, on his own volition, starts
                            paying for your health insurance, and then tries to control everything
                            you do because he is paying for something which you never solicited!
                            In a court of law, you could be free to accept his largess for as long
                            as you wanted and he would still never have any power to control you--simply
                            because it is a one-side offer.
                        
 To carry the benefit argument to further extremes, giving government
                            the power to mandate "beneficial" conduct would also
                            allow government to mandate that everyone drink three glasses of milk
                            a day--simply because it may be deemed beneficial. Again, government
                            can only defend against the infringement of rights, it cannot mandate
                            positive benefits or mandate beneficial actions.
                        
 Motorcycle helmet laws fall into this same category. Failure
                            to use a helmet only direct affects the user, and thus the majority
                            has no right to mandate its use. If they did have such a right then
                            safety requirements could be expanded in unlimited ways to include
                            special boots, anti-skid brakes, armored clothing and a host of very
                            expensive additions to an inherently unsafe vehicle.
                        
 Safety experts can sometimes get indignant when citizens complain
                            about the costs that must be borne to satisfy their demands. "How
                            can one put a PRICE on safety?" they retort. Actually, the price
                            is irrelevant to the fact that even a "free" mandatory safety
                            item would be a violation of the right to be self-responsible in areas
                            which do not affect others directly. But in another sense the price
                                is relevant in that mandatory safety equipment represents a "taking"
                                of property (money). The bigger the cost, the bigger the violation
                            of the property right. While most safety experts are considerate of
                            costs, they are under no legal obligation to act with such restraint.
                            Reasonableness is only a reflection of their desire to keep people from
                            rising up against this type of benevolent tyranny.
                        
 Why not ban motorcycles altogether, as some have suggested? The reason
                            is simple: it is each person's fundamental right to take risks and assume
                            the consequences for his own "unsafe" actions as long as others'
                            rights are not infringed. Using a vehicle recklessly in the presence
                            of other innocent bystanders is infringing on others' rights, but refusal
                            to wear a helmet is not.
                        
 This area of legislative action I have just described is the most
                            insidious type of lawmaking because most Americans, especially those
                            who use seat belts, and wear helmets, and build homes properly, see
                            nothing WRONG with the law. They fail to realize that what is PROPER
                                FOR THE VOLUNTARY ARENA is NOT PROPER FOR GOVERNMENT to mandate
                            by law. We are dealing here with mandating "beneficial acts"
                            wholly outside the limits on government power.
                        
 For the pragmatists who are always asking, how would we protect ourselves
                            against houses and buildings from collapsing and other effects of poor
                            judgment, simply look back into history. The US capitol building was
                            designed and built by unlicensed architects and builders--the free market.
                            At least four of our US presidents, including George Washington, had
                            no formal education--no credentials. Houses are still being built today
                            without any building codes, and they have no greater incidence of problems.
                            People in Oregon and Maryland (as of 1990) don't get annual safety inspection
                            on their cars, and have no higher incidence of safety-related accidents
                            than states with rigid laws.
                        
 Most importantly, when the market is free, and people rely less on
                            government to restrict their liberty to fail, personal judgment increases
                            (through going through the school of "hard knocks") and people
                            become better at seeing competency. When people find themselves in situations
                            where they do not feel competent, experience will eventually induce
                            them to hire an outside expert to check it out, to use good contracts
                            to ensure quality, and to assess liability if errors should occur. Granted
                            there will always be those in society who will fail to exercise caution,
                            fail to hire experts, and fail to get self taught about a subject where
                            they can't afford an expert. But there is little excuse for this slothfulness.
                            Let them pay the consequences, I say. Fortunately, there are still enough
                            examples of the proper use of freedom to prove my point. It is imperative
                            that we learn to distinguish between a good idea (safety) and the evil
                            of letting government enforce it by penalty of law.
                        
 Remember also, that the ultimate force behind every law is the taking
                            of life and property. One should ask himself, before supporting any
                            law, is the violation of this law worth taking away a man's life or
                            property should he object to it? In most safety laws, we must come to
                            a negative conclusion. As law moves into mandating landscaping and beautification,
                            the answer is even more emphatically negative--but those laws are on
                            the books in certain cities today because well meaning people failed
                            to see the danger in allowing government to mandate that which they
                            deem beneficial.
                        
 Probably the biggest single motivator towards intrusion into this
                            area, despite sound arguments is when little children are adversely
                            affected by the bad judgment of their parents. This is indeed tragic.
                            But it really isn't any different when an adult gets killed by some
                            unwise decision of another. Both are tragic, but neither can be stopped
                            by "a priori" regulation. Even if you could demonstrate that
                            less house fires are caused by building codes--you could never show
                            that on balance the net cost to society is less. When you total
                            all the additional costs involved with compliance with building codes,
                            (increased housing and rental prices, material costs, compliance costs,
                            litigation, liability trials, bureaucracies, designer's and builder's
                            time and cost keeping up with the code, etc., etc.,) the costs far,
                            far exceeds the outright loses from fire or safety that would have occurred
                            in the absence of codes. These are the hidden costs to society. And
                            for all these billions in hidden costs, there are thousands of jobs
                            that aren't created and small businesses on the margin that don't make
                            it because money is siphoned off into safety areas. These hidden victims
                            are never counted by the "safety" cheerleaders.
                        
 Safety does have a net benefit when implemented carefully and voluntarily
                            within the restraints of good business practice, but those net benefits
                            quickly disappear when mandated nationwide, or statewide by broad brushed
                            bureaucracy and enforcement divisions--as the number of horror stories
                            from small business can attest since the establishment of the Federal
                            Occupational, Safety and Heath Administration (OSHA).
                        
 The right to take PERSONAL RISKS without prior restraint as long
                                as others, not bound in a voluntary contractual relationship, with knowledge
                                of those risks, are not involved
                        
 Simply put, this principle restrains lawmakers from PROHIBITING dangerous
                            risk taking, including financial risks, when each person involved has
                            a knowledge of the potential harm and has voluntarily accepted those
                            risks. This effectively would prohibit such government agencies like
                            OSHA from interfering with employees who voluntarily chose to work under
                            hazardous circumstances. The allowances of this principle would induce
                            workers to be more careful in the contracts they signed, and to exercise
                            due caution themselves. It would also put government financial regulators
                            like the SEC out of the interference business, except to investigate
                            fraudulent practices upon actual evidence or complaint.
                        
 Again, as in all areas of freedom, there are those people who may
                            choose to not exercise due caution or properly scrutinize investment
                            or employment conditions where risk is involved. We must not let such
                            failure to make good choices lead us to take away all men's right to
                            take risks, and turn over such judgments to government bureaucrats.
                            Employers who failed to openly warn workers of certain hazards when
                            they were known by the employer and where the employee had requested
                            to know all hazards subsequent to the contract, could and should be
                            prosecuted for fraudulent practices.
                        
 Note that these rights of self-responsibility make reference to being
                            free to take risks as long as OTHERS OUTSIDE OF COVENANT AND CONTRACTUAL
                            RELATIONSHIPS are not involved. This simply means that one's risk taking
                            (which infers some danger) cannot involve non-contracting parties. Parties
                            who are joint partners with the risk taker, by contract, with a knowledge
                            of those risks, cannot claim to be involuntarily harmed by the effects
                            of the risk taking.
                        
 But what about children and family members? These are the COVENANT
                            relationships referred to, since the act of having children engenders
                            an automatic covenant for child care until the child reaches an ability
                            or desire to be self-sufficient. Almost every major decision that parents
                            make involves not only risk to themselves but to their children. Simply
                            getting in a car and driving somewhere is an example. But the mere
                                presence of risk is not sufficient reason to give the state the power
                                to easily intervene in the decisions of parents relating to their
                            children--all of which involve some risk. The risk taking by the parent
                            must be imminently threatening to the life of the child,
                            or represent grossly negligent conduct, that clearly presents a physical
                            risk (starving a child qualifies, but failure to use an "approved"
                            government feeding formula would not) for external intervention by government
                            to be justified. It must also be pernicious in nature, that is, a reoccurring
                            problem, with bad intent, more than a mere one-time case of poor judgment.
                        
 For example, driving on public streets and highways cannot qualify
                            as imminently threatening to a child. It is POTENTIALLY life threatening,
                            like most things in life, but not IMMINENT since there is such a low
                            percentage of accidents per miles driven. Even if it did become imminently
                            threatening, it would not be appropriate for government to enter with
                            piecemeal regulations like child restraint laws. Such "least restrictive"
                            doctrines only invite constant government intervention until parents
                            find themselves without ultimate authority for child care. It is better
                            in the long term to provide for government custody intervention only
                            at the most pervasive and abusive end of the scale in order to make
                            the line of demarcation between parental and government authority as
                            clear as possible. The potential of total loss of custody plus other
                            heavy penalties will generally serve as a strong deterrent to gross
                            negligence.
                        
 For example, if a parent had a habit of taking a non-consenting, young
                            child with him on a dangerous stunt car circuit, where there were numerous
                            fatal accidents, that could be judged as imminently threatening,
                            it may be appropriate for government to intervene and at least threaten
                            to transfer the custody of the child to another more responsible person
                            if such life-threatening conduct does not cease. If, however, the child
                            was older and more knowledgeable of the risks and desirous of taking
                            them, the state could not intervene, no matter how dangerous.
                        
 To engage in voluntary CONTRACTS, written or verbal, without restriction
                                or regulation except where direct and harmful non-contractual consequences
                                to others occur; and to enforce such contracts, where real consideration
                                in the form of labor, assets or other property is given. 
                        
 The right of contract is one of the most important of our fundamental
                            rights. It does have certain conditions by which it is properly exercised.
                            The right to contract is an extension of our fundamental right to act,
                            as long as both parties are acting voluntarily, and where fraud or deception
                            is not present. Contract rights are also linked to ownership rights,
                            since one cannot contract with that which he does not own or control.
                        
 I prefer a very free approach to the rights of contract, with strict
                            penalties and restitution for breaking contracts, despite the fact that
                            many people will, through ignorance and lack of caution, enter into
                            contracts that will cause them regret and suffering.
                        
 The question arises as to when a contract is valid. The above language,
                            stipulating the conditions surrounding contract rights, indicates that
                            a contract is binding only when "consideration" is given (meaning
                            something of value), whether in the form of labor, or assets, from both
                            parties.
                        
 In other words, a promise to give someone a gift is not a binding
                            contract, because the intended receiver has not exchanged anything in
                            value, for which he could claim damages, should the giver change his
                            mind. When a person promises to marry someone, and that person spends
                            money on preparations for the marriage, many states consider this a
                            valid contract. I do not, unless written--and if it has to be written,
                            it's a bad marriage to start with. In dealing with marriage, both parties
                            should realize that nothing is settled until it is really settled. Making
                            marriage preparations should always be done modestly and at each party's
                            own risk. I would not support forcing any couple to marry if one did
                            not want to, but certainly it would be appropriate to require financial
                            responsibility if a child was engendered by the couple.
                        
 The presence of fraudulent or deceptive statements would certainly
                            tend to negate the validity of a contract. The only major question that
                            arises is whether the presence of a very minor deceptive statement should
                            invalidate the entire contract--especially if it would result in greater
                            harm and damage to either one of the parties. One would not want to
                            entice people to search for a tiny exaggeration of a claim and turn
                            it into a "fraudulent" contract. While lack of honesty should
                            generally be a good reason to back out of an agreement, damages or settlements
                            should be awarded according to the principles of fairness, each being
                            restored as much as possible to his original position.
                        
 . Generally I favor a fairly harsh approach to contract enforcement
                            which puts the maximum burden upon the one signing the contract to ask
                            the proper questions and read and understand the entire document. Although
                            it is the contracting party's responsibility to ask pertinent questions,
                            it is the primary obligation of the more experienced party offering
                            the service to explain all of the risks and complexities involved. These
                            complexities should be part of enforceable contracts. Any withholding
                            of major factors that would have affected the judgment of either party
                            involved could be grounds for abrogation of the contract. But it should
                            be a significant factor, which, of course, would be a matter of judgment
                            that a judge would have to decide. I grant that this is difficult territory.
                            Once we allow a judge to decide what each party should have told the
                            others, it becomes difficult to enforce a contract. No one can possibly
                            remember everything about every detail that may be someday involved
                            in a contract, but certainly the most critical issues can be determined
                            by a specialized judge, using experience judicial criteria.
                        
 The greater danger is in the contract that is made ignorantly by people
                            of low intelligence without wisely inquiring into all the pertinent
                            details. Everyone has the right to take the document to a more experienced
                            person for clarification and review. But as a practical matter, this
                            costs money and the poor, the aged and infirm or the ignorant of low
                            intelligence, would either be ignorant of where to find help or would
                            be unable to afford it. I think there is a very real possibility of
                            charitable legal services emerging to help the poor with free advise.
                            But in any case, we need to address what to do with those who intentionally
                            prey upon ignorance and get older people, for example, to sign away
                            their homes for insurance annuity contracts of little value, etc. I
                            would only favor the invalidation of contracts where it could be determined
                            that a clear imbalance between mutual benefits was engaged without having
                            that disadvantage clearly explained in writing and initial. Much as
                            doctors can be required to explain to patients the risks, so the risks
                            of contracts ought to be part of a binding contract. I also think a
                            3-day cooling off period is productive. With many people, who sign something
                            on the spur of the moment, conscience successfully begins to get through
                            to them those nervous feelings about impending error, only as they think
                            about it later. A 3-day abeyance of contract validity goes a long way
                            to help people back out of bad deals. As long as all parties are aware
                            of such delays in validity, business can properly plan ahead. In all
                            cases of contract set-asides, however, I would favor having the side
                            backing out have to pay for any actual bone fide use they derived from
                            such a contract before abrogation. Expenses of the pusher of the contract
                            should not be allowed, however, unless the abrogating party made the
                            first approach without being invited to do so by the other.
                        
 The foregoing has been only a cursory view of a multi-faceted and
                            complex area of law. My intent is to accentuate the basic principles
                            of human action which avoid litigation and place the maximum incentive
                            on the individual to improve judgment. As in the area of risk, the more
                            responsibility placed upon the enforcement of contracts, generally,
                            the more careful people will become. A heavy reliance upon government
                            to protect people from their own ignorance, will only result in greater
                            incompetency and dependency, not less.
                        
 However, where a particular promoter shows a history of high pressure
                            tactics designed to induce ignorant persons to sign contracts without
                            a full understanding of the results, a court should have some discretion
                            to designate such tactics as "intent to deceive" and prosecute
                            accordingly. The legal criteria for such judgments would be difficult
                            to determine, but should be carefully designed to deter savvy lawyers
                            from devising ways to break contractual agreements for cursory, or dishonest
                            reasons.
                        
 CONTRACTUAL RIGHTS, continued:
                        
 1. To engage in any ECONOMIC ACTIVITY desired as long as such activity
                            does not involve compulsion upon others or the assistance of an enemy
                            of these fundamental rights.
                        
 a. To unrestricted SELECTION and PURCHASE of all available goods and
                            services desired, whether deemed good or bad by others, whether domestic
                            or imported, except where such purchase, possession or use will infringe
                            upon the rights of others, or assist an enemy of these rights.
                        
 b. To circulate and negotiate any tangible asset or sworn evidence
                            thereof as money or a MEDIUM OF EXCHANGE as long as it is voluntarily
                            accepted by another and fraud and misrepresentation are not present.
                        
 The foregoing language asserts the basic economic freedom which has
                            been so totally emasculated by the US Supreme Court. This language allows
                            natural monopolies (meaning one company that dominates the market because
                            it is so efficient and unanimously popular), and cut-rate competition,
                            as long as all actions are voluntary. The only "unfair advantage"
                            in the market place is the advantage government grants to some and not
                            to others. This is the only type of monopoly that would be prohibited.
                        
 This is not to say that a contractual government, like any other association,
                            cannot set up some type of business, school or service, like the postal
                            service. But it must not use general tax funds to do so, and it must
                            act as a free enterprise, charging user fees, and allow all others to
                            compete freely.
                        
 However, the right of people to protect themselves against an enemy
                            supersedes this economic right. No one has the "right" to
                            aid and trade with an enemy. This must be construed very specifically,
                            however. The enemies are often the LEADERS of a nation, not the individual
                            people. Unless government could demonstrate that the transaction will
                            assist specific enemies, a merchant should be free to trade with specific
                            individuals, just as he would be free to assist them in their cause
                            of gaining freedom.
                        
 This same principle applies to the purchase of goods. As long as the
                            results of certain purchases cannot be shown to be supporting an enemy
                            of freedom, one would be free to buy such products. The burden of proof
                            should be upon the government. There is a gray area here in determining
                            at what level of mixed free-enterprise and socialism does a government
                            become enough of an enemy to warrant prohibition of trade in the name
                            of self-defense. That would be another judgment call to be made by one's
                            elected leaders and the courts.
                        
 Also, just as there is firm support in the principles for prohibiting
                            the importation of goods made with slave labor, there is some justification
                            for prohibiting the distribution of foreign goods made with government
                            subsidies. Subsidization represents a partial enslavement of a people
                            living under a socialist regime. They are being partially coerced into
                            producing something against their will, by having a portion of their
                            tax funds involuntarily transferred to an industry or to wages.
                        
 In both cases, however, the national government could not prohibit
                            such trade unless the totalitarian actions of the foreign government
                            against their own citizens were a real threat to our own freedoms. In
                            the case of Soviet slave labor, this is not difficult to establish,
                            on two counts: first, they have openly stated their intent to enslave
                            us, and the partial enslavement of their own population is in furtherance
                            of that goal. Second, there are or have been at least 5000 Americans
                            in Soviet slave camps.
                        
 In the case of subsidized goods, it would be hard to make the case
                            that such subsidization is a direct threat to our freedoms. If it could
                            not be determined that such a threat existed, then the boycott of those
                            goods would have to be voluntary, or be made part of the unanimous citizen
                            contract, wherein all agree not to buy subsidized goods.
                        
 HONEST MONEY:
                        
 The right to negotiate anything as "money" is a simple extension
                            of the right to contract. As long as the other person willingly accepts
                            one's medium of exchange, and no deception is present, who is the government
                            to say it is not "good" money. This language on free money
                            prohibits any government activity in the control of money except to
                            prosecute for fraudulent practices. Ironically, governments have always
                            been the biggest perpetrators of fraud in issuing paper currency, without
                            backing--the same thing they condemn as "counterfeiting" in
                            the private sector.
                        
 People complain about the potential problems of lots of different
                            "funny money" floating around, if everyone had the freedom
                            to issue their own. That view does not match history, nor does it consider
                            the beneficial example of personal checks issued from a variety of banks.
                            The paper issued is only as strong as the buyer views what the paper
                            promises to pay upon redemption. The best and most valuable money becomes
                            the standard of ease in exchangeability. That is why people select credit
                            cards that have near universal acceptance. We note that no one company
                            has a monopoly, but all of the top contenders meet a relatively high
                            and uniform standard of service and acceptability in the marketplace.
                        
 The existence in the markets of millions of personal checks is strong
                            evidence that non-government money works, even with the potential of
                            fraud and insufficient funds. The presence of high penalties for issuing
                            a bogus check is sufficient to deter most. Where "big risks"
                            are present, smart businessmen require more SECURE forms of money than
                            personal checks. Such a hierarchy of surety money would quickly form
                            in a free money society. As in most free market problems, the advantages
                            far outweigh the disadvantages, and experience in the market place usually
                            keeps most people out of trouble. Also characteristic of everything
                            in the free market, ignorance is penalized and skill and trust are rewarded.
                        
 In the final analysis, there are absolutely no arguments that one
                            can give for government monopoly of currency that cannot better be handled
                            by the free market, as long as government does a proper job of prosecuting
                            for fraud. All the current proposals about taking the printing power
                            of money away from the Federal Reserve and giving it to Congress are
                            woefully flawed. The nation's politicians are certainly the last that
                            we can expect to be fiscally responsible. We need only look to the spiraling
                            national debt and the indiscriminate spending by government for evidence.
                            This is not to say I favor a continued role of the Federal Reserve.
                        
 Neither are the arguments valid that the supply of money must be increased
                            each year to match the growth of the economy (as indicated by the Gross
                            National Product (GNP) or other indicator). That's more bad economic
                            theory that most conservatives have ignorantly accepted. Actually, one
                            could freeze the existing supply of money, and prices would simply begin
                            to fall as the GNP increased. The economy can be operated on nearly
                            any quantity of money, as long as prices are free to change relative
                            to the demand for that money, and if sufficient numerical subdenominations
                            of the unit of currency exists to accommodate a high value for scarce
                            money.
                        
 By freezing the present supply of paper currency (replacing only worn
                            out bills), its value would gradually increase, except where it had
                            to compete with "real money" like gold, silver or some other
                            valuable commodity. These latter types of money have both intrinsic
                            value AND certification value (meaning the money implies or certifies
                            that the holder had previously exchanged something of value in order
                            to possess it). Paper money only has certification value, which is only
                            as good as people's confidence in its relatively fixed supply. As people
                            see excess dollars entering the market place (by way of rising prices),
                            they begin dumping dollars (rapid buying) in order to beat the next
                            price rise, or natural devaluation of the dollar. Gold is much more
                            resistant to such devaluation because of its relative scarcity and intrinsic
                            value.
                        
 FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION:
                        
 The RIGHT To ASSOCIATE with other persons without coercion as long
                            as that association is desired by all parties, does not constitute a
                            direct and harmful threat to another's rights, and where such association
                            is not in violation of the desires of the property owner.
                        
 Here, the right to associate with other people of mutual choice is
                            stated, with one important limitation: such association must not be
                            a direct threat to the rights of others. Thus, groups associating together
                            for treasonous purposes could be enjoined from doing so. The actual
                            prosecution would have to be on the treason charge, rather than on the
                            association itself, which could not be a crime. But, if there is substantial
                            evidence of treason, further association could be enjoined during the
                            process for determination of guilt. This would prevent military or even
                            mob groups from using freedom of association to mask their intent to
                            gather and strike.
                        
 The following are some limiting conditions about the nature of associations.
                            Like other rights in this section, they are corollary rights to property
                            rights. Even on contractual property, you only have the rights you were
                            allowed under the voluntary conditions agreed upon.
                        
 Associations possess all the fundamental rights of individuals,
                                but never exceed individual fundamental rights by virtue of being an
                                organization.
                        
 This concept keeps government (a citizen association) from assuming
                            it has more rights than individual citizens by virtue of its association
                            power. Even the defense function of government is possessed simultaneously
                            by each citizen. The notion that the state has been given a "monopoly"
                            on the use of power is not true. It is given the first priority in the
                            use of power to defend universal rights, but the citizen never should
                            relinquish his ultimate right of personal self defense, nor the right
                            to join in general self-defense against tyranny. In the citizen contract,
                            each citizen agrees not to exercise his defense rights except in an
                            emergency when recourse to government defense is not immediately available,
                            or when the government ceases to be the servant of rights and becomes
                            a tyrannical extension of majoritarian rule. The governmental association
                            may possess more POWER than an individual, by greater numbers and resources,
                            but that must not be confused with greater RIGHTS. The government is
                            always the employee, not the master, except over those who violate other's
                            rights.
                        
 Individuals may PEACEFULLY ASSEMBLE in groups without criminal
                                or treasonous intent as long as private property rights and free movement
                                on public (association) property are not infringed or impeded.
                        
 This doctrine essentially solves the problems of public demonstrations
                            which, in a busy metropolis, can disrupt all other activities. Obviously,
                            people are free to assemble on private property with the permission
                            of the owner. But properly understood, public property is nothing more
                            than a large neighborhood association that owns a park, for example.
                            People using the park, members of the association, are limited by what
                            the rules and regulations set by the elected ruling body. In like manner,
                            government has the right to regulate conduct on public property, by
                            virtue of its charter to establish rules and regulations of conduct.
                        
 In other words, no one has full set and use of all fundamental rights
                            except on his own property. When he moves, voluntarily, on to another's
                            property (even the association's) he moves into a tacit agreement to
                            abide by some else's rules or covenant restrictions. Obviously, men
                            would be foolish to give total and arbitrary powers to government in
                            establishing rules of conduct, but that is, in fact, what often happens
                            out of a mistaken trust in democratic processes--the failure to envision
                            the potential corruption of the majority, and the subsequent misuses
                            of majority rule to deny fundamental rights of the productive class.
                        
 Unless careful restrictions are placed on citizen-government contracts,
                            all basic rights in a democracy can be limited by the elected officials
                            on public property, including speech, assembly and economic activity.
                            The only limiting factor in democratic law is the majority will.
                        
 In a normal, non governmental association, persons who cannot or do
                            not desire to abide by the association rules are free to go elsewhere--and
                            take their money with them. This would be a novel approach to local
                            governments--if people had the power to form competing government entities
                            for basic services, and pay their tax moneys to the one that performed
                            the best. This allows for maximum justice and plurality of belief and
                            action--the ultimate power to escape the oppression of the majority
                            and retreat to a smaller, separate unit of government for greater protection
                            or less personal restrictions. Naturally if competing local governments
                            were permitted, over time the best two or three would prevail. One alone
                            might prevail if it was good enough as compared to the competition.
                            Certainly it may not be practicable for the entire range of services,
                            but it does provide the possibility for the productive class to pull
                            out of local taxing authority that is becoming more and more engaged
                            in improper welfare services. Competing local governments would eventually
                            end up as user fee associations--and the ones who promised the most
                            improper benefits would go bankrupt the soonest.
                        
 It is interesting to note in this regard that regulations and restrictions
                            increase exponentially with the density of population in any given place.
                            The more people, the greater the friction and interaction that appears
                            to require government regulation. Also, voluntary cooperation decreases
                            in proportion to lack of personal acquaintance people have with others,
                            which is very low in large cities. For this reason, the creation of
                            smaller, more personal government entities is beneficial and more responsive
                            to the individual. The incentives to form unified smaller divisions
                            of government, as provided herein, tend to keep cities from becoming
                            excessively large. Voluntarism is increased due to a higher level of
                            personal acquaintance among the community and a higher level of uniformity
                            in values. Both of these factors, working together, tend to decrease
                            the propensity to demand socialist forms of intervention and regulation
                            in the community. Large units of government do just the opposite. They
                            foment a sense of futility about individual effort and induce citizen
                            dependency upon the "all powerful" state. Worse yet, individual
                            action tends to give way to class consciousness as minority groups clamor
                            for control.
                        
 The only real down side to smaller units occurs when overall military
                            defense is needed. Small factions tend to be very difficult to unite
                            until the crisis is so large and the threat so great that it is often
                            too late.
                        
                        
 To DISASSOCIATE with other persons without public reason or
                                    justification and to exclude all persons not desired from one's own
                                    property.
                        
 This is the basic right to exclude people, for whatever reason one
                            desires, but is limited to property controlled by you. This concept
                            runs at variance with present-day civil rights legislation, which prohibits
                            private discrimination. Private discrimination should always be legal.
                            To do otherwise is to say that government has the arbitrary power to
                            decide who you will associate with or who you will do business with.
                            There is no substance to the government argument that a business "open
                            to the public" is a public business. Making an offering to the
                            public to buy does not presuppose the loss of right to select with whom
                            one will do business--nor does it establish any legal linkage to regulation
                            and control. Regulation and control can only come at the threat to a
                            fundamental right. Since no individual has a right to force any one
                                to engage in business with him, there is no damage to fundamental
                                rights when someone declines to sell or offer you their services.
                        
 The invitation to the public is not a license to buy, but an invitation
                            to negotiate, and can be withdrawn or declined by either party at will.
                            The businessman, right or wrong, must have the power to limit the invitation
                            in any way he wants--even to race, color, creed, size, weight, or anything
                            at all. While I would not agree that there was such a need to be so
                            bias in most cases, I would defend his right to do so. Clearly there
                            are cases when gender, weight, or size can be significant factors that
                            an employer has to have the right to consider. While race is almost
                            never a valid criteria for private discrimination, once you allow government
                            to start making a prohibited list of discriminatory actions, what color
                            or law allows you to limit that process. There is no limit once you
                            allow government to enter this area--so we must never allow it to enter
                            and prohibit discrimination.
                        
 Remember, to limit a person's ability to discriminate (to make a class
                            judgment) is to violate one's right to act on his judgments, when such
                            judgments do not violate the rights of others. Remember, there is no
                            right to buy, only the right to accept an offer if tendered. There is
                            no right to not be judged, only to judge others and to act on
                            those judgment, within one's fundamental rights. A person's class judgment,
                            and subsequent desire not to deal with that class, is not violating
                            anyone's right--it is merely the restricted exercise of his own right.
                            The power to invite or not to invite is inherent in the right to control
                            entrance to one's property.
                        
 Congressional civil rights legislation of the current type is only
                            appropriate for matters of federal contract. Any association may choose
                            to limit their right to discriminate, but they cannot limit others by
                            majority rule--only by unanimous voluntary covenant. In like manner,
                            state legislatures could prohibit discrimination in state contracts,
                            but neither legislative body can rightfully prohibit private discrimination,
                            since that is a violation of the private citizen's fundamental right
                            of association, and disassociation.
                        
 FREEDOM OF SPEECH
                        
 To PUBLISH, or make any other written or VERBAL EXPRESSION, on
                                property within one's ownership or control, whether for personal or
                                commercial intent, without prior restraint or restriction of the distribution
                                thereof, except when acting so as to destroy or deny to others these
                                fundamental rights. All persons have the right to state anything labeled
                                as their own opinion or personal belief as long as such statements are
                                directly accompanied by such qualifying remarks. 
                        
 The foregoing statement is the basis for free expression, both written
                            and verbal. Again, the basic condition of one's realm of ownership and
                            control applies. One does not have the right to say or publish anything
                            on someone else's property--this must be done by mutual agreement and
                            contract. Thus no one has "free speech" rights in another's
                            house, or on his property, or in another's business.
                        
 Even on "public property" (of a true, contractual government
                            association), one would be subject to the rules that had been pre-agreed
                            upon in the by-laws of the governing unit--which may or may not have
                            some limits on free speech. These regulations may be either open or
                            restrictive, but in any event, they would usually be dependent upon
                            some type of majoritarian control. If competing local governments were
                            allowed, and one didn't like the rules of the association, he would
                            be free to try to change the majority opinion, or withdraw from the
                            association and not participate in the benefits of public property,
                            nor pay any of the taxes. That is not, however, as simple a choice as
                            it sounds, as will be discussed in a later section--notably because
                            there are issues of territoriality involved in government. But in any
                            case, under this doctrine, one can always retreat to the private arena
                            to criticize government if there are excessive limits in the public
                            arena.
                        
 LIBEL AND SLANDER:
                        
 When we come to the sticky area of libel (written defamation) and
                            slander (oral defamation), I am in favor of allowing the maximum possible
                            freedom to state negative opinions about others--especially since such
                            criticism is essential for the preservation of freedom and justice.
                            But I would be reluctant to allow continued lying about provable facts,
                            with bad intent. I do not favor the establishment of a tenuous difference
                            between public servants and private people, as in present law, trying
                            to establish different rights for different groups. But I am cognizant
                            of the need to allow a person to prosecute others for lying about matters
                            of purported FACT which the purveyor knows are malicious and untrue,
                            which cause demonstrable harm --however difficult that may be to prove.
                        
 I believe that the resolution lies in the difference between matters
                            of fact and opinion. No one has a right to have a fixed value on his
                            true worth--that is a matter of opinion, and each is free to judge another's
                            worth as he sees it. No one has a "right" to be viewed by
                            all as "honest, upright, moral, or good." Those are all matters
                            of general opinion by others as they view another person and are subject
                            to change. Each person should have the right to make general--non fact-based
                            statements as his own opinion, as long as his comments are stated as
                            such. This disclaimer sufficiently weakens any statement and leaves
                            room for enough doubt to encourage others to reserve judgment.
                        
 Nevertheless, there are matters of fact surrounding a person's property,
                            which include himself, which are inseparable from the rightful use and
                            exercise of self and property. There is no conflict of rights in recognizing
                            the ownership of facts since all men can own truthful facts simultaneously
                            without being in conflict with one another. By definition, a truthful
                            fact is one which does not conflict with any other fact about the same
                            subject.
                        
 The key problem in libel and slander is in matters of opinion where
                            there is no DIRECT, physical attack on the victim, except perhaps in
                            the mind and intents of the perpetrator--which is hard to prove. The
                            effect of the negative comment is upon how OTHERS may view your reputation.
                            There is a difference between something being harmful to your reputation,
                            and being harmful to your rights. No right to a certain reputation exists--only
                            to provable facts of history surrounding your person or property. So
                            the only damages that should be allowed to be recoverable are those
                            which cause financial loss or loss of employment loss based upon the
                            promotion of falsehoods done with malicious and willful intent.
                        
 No one can prove he should be esteemed by others in a certain manner.
                            This must be determined by individual negotiation. It cannot be a right
                            since it would be in direct conflict with another's right to make a
                            free judgment about your true worth as he perceives it. Furthermore,
                            would you dare give government the power to regulate or determine how
                            others view you? Or worse yet, demand, as do the egalitarian socialists,
                            that all people are forced to accept all others at equal worth--and
                            therefore, equal pay. That is unjust as well.
                        
 In general, my purpose in seeking a means of attacking libel and slander
                            (without endangering free speech) is because these often constitute
                            acts generated by real malicious intent to destroy a person's reputation
                            or economic livelihood. Even true economic competition can exist without
                            malicious intent, and I think it can be distinguished from predatory
                            practices. So, if we can distinguish malicious intent without destroying
                            all beneficial criticism, or beneficial natural monopolies, then we
                            will have a more peaceful society. Allowing malicious intent to grow
                            under the protection of freedom is only tolerable in very minor amounts--especially
                            since bad judgment and actions always increase the demand for "another
                            law" to protect someone, which often in the end restricts everyone's
                            freedom. So, I believe there is a significant purpose in seeking ways
                            to target malicious intent while still preserving all essential freedoms.
                        
 One possible way of attacking the problem of libelous speech is to
                            differentiate between words that can never be accusations of fact (hence
                            are always opinions) and those that always imply factual knowledge.
                            For example, calling someone a rogue, a bum, ugly, amoral, stupid, or
                            unscrupulous would never be grounds for liable. These words are all
                            derogatory, but all unspecific. There is no way to know precisely what
                            the grounds are for such appellations. However, descriptions such as
                            immoral, liar, thief, and traitor, are words that underlie specific
                            actions or facts that can be discerned by law. One can challenge each
                            of these with a question seeking a specific fact: with whom and when
                            did the immoral act occur?....what was the lie?....what was stolen and
                            when? etc. These accusations are traceable and should be open to scrutiny.
                            General accusation with no traceable basis in a specific fact should
                            be open for use, without fear of having to back them up. It is true
                            that one can ask a person using unspecific, derogatory words to give
                            us some back up, but he should not be required by law to do so since
                            the answers could be valid, but still composed of general observations,
                            none of which could be traced to any specific illegal or morally reprehensible
                            act.
                        
 But how can we distinguish between one type of negative attack that
                            is malicious and untrue, and another which is even more devastating
                            but true? Let us take the economic case first. We cannot say that a
                            reporter's negative (but true) criticism of someone's product is harming
                            the producer. Each has an equal right to true facts. If it is true,
                            the actions of the producer, which were sloppy or deficient, are causing
                            harm to himself. The reporter in drawing attention to the facts does
                            not create the harm. But if the statement is false, and stated as a
                            fact, then damages could be awarded if malicious intent is proven. In
                            the absence of malicious intent, but where one can prove the allegation
                            is false, the perpetrator should be required by law to make a correction
                            of equal publicity. The refusal to correct a proven falsehood would
                            be a strong indication of malicious intent.
                        
 How about the case where a reporter incorrectly, but without malicious
                            intent, maligns a product with a negative opinion, rather than fact,
                            and destroys sales? While no one's fundamental rights have been damaged,
                            financial damage has occurred in loss of returns on investment capital.
                            Should the plaintiff be able to recover damages? Probably not, as long
                            as the report was concerning opinions and not facts. Unless one can
                            show that untrue facts were presented, with malicious intent, not just
                            ignorance, we must rely here upon each person's right to campaign for
                            his own position.
                        
 One of the ways to show bad intent is for the offended party to send
                            by certified delivery facts, evidence and arguments refuting
                            the charges. If the perpetrator continues to publish the same falsehood,
                            without specifically countering each and all of the arguments and evidence
                            sent to him, he would be held liable for damages henceforth, if a
                                court of law found those facts provable. Obviously one would not
                            have to respond to fallacious arguments or evidence which would not
                            stand up in court. These procedures would not. in my opinion, have a
                            chilling effect on argumentation--in fact, it would enhance it--since
                            the perpetrator could not be "selective" in only choosing
                            the arguments he could easily challenge. If he left out some (of those
                            sent to him by certified delivery), that could be proven to be valid
                            in court, it would demonstrate bad intent, in the face of provable facts,
                            and damages could be awarded. This would effectively eliminate one
                                of the most common of all ways in which people obscure truth in public
                                debate--they simply avoid answering the critical issues and
                            avoid mentioning critical evidence that would deny or at least
                            shed unfavorable light on their position. The establishment media uses
                            this all the time, and would become liable for these knowing obscurations
                            of truth once they had been served notice. Under this new color of law,
                            there would still be almost unlimited freedom to speak one's mind--especially
                            the first time. But once served with notice of provable error, he or
                            she would be required to set things right, argue the issues, or disregard
                            them if they were sure they were without substance.
                        
 Of course, there would be greater protection in stating anything as
                            your own opinion, and the more general the opinion, the better the level
                            of protection. But, my present inclination lends me to favor even employing
                            the "Certified delivery of evidence" rule to specific attacks
                            by opinion. Making an accusing party (even under the guise of opinion)
                            responsible to air the counter evidence (with his rebuttals) if he deems
                            it provable in court is good for debate and places the burden of balanced
                            argument (not ultimate proofs--which belongs to the court) on the accuser.
                        
 On the other hand there are the types of attacks, usually on reputation,
                            that cannot be disproven by certifiable facts. For example, one could
                            not send any certifiable proof to counter certain types of charges like
                            "Mr. so and so has been unfaithful to his wife." But in such
                            cases, the accused could demand that the accuser provide the basis of
                            his evidence, or cease and desist. I would not favor prosecution for
                            the first statement--only the subsequent attacks where the attacker
                            could not produce evidence. I would be fairly lenient on evidence as
                            well in this regard. If one could name the source of the information,
                            he should be free to quote that source without having to prove its veracity.
                            The accuser would then have to go after the source. For matters of moral
                            turpitude, I would favor the source being free to stand upon anything
                            he claims he was an eye witness to, without having to prove it. However,
                            if at that point, the accused can prove that the claimed eye witness
                            was not present, he could claim damages from him for defamation of character.
                            The basis in rights, is not that anyone has a right to be esteemed in
                            any certain light, but that he has a right to defend an truth
                                about himself, when that truth is specifically attacked by another
                                for malicious intent. Malicious intent mean the will to do harm--even
                            if it is not physical, and therefore damages of a fairly limited amount
                            (but enough to be a deterrent) should be allowed.
                        
 Books are a little different than television, or even newspapers since
                            it takes a lot more time and money to get something in print. The burden
                            of having to make corrections or retractions would be a costly one.
                            If, therefore, it became law that publishers would be responsible for
                            attacks of fact against another, habits would naturally evolve to avoid
                            unnecessary correction expense. Accusers of people or products would
                            probably have to send their manuscripts for comments to the accused
                            parties in order to avoid having to publish a later clarifying work.
                            As long as the accusing party addresses all issues presented to him
                            by the accused, and avoids attacking provable truth, he should be free
                            to proceed without fear of damages. My initial feelings are that this
                            system or something similar offers the best balance between being about
                            to present some forms of hearsay evidence, which one believes to be
                            true without having to prove it in court at the same degree of evidence
                            that apply to criminal law.
                        
 It is sad to be unable to remedy every area of damage because the
                            injustice cannot be proven to exist, when bad intent is not visible.
                            The interesting alternative that I present in this new proposal is that
                            one doesn't concentrate on proving the past malice, but one provides
                            new certified evidence upon which future malice can be proven if the
                            accuser proceeds to attack in light of provable facts or evidence. The
                            present alternatives seems to be a worse--allowing unlimited attacks
                            on everyone regardless of provable truth, or the making of every speaker
                            or publisher liable for every statement he makes, with the burden of
                            proof on the accuser. The latter would have an extreme chilling effect
                            on free speech. This would not only place a severe restriction on one's
                            ability to speak (since few things we ever say are fully provable),
                            but it would also destroy our ability to criticize tyranny or malicious
                            conspiracy in government.
                        
 For example, suppose you know something about a government official
                            that is improper and dishonest. You saw it with your own eyes and are
                            sure of what you saw. However, there were no other corroborating witnesses,
                            so it is your word against his--you cannot prove your charge under a
                            court's rules of evidence, other than to serve as your own witness.
                            Under the criteria of having to prove one's statement as true, or be
                            subject to someone's libel or slander charge, one would be unable to
                            warn others without suffering unjust damage from the other's libel suit.
                            But being free to stand on one's own testimony without being forced
                            to prove it allows for an open attack against evil. The opposition could
                            only stop you from saying subsequent statements if they were
                            capable of proving you were not present and had no other evidence. Even
                            then, the maximum penalty would be a cease and desist order.
                        
 So, under these principles, there is a simple solution. The man possesses
                            a fact, by right, since he saw it himself. As long as a person can claim
                            to be an eye witness, he must be free to declare those facts, and no
                            one can charge libel or slander, unless they can prove he is lying.
                            An eye witness has a right to the facts--they are part of him. He can
                            only be prosecuted if the other party can prove he is lying, not simply
                            mistaken. This alternative allows for the maximum freedom to criticize
                            known facts, without placing the burden of proof on the speaker--which
                            would be an intolerable burden to free speech since so few things in
                            life are provable even when seen by an eye witness.
                        
 I would also apply the same standards of free speech to leaders in
                            government. They would not be able to attack individuals or legislation
                            without having to respond to arguments and evidences of truth presented
                            by the opposition.
                        
 FREEDOM OF THE PRESS 
                        
 As to the freedom of the press, I think it is sufficient to look at
                            published material as a free and voluntary contract between publisher
                            and subscriber. Today, we erroneously think of the newspaper as a public
                            medium. It is not, as long as every paper is sold on a private contractual
                            basis--without use of tax funds. All aspects of the news media, as well
                            as private television should be considered private communication, despite
                            the fact that it may be available for sale in open areas. The only thing
                            that would be subject to prosecution would be a violation of the fundamental
                            right NOT TO BE INVOLUNTARILY ACTED UPON IN A HARMFUL MANNER. This would
                            entire an attack upon character (after demand for evidence or the sending
                            of certified evidence to the contrary) or visible material on the cover
                            or screen, open to public view that would be morally offensive and harmful
                            to children. In other words, one could only petition for a cease and
                            desist order and damages if you could view objectionable material from
                            a public sidewalk or from your own private property. You could not claim
                            harm or damages, however, if you chose to go inside a private bookstore
                            or viewing area, since you entered the domain of someone else's rights.
                            Where there is an open invitation to enter a business, some appropriate
                            warning of the presence of offensive materials could be required.
                        
 FREEDOM OF BELIEF
                        
 Any person is free to believe anything he wants, good or evil, without
                            restriction. In fact, there is no way, known to man, of knowing what
                            a person believes unless he expresses such beliefs. Generally, limitations
                            may be placed upon the exercise of belief, only when actions,
                            based upon such beliefs, violate the rights of others. That is fairly
                            straightforward. But what about the expression of beliefs that are viewed
                            as an INTENT to violate others rights?
                        
 I believe that it is within the defense rights of all persons to apply
                            prior restraints to those who intend to harm others, or in other ways
                            violate their rights. The problem arises in finding clear and distinct
                            evidence that such intent is real, imminent, and potentially dangerous
                            to rights--not simply because you dislike or disagree with
                                it.
                        
 Those are not easy criteria to satisfy. Generally, one would have
                            to rely upon witnesses, which presents difficulties about who is telling
                            the truth. But neither is it sufficient to wait until the person strikes
                            and does his damage. Prosecution is of little consolation to one that
                            has lost his life or been permanently damaged. Restitution is insufficient
                            in areas where no restoration is possible. Concerned for justice, as
                            we may be, this is one of the gray areas of law, which unfortunately
                            cannot be satisfactorily written in statute. In general, the issues
                            of intent to do damage must be left to the judgment of a jury. Juries
                            can usually sense when a witness is lying, and must be given sufficient
                            freedom to declare such. But there is a troubling trend in jury selection
                            now--the picking and choosing of dumb, emotional, manipulable people
                            and screening out all of those capable of critical analysis. I'm not
                            sure if such juries are reliable anymore.
                        
 I am not so concerned about the potential for leniency in these few
                            gray areas of the law, as long as strong measures are present to deter
                            the actual acts, if they should be proven to have occurred. It is when
                            we show excessive leniency toward the determination of criminal intent,
                            combined with permissive prosecution of the crime, and liberal parole
                            policies, as we now have, that evil criminal conduct fails to be deterred.
                        
 THE RIGHT TO PRIVACY
                        
 To act in PRIVACY, within one's own or contractual property, free
                                from search, seizure, regulation and internal surveillance except when
                                acting to infringe upon, or destroy another's rights. 
                        
 In this section, the right of privacy is assured, with two conditions.
                            One, that the right only exists on one's own property, or on property
                            that he controls. However, it is incumbent upon the person to provide
                            his own shielding when he is in plain view of others who may be on some
                            else's property. Second, no one has a right to privacy when acting
                                and planning to infringe upon another's rights.
                        
 The issue of secret surveillance has an interesting result under these
                            principles. The implication of these principles is that the actions
                            and the thought processes OF THE PERSON CLAIMING PRIVACY determine whether
                            he possesses the right or not. If he is in the process of planning or
                            acting in a treasonous manner (defined as working to destroy others'
                            fundamental rights) he, at that moment, or in any subsequent actions
                            related to that intent, HAS NO RIGHTS TO PRIVACY.
                        
 In other words, if a government agent is eavesdropping on him and
                            discovers the intent to violate rights, his eavesdropping is valid.
                            If an agent is discovered by the owner and prosecuted for invasion of
                            privacy and cannot produce any evidence of infringement of rights, then
                            the officer could be held liable for a violation of privacy and property
                            rights. If there were external evidence sufficient to secure a time-limited
                            warrant from a judge to engage in the a search for evidence, the officer
                            could not be rightfully prosecuted since the probability of treason
                            had already been established by some evidence. The judge would be liable
                            for issuing any search warrant with insufficient. Officers of the law
                            should be held personally liable for falsify such evidence to a judge.
                            But none of these cases should be allowed to taint actual evidence of
                            a crime. They should be prosecuted as separate offenses.
                        
 Under this doctrine, both accidental discovery of evidence can be
                            used to convict as well as evidence by warrant issued under probably
                            cause.
                        
 FREEDOM OF RELIGION
                        
 To be free to WORSHIP God according to the dictates of conscience,
                                as long as any actions stemming from such worship do not violate the
                                rights of others or covenants individual members have made with government.
                                It is also the freedom not to be compelled to worship or give allegiance
                                to any deity, object, person or government except by voluntary covenant.
                            
                        
 At issue here is the concept of ultimate sovereignty. But sovereignty
                            must always be stated relative to other claims to power. It is my personal
                            belief (which I do not desire to force upon others) that the Creator
                            of this earth possesses the ultimate sovereignty over earthly affairs--regardless
                            of man's recognition or lack of recognition of God's existence. Because
                            of my recognition of God as the Creator and ultimate sovereign over
                            the affairs of the earth, I can only give partial, conditional allegiance
                            to any earthly power.
                        
 There is a distinct propensity in evil man, especially those bearing
                            high earthly powers, to become enraged at the thought that certain religious
                            persons refuse to recognize the absolute powers claimed by government.
                            Throughout history, they have taken great delight in inflicting pain,
                            suffering, and even death upon innocent persons, trying to coerce them
                            into submission. This declaration is an open warning to such persons
                            that no such involuntary allegiance can be rightfully justified.
                        
 But neither are these professions of belief grounds for demanding
                            that all give allegiance to God. I believe that the grand Creator of
                            earth wants men to be free to choose whom they will serve. Thus, men
                            are free to give as much voluntary allegiance to earthly institutions
                            as they wish and, in contrast to the foregoing, religious men cannot
                            rightfully compel others to withhold such allegiance from earthly institutions
                            in deference to God.
                        
 Because of the temporary autonomy given to man on earth, and the potential
                            abuse of government power, I believe it is in the best interest of all
                            good men (including peaceable, but non-religious persons) to join together
                            in establishing good government for self-protection. In doing so, we
                            do not necessarily give such government total allegiance. It is perhaps
                            more prudent to look upon our allegiance to country and even good government
                            as conditional--that is, to the degree that government does not infringe
                            upon fundamental rights.
                        
 Such a government protecting every person's right to worship or not
                            to worship, as he or she may see fit, can and must allow for the free
                            expression of religious feelings by its elected leaders--with one limitation.
                            They must not use general tax funds to promulgate religious teachings,
                            symbols or prayers. A leader may pray publicly or privately, but it
                            would be improper to pay a minister to pray at a public gathering. He
                            could do so without pay, as long as the selection for the program followed
                            what the majority decided. Leaders have to be given full powers of free
                            speech in order to lead. But beyond that they cannot use general tax
                            funds to promulgate values. Values must always be competing, and the
                            only way to accomplish that in a free society is to make sure no one
                            has to subsidize anyone else's values with public funds. That's why
                            prayer and even "generic" religion is improper in public schools--because
                            the government schools improperly take everyone's money. Now, if government
                            schools were financed exclusively user fees, then if the majority
                            wanted to pray that would be acceptable. Those that objected would be
                            free to choose schooling elsewhere with no financial penalty.
                        
 4:
                        
  SELF DEFENSE AND REVOLUTION
                        
 To DEFEND one's person and property against any overt and imminent
                                threat, and to use the minimum, appropriate force required, of the alternatives
                                immediately available at hand, to eliminate such threat, when no immediate
                                recourse is available to assistance or constitutional adjudication.
                                This includes the right to defend oneself against the aggression of
                                other persons acting unconstitutionally as a majority within a government
                                with the intent to take assets without prior consent or otherwise deprive
                                any person of these fundamental freedoms.
                        
 There are two inherent dangers involved in the fundamental right to
                            self-defense. First, it must not be viewed as a total license to kill
                            for small and petty reasons. But on the other hand, it must not be so
                            restrictive that it forces a person to calculate a myriad of legal alternatives
                            when he is under dangerous, threatening and uncertain circumstances.
                        
 As we discussed earlier, we join together to form governmental associations
                            in order to enhance our capability to deter and prosecute crime, and
                            to use large scale defensive military force when appropriate. We also
                            place voluntary limits upon our own powers of self-defense, by deferring
                            to the judicial process for prosecution rather than taking personal
                            retribution and revenge. The only exception is when the threat is so
                            imminent, dangerous, or uncertain that there is no safe opportunity
                            to summon law enforcement officers. In such a case each person is free
                            to rely on his fundamental right to defend himself.
                        
 Such self-defense should give every benefit of the doubt to the one
                            who is being threatened--not the aggressor. This principle is specifically
                            worded to not give the type of legalistic aid and comfort to criminals
                            as is presently provided by the myriad of legal restrictions surrounding
                            the use of "deadly force" by a citizen.
                        
 A homeowner who is threatened by physical force should be free to
                            select the best weapon, of that which is immediately available, that
                                HE or SHE determines is necessary to eliminate the threat. There
                            are circumstances that may well even justify shooting a violent
                            attacker as he is fleeing, under the very real presumption that he is
                            likely to come back and try again. It also means that a person isn't
                            restricted from using fast and deadly force against an attacker simply
                            because he cannot visibly see a weapon. In many circumstances, at dark
                            and at night, the presence of an intruder who refuses to respond to
                            your demands to identify himself or otherwise stop his approach
                            warrants the use of deadly force, from as safe a distance as possible.
                            The only weapon that is usually suitable under such criteria is a stand-off
                            weapon, such as a handgun, which demonstrates one of the prime reasons
                            why a citizen's right to self-defense is severely handicapped if handguns
                            are prohibited.
                        
 The last part of the statement expands the self-defense role from
                            the individual threat to the more onerous threat of tyranny by improper
                            government force, as is quite common even in our society. In essence,
                            it defines the right of legitimate revolution against government tyranny.
                        
 Instead of reaching for a gun to go next door and rob people, when
                            in need, people have been enticed to believe it is appropriate to "reach
                            for their legislator" instead of the gun. The legislator, along
                            with a majority of the other representatives, performs the violation
                            or theft, but he does so in the name of the law and taxation. That is
                            why social welfare laws are improper and a violation of the fundamental
                            rights of ownership. Government asserts the power to do what the individual
                            citizen does not have the right to do--take from the productive and
                            give to those that claim a need. But government, like any other association
                            of men, cannot possess greater rights than those forming the association.
                            If individuals do not have the right to take money from another without
                            a voluntary exchange, neither does government.
                        
 Government has the power to tax, but only under contractual circumstances
                            where the citizens have agreed to pay for services they assign a government
                            to perform. The power to tax should be nothing more than an extension
                            of the individual power to contract. After receiving a contractual service,
                            the individual can be forced to comply with the terms, meaning "pay
                            up." Unfortunately, we have many types of government taxes which
                            are forced upon people who have never contracted for the service. This
                            is improper. In fact the entire formation of a government without initial
                            consent of all the governed is a violation of a major principle
                            of liberty.
                        
 When sufficient violations of this nature occur, and when there is
                            no further recourse to peaceful change, the people may well be justified
                            in exercising their right to revolution. Usually this is only necessary
                            when the majority of voters have begun to participate in the benefits
                            of government theft, and refuse to repeal the improper laws, voluntarily.
                            Only when an oppressed minority has lost, in whole or in part, its fundamental
                            rights and there no longer remains any ability to gain redress for grievance
                            by democratic means is it justified in disregarding the law (nullification),
                            leaving the government (secession), resisting compliance by armed defense,
                            and throwing the rascals out of power (by revolution).
                        
 Granted, this is a dangerous and unpleasant course, and as stated
                            in the Declaration of Independence, should not be done for "light
                            and transient causes." Nevertheless, it must be universally taught
                            and defended as the fundamental right that it is. (Such instruction
                            of citizen's rights should never be allowed to justify a mandatory government
                            school system--only that it may be view as a mandatory prerequisite
                            of understanding for each person applying for citizenship. Where and
                            how he learns it is up to the individual, as is discussed in the area
                            of contractual citizenship. The citizen contract is found at the end
                            of the Constitution.
                        
 
                         
                        
                            
                            
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