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	<title>Stumax.com &#187; Freedom Matters</title>
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		<title>Finally, someone notices the right&#8217;s contempt for the judiciary</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Sep 2005 08:03:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=443</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>
Finally, someone takes notice of the right wing radicals who are trying to undo American government by attacking the judiciary, weakening the legislature, and empowering the executive....  so to speak: The extreme Right has conquered the executive and legislative branches of government, but it has not been able to bring the federal courts to heelâ€¦yet.  Undoubtedly, this group has a prodigious impact on the Supreme Court and the other federal courts, but it wants so much more....  But Edwin Meese began arguing in the 1980s that the Bill of Rights does not apply to the states, and now the extreme Right supports his assertion that such Constitutional protections only exist to inhibit action by the national government....  This week, as John Roberts' confirmation hearings begin, all Americans should be paying close attention to the role judges play in our system of government.  For any true American, for any true "originalists" out there, the idea that our system of government could function with anything less than a strong, independent judiciary should be absurd.
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>
Finally, finally, finally!  Finally, someone takes notice of the right wing radicals who are trying to undo American government by attacking the judiciary, weakening the legislature, and empowering the executive.<br /> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a><br />
Catherine Crier writes a blog post about her new book, <em>CONTEMPT &#8211; How the Right is Wronging American Justice</em>.  Allow me to quote liberally&#8230; so to speak:<br /> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a><blockquote><br />
The extreme Right has conquered the executive and legislative branches of government, but it has not been able to bring the federal courts to heelâ€¦yet. Undoubtedly, this group has a prodigious impact on the Supreme Court and the other federal courts, but it wants so much more. Its leaders have taken an entity that innately resists politics and turned it into a highly politicized battle zone. They seethe over this unelected, independent third branch of government, the last bulwark between the American people and their attempted coup. That some federal judges have proven well educated, fair, and unintimidated by these voices and methods has further stymied their best-laid plans. The extreme Right may control a good part of the castle, but they have yet to breach the citadel. Only, make no mistake, they mean to bring every last wall crashing down.<br />
</blockquote><blockquote><br />
The Far Right wants to control our federal judiciary in order to enact this reactionary agenda. At first blush, the focus seems to center on social issuesâ€”abortion, gay rights, affirmative action, and religion in schools. These items certainly garner the most press attention, but don&#8217;t be fooled.<br />
</blockquote><br />
[snip]<br /> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a><blockquote><br />
There is another insidious aspect to their designs. Economic and political issues are crucial to them as well. If they are successful in our federal courts, this plot will have a profound impact on citizens in every arena. They are making efforts to curtail federal regulation of businesses, environmental protections, worker&#8217;s rights, bankruptcy laws, tort liability, and property interests, among other causes.<br />
<br />

<br />
This radical group also wants much more control exerted by the states. For over a century, the federal courts have built a safety net in order to protect the constitutional rights of every American. But Edwin Meese began arguing in the 1980s that the Bill of Rights does not apply to the states, and now the extreme Right supports his assertion that such Constitutional protections only exist to inhibit action by the national government. They want our individual guarantees surrendered back to the states, where enforcement will diminish and maybe disappear altogether.<br />
<br />

<br />
Despite the Far Right&#8217;s claims that they want the courts to leave Congress alone, they actually aim to reduce congressional authority. They want ultraconservative judges to strike down a great deal more federal legislation and to negate decades of legal precedentâ€”the very definition of &#8220;reactionary.&#8221; The extreme Right may argue against judicial &#8220;activism,&#8221; but they certainly know how to practice it. And through it all, they camouflage these issues under a shiny veneer of values, morality, and religion.<br />
<br />

<br />
Should the nation have minimum wage laws? Should corporations be held responsible when they commit serious wrongs? Should our environment, the air and water, be protected from polluters large and small? Should the Bill of Rights apply to all of the states, or should we have fifty different fiefdoms wherein a simple majority of state legislators can decide our fates?<br />
<br />

<br />
For the first time since the early twentieth century, these items are actually in play.<br />
<br />

<br />
Of course, the key to each and every one of these issues is the federal courts. And this drives the extreme Right to distraction. They have nothing but disdain for the founding fathers&#8217; belief in three branches of government and the prescient system of checks and balances. Indeed, they are rewriting America&#8217;s revolutionary history to accommodate their point of view.<br />
</blockquote><br />
I have been on about this for years, and I have been increasingly worried lately by the right&#8217;s growing power and their continual attacks on the judiciary.  This week, as John Roberts&#8217; confirmation hearings begin, all Americans should be paying close attention to the role judges play in our system of government.  For any true American, for any true &#8220;originalists&#8221; out there, the idea that our system of government could function with anything less than a strong, independent judiciary should be absurd.  Yet the right is closer than ever to making that claim stick.  True Americans must not let that happen.<br /> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/#p3">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p4"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/finally-someone-notices-the-rights-contempt-for-the-judiciary/#p4">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>It&#8217;s on.</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/its-on-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/its-on-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Feb 2005 09:37:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics Matters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Truth Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=383</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Battle for America.  Damn.  As in, Day-am, Bow0eee!
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	<a href="http://www.thebattleforamerica.com/">The Battle for America</a>. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/its-on-2/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	Sure, it&#8217;s a big file, but you&#8217;ll want to suck down every last megabyte. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/its-on-2/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/its-on-2/#p2">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Score One for Our Side!</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/score-one-for-our-side/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/score-one-for-our-side/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Aug 2004 19:02:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=266</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	This is very cool!  The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has issued a ruling in favor of P2P software maker Grokster.  Now, to get to work on our congressmen&#8230; <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/score-one-for-our-side/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	Read the post at Boing Boing, then send the EFF some turkee. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/score-one-for-our-side/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a>
	<a title="Boing Boing: EFF wins Grokster! Software doesn't have to be easy for Hollywood to wiretap!" href="http://www.boingboing.net/2004/08/19/eff_wins_grokster_so.html">Boing Boing: EFF wins Grokster! Software doesn&#8217;t have to be easy for Hollywood to wiretap!</a> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/score-one-for-our-side/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/score-one-for-our-side/#p3">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Computer Ate My Vote</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/the-computer-ate-my-vote/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/the-computer-ate-my-vote/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jul 2004 07:03:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics Matters]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=218</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[VerifiedVoting.org is hosting a national &#8220;Computer Ate My Vote&#8221; day today.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	VerifiedVoting.org is hosting a national &#8220;Computer Ate My Vote&#8221; day today.  Click the banner below to get info on issues with electronic voting machines&#8230; <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/the-computer-ate-my-vote/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	<a href="http://www.verifiedvoting.org/verifier/"><img src="http://www.verifiedvoting.org/action/20040713.dayofaction/toolkit/camv_badge.gif"></a> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/the-computer-ate-my-vote/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/the-computer-ate-my-vote/#p2">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Terrorists hate simpleminded ideology</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Jul 2004 20:15:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[For some reason today I was thinking of the President&#8217;s oft-repeated assertion that &#8220;Terrorists hate freedom,&#8221; and It was kind of sticking in my craw.
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	For some reason today I was thinking of the President&#8217;s oft-repeated assertion that &#8220;Terrorists hate freedom,&#8221; and It was kind of sticking in my craw.  The idea just doesn&#8217;t make sense to me for lots of reasons, yet the phrase is so appealingly simple that it seems to have embedded itself into the consciousness of politicians and pundits alike, and to have passed by almost without scrutiny. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	Here&#8217;s one problem I have with the &#8220;Terrorists hate freedom&#8221; meme:  If terrorists hate freedom and terrorists attack America because we have freedom, then the only way to keep America safe would be to either kill all terrorists or eliminate America&#8217;s freedom.  The first solution doesn&#8217;t seem possible, and the second doesn&#8217;t seem palatable (though, I could be wrong). <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a>
	And why would terrorists hate freedom, anyway?  What would be the threat to terrorists if freedom were to come to their country? I guess I could understand if a totalitarian state were to be taking arms against us, but for a seemingly rootless and country-less agglomeration of bad actors to declare war on the mere existence of American freedom&#8230; that&#8217;s an argument that I just can&#8217;t follow. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a>
	The dangers of accepting the canard are twofold:  first, if terrorists hate freedom and America = freedom, then there&#8217;s really nothing we can do on our side to stop the terrorists from hating us.  They just hate us for who we are and cannot be reasoned with so only the most draconian law enforcement tactics will suffice to keep those crafty terrorists from hurting more Americans. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p3">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p4"></a>
	Secondly, if we accept that terrorists hate freedom, but what terrorists actually hate is, say, our policies, then we will be making America less safe by failing to address the root causes of terror.  It&#8217;s like pumping air into the tires on your car when you&#8217;ve run out of gas&#8230; it ain&#8217;t gonna work, folks. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p4">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p5"></a>
	Recent events suggest that the Justice Department, Homeland Security, Congress, and law enforcement officials seem to depend on the &#8220;terrorists hate freedom&#8221; justification to promote and enact evermore infringing attacks on the rights of US citizens.  Innocent American citizens are placed on Homeland Security watchlists and subjected to harassment for taking pictures in a public place.  Prisoners are held in extra-legal no-mans-lands, without right of due process.  Psychological and physical torture of innocents is justified in secret memos.  These acts don&#8217;t seem to match up with a government concerned with promoting freedom. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p5">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p6"></a>
	Terrorists hate something.  It seems likely to me that what they hate is American power and the particular way we project it in the world.  It doesn&#8217;t seem likely to me that terrorists hate freedom, nor does it seem likely that such a simple-minded analysis adds anything to solving the problem of keeping America safe. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p6">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p7"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/terrorists-hate-simpleminded-ideology/#p7">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Honor isn&#8217;t just a word</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 15 May 2004 02:46:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=170</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	Mark Divine is an acquaintance of mine who is currently serving in Iraq.  He and his business partner Jerry Singleton, a former Navy fighter pilot, are the only people I&#8217;ve met who ever made me regret not joining the military.  They live and breathe honor and dignity, and make me realize what I lost out on by not choosing that path. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	Mark keeps the excellent <a href="huwww.navyseals.com">NavySeals.com</a> and somehow finds time to contribute to it on top of all his other duties.  The following is an excerpt from his article of May 7, 2004, in which he reminds us that the overwhelming majority of our fighting forces are men and women of honor &#8211; warriors in the best sense of that word. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a>
	<a title="Navy SEALs.com - Articles: Viewing Article" href="http://www.navyseals.com/community/articles/article.cfm?id=3510">Navy SEALs.com &#8211; &#8220;General&#8221; Malaise</a> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a>
	<blockquote>
		Warriors display an ethic that requires them to hold themselves to a higher standard than the average person. They actively practice the art of discipline&#8212;which is from the same root word as &#8220;disciple.&#8221; They are disciples of the art and science of improving themselves daily&#8212;in mind, body and soul. They actively practice Honor. Honor is a way of life for Marines and SOF warriors. Not just a word, honor was displayed in action by Pat Tillman refusing to profit or gain personal glory from his decision to join the Army Rangers&#8212;even as a shocked media stumbled over themselves to interview him and offer book contracts. Honor is displayed daily in the selfless manner that Marines, SEALs or Green Berets accept responsibility for their screw-ups. No one is perfect, and fallibility is an accepted part of the human condition. Warriors understand this, and though they strive for a state of perfection, they do not expect that their actions will always be perfect. It is the intent that is important. Honor, discipline, integrity, courage, compassion&#8212;these are the calling cards of the warrior. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p3">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p4"></a>
	</blockquote>
	<blockquote>
		This brings me to an unpleasant topic. As I tout the traits of the warriors, and am proud to include myself in that breed that is increasingly rare to find in our society, I must point out that not all military members in Iraq, or the US Military, are warriors. The most glaring disparity is with our US Army conventional and National Guard forces. Those who read this from the Army who hail from units that have bucked the inertia in the system and have risen above the malaise&#8212;I applaud you. It must be a gargantuan task to shine in a broken, low-morale and malaise-ridden system. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p4">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p5"></a>
	</blockquote>
	<blockquote>
		I hold out as my glaring example the one-star general in charge at Abu Ghraib prison. Brigadier General Janis Karpinski was wholly and completely responsible for every action in that prison&#8212;whether she knew about it or not. The fact that she claims she knew nothing is only more proof that she was completely incompetent and that the place was out of control. Her actions, or lack thereof, have placed the entire 1 1/5 year efforts of two hundred thousand soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines (and coalition partners) at risk of being rendered meaningless. The enormous personal effort by the soldiers and civilian volunteers to win the hearts and minds of ordinary Iraqis has been dashed by a single incident of amazing cruelty and insensitivity to the mission of the United States in Iraq. Of course those that perpetrated the actual acts are trailer trash to the extreme. They do not represent the American Soldier, Sailor, Airman and Marine. They are anathema to the warrior. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p5">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p6"></a>
	</blockquote>
	In the absence of reminders, I tend to think of the armed forces as one large lump of people, all with about the same function and duties.  But of course, the different branches of service do have different traditions and expectations.  It is even more poignant to me, then, to know that the atrocities in Abu Ghraib prison will have repercussions not just on the few who have been arrested, but on men like Mark, who serve under an infinitely higher standard. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p6">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p7"></a>
	I&#8217;m ashamed of the US for having perpetrated these crimes &#8211; we&#8217;re all stained with the sin of it &#8211; and I&#8217;m ashamed of our commanders who, by refusing to shoulder responsibility or blame, have left the true and honorable warriors to bear the brunt of the dishonor. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p7">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p8"></a>
	Never have I seen an administration so willing to talk about courage and leadership, but so vastly incapable of understanding the sacrifice those words imply.  Mark and his fellow warriors deserve better. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p8">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p9"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/honor-isnt-just-a-word/#p9">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Jack&#8230; oh, now I get your name</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2004 17:44:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=168</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	Did he really say this?  In an article at CNET News, Jack Valenti argued against the Digital Media Consumers&#8217; Rights Act: <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	<a title="Congress mulls revisions to DMCA | CNET News.com" href="http://news.com.com/2100-1025_3-5211674.html">Congress mulls revisions to DMCA | CNET News.com</a> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a>
	<blockquote>
		&#8220;And the 1000th copy of a DVD, Mr. Chairman, is as pure and pristine as the original. You strip away all the protective clothing of that DVD and leave it naked and alone.&#8221; <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a>
	</blockquote>
	Ooooh, Jack, stop it.  You&#8217;re making me horny! <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/#p3">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p4"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/jack-oh-now-i-get-your-name/#p4">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Justice is bloated</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/justice-is-bloated/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/justice-is-bloated/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Apr 2004 17:51:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=153</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	<a title="Reason: Washington's Biggest Crime Problem: The federal government's ever-expanding criminal code is an affront to justice and the Constitution. " href="http://www.reason.com/0404/fe.wa.washingtons.shtml">Reason: Washington&#8217;s Biggest Crime Problem: The federal government&#8217;s ever-expanding criminal code is an affront to justice and the Constitution. </a> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/justice-is-bloated/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	An excellent article.  With this trend to criminalizing everything under the sun, wouldn&#8217;t it be easier to just put a big razor-wire fence around the US.  After all, we&#8217;ll all be guilty of something eventually. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/justice-is-bloated/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a>
	(Am I bitter?  Naw.) <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/justice-is-bloated/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/justice-is-bloated/#p3">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Music is Hell</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Apr 2004 00:04:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=148</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	<b>The Recording Industry Association of America&#8217;s shrill crusade to end music piracy is making in-roads in Congress.  But is the industry&#8217;s war of lawsuits and intimidation destined to become a quagmire?</b> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a>
	Despite <em>Wired</em> magazine&#8217;s <a href="http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,63026,00.html">report</a> that CD and album sales were up 10% in the first three months of 2004, and in the face of mounting evidence to the contrary, the recording industry continues to call file sharing the biggest extant threat to its existence.  The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) makes war on its customers and pushes for legislation that would make swappers into jailbirds.  And, like the wars in Iraq and in Vietnam, it&#8217;s hard to see a way out that&#8217;s going to be anything but bloody and demoralizing for everyone involved. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p1">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p2"></a>
	On March 31, 2004, <a href="http://news.com.com/2100-1028-5182898.html">CNET News reported</a> that a House sub-committee has approved a bill that would make sharing copyrighted files a criminal offense.  The Piracy Deterrence and Education Act (<a href="hudw.com.com/redir?destUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fi.i.com.com%2Fcnwk.1d%2Fpdf%2Fne%2F2004%2Fpdea2004.pdf&#38;siteId=3&#38;oId=2100-1028-5182898&#38;ontId=1023&#38;lop=nl_ex">PDEA</a>) <del>- <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p2">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p3"></a>
	<blockquote>
		&#8221;[...] the result of intense lobbying from large copyright holders over the past six months</del>-has emerged as a kind of grab-bag that combines other proposals introduced in the past but not approved. One section that first surfaced last year punishes an Internet user who makes available $1,000 in copyrighted materials with prison terms of up to three years and fines of up to $250,000. If the PDEA became law, prosecutors would not have to prove that $1,000 in copyrighted materials were downloaded&#8212;they would need only to show that those files had been publicly accessible in a shared folder.&#8221; <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p3">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p4"></a>
	</blockquote>
	In other words, if you owned a computer that was found to contain approximately 65 CDs worth of copyrighted music in a shared folder&#8212;whether you put it there or not and regardless of whether the music was actually downloaded by anyone&#8212;you could go to prison for three years. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p4">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p5"></a>
	According to the <a href="http://www.sgc.wa.gov/">Washington State Adult Sentencing Manual</a> for 2003.  here are some other things you could do to buy yourself a trey in the Big House for your first offense:  Assault of a Child, Controlled Substance Homicide, Hit and Run resulting in death, Homicide by Watercraft/Vehicular Homicide by being Under the Influence of Intoxicating Liquor or any Drug, Malicious Placement of an Explosive, Robbery in the First Degree, or Sexual Exploitation. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p5">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p6"></a>
	On the other hand, Arson, Delivering Methamphetamines, Manslaughter, Vehicular Homicide by operating a vehicle in a reckless manner, Burglary in the First Degree, Child Molestation in the Second Degree, dealing in child pornography, Drive-by Shooting, Unlawful Possession of a Firearm, Use of a Machine Gun in Commission of a Felony, Intimidating a Judge/Juror/Witness, Third Degree Rape of a Child, Extortion, Second Degree Kidnapping, Third Degree Rape, Sexually Violating Human Remains, Counterfeiting, Threats to Bomb&#8212;each of these offenses carry mandatory sentences of 27 months or less in the State of Washington. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p6">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p7"></a>
	Of course, this is just a partial list, but you can see my point.  If the PDEA were enacted in its current form, the punishment for file sharing would be greater than the punishments for necrophilia or molesting a child.  Heck, by my count you could steal a firearm (14 months), commit sexual misconduct with a minor (12 months), print your own money (9 months), <strong>and</strong> forge a prescription for codeine (2 months) and you&#8217;d only be in prison a month longer than a file swapper. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p7">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p8"></a>
	Or, you could <em>kill someone</em> with your car or boat while under the influence and receive a sentence equal to the proposed sentence for making 65 CDs worth of music available for downloading on your computer. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p8">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p9"></a>
	Aside from putting the kibosh on KaZaA, the PDEA would create a huge new category of criminals.  How huge?  According to the bill&#8217;s authors, &#8220;the most popular peer-to-peer file trading software programs have been downloaded by computer users over 200,000,000 times. At any one time there are over 3,000,000 users simultaneously using just one of these services. Each month, on average, over 2,300,000,000 digital-media files are transferred among users of peer-to-peer systems.&#8221;  Holy crap.  Think of that &#8211; 3,000,000 potential new criminal cases to bring against the users of just one P2P service!  Looks like now&#8217;s the time to start investing in prison construction companies and FBI futures. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p9">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p10"></a>
	I&#8217;m fond of the saying that goes &#8220;Just because a million people do a stupid thing, it doesn&#8217;t mean it&#8217;s not a stupid thing.&#8221;  Yet as lobbyists for the recording industry and representatives in the House continue to hammer out laws for extreme protection of copyrights, millions of users currently engaging in file sharing will have to make a choice:  pay the vig to the RIAA&#8217;s musical extortion racket or face jail time and stiff fines. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p10">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p11"></a>
	I&#8217;m safe.  I haven&#8217;t shared files for some time now.  I admit it:  I have used Napster in the past (the original, mind you, not the namesake).  I also used AudioGalaxy, iMesh, and Morpheus.  I downloaded music, and I made my shared folder available to other users of those programs.  I did it not because I wanted to fill up my hard drive with free music, though that was certainly nice.  No, I used file sharing services because they offered me a way to discover and research artists that I could not find as easily or at all through traditional means.  I found I could no longer turn on a radio and hear music that appealed to me, and I had been burned more than once by buying an album based on the one song I knew about only to find that the rest of the album was completely different.  So the choice offered by P2P programs was a vast improvement to my ability to make informed decisions about music buying. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p11">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p12"></a>
	More than that, P2P offered a way to research artists whose work didn&#8217;t always show up in a record store, and to &#8211; yes, I admit &#8211; avoid spending thousands of dollars building a personal library of music that I was only interested in for the historical perspective it offered.  Did that hurt the artists whose music I downloaded?  I would argue that it didn&#8217;t, mainly because I wouldn&#8217;t have bought their albums in the first place just on spec.  On the contrary, many artists were directly helped by my P2P browsing because I did end up buying their albums based on what I heard.  For once, I was excited about discovering new music. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p12">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p13"></a>
	But then along came the RIAA with their campaign of tyranny, waving the flag of artists rights, crying financial hardship, and suing music consumers for doing what music consumers have always done &#8211; sharing the music of their favorite artists with like-minded fans.  So I stopped.  I stopped sharing, I stopped buying, I just got out of the game entirely.  And you know what?  I don&#8217;t really miss it.  I&#8217;d rather listen to my current collection of CDs and tapes in an endless loop than pay one more dime into a system that rapes artists, sues consumers, and generally stifles creative expression. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p13">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p14"></a>
	Look, I&#8217;ll be the first to admit that there are some problems with the file sharing model.  For instance, sticking a piece of music on your hard drive when you haven&#8217;t paid for a copy of that piece of music is, well, probably not cool.  (Sorry to equivocate, but I <em>can</em> imagine a society that actually encouraged that behavior to the economic benefit of all, so I can&#8217;t bring myself to say that it&#8217;s just flat out wrong.)  I don&#8217;t really have a need to own music I haven&#8217;t paid for.  I&#8217;m an artist myself, and I get the economics and ethics of this problem on a very deep, personal level.  However, as a consumer, what I want is to find and experience music free of the linear, controlled output of the radio station.  I don&#8217;t want someone else telling me what I should listen to.  I want to be able to experience music in the same way that the Internet has taught me to experience words and images &#8211; at my whim, at a moment&#8217;s notice, and with some anonymity.  P2P let me, in essence, program my own radio station based on whatever I was interested in at the moment, the way the Internet lets me program my own news and entertainment experience.  Ideally, I want to be able to browse and select from the vast catalog of recorded music, listening to as much or as little as I want, with some way to compensate the artists fairly for what I consume. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p14">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p15"></a>
	This is not what the recording industry wants for me, however.  The recording industry wants to maintain its exclusive control over the channels of production and distribution of popular artists.  The record companies want to maintain their position as the gatekeepers to musical culture, both for artists and consumers.  The recording industry wants to continue to pay artists pennies and half-pennies on the dollar for their creations while reaping maximum profits for itself.  It wants to maintain control of the media through which we consume music &#8211; e.g. CDs, albums, tapes.  The industry wants to be able to keep certain artists out of the game by denying them contracts.  The RIAA wants to maintain control, because control to them is about dollars. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p15">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p16"></a>
	The <a href="http://www.riaa.com/issues/piracy/default.asp">RIAA website</a> lays out the industry&#8217;s case.  Music piracy hurts consumers, music pirates, and honest retailers, as well as record companies and the creative artists themselves.  According to the site, &#8220;Eighty-five percent of  recordings released don’t even generate enough revenue  to cover their costs. Record companies depend heavily  on the profitable fifteen percent of recordings to subsidize  the less profitable types of music, to cover the costs  of developing new artists, and to keep their businesses operational. The thieves often don’t focus on the  eighty-five percent; they go straight to the top and steal  the gold.&#8221;  Presumably, the file sharers, then, can have the dreck from the bottom 85; just don&#8217;t steal the good stuff. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p16">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p17"></a>
	The RIAA site goes on to say, &#8221; Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the creative  artists lose [because of piracy]. Musicians, singers, songwriters and  producers don’t get the royalties and fees they’ve  earned. Virtually all artists (95%) depend on these fees  to make a living.&#8221;  Indeed.  Yet industry record contracts are notoriously onerous, as Nirvana&#8217;s producer Steve Albini outlines in vivid detail in <a href="http://www.negativland.com/albini.html">this essay</a> posted at <a href="huwww.negativland.com">Negativland.com</a>. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p17">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p18"></a>
	Albini describes the typical experience of a band producing material that would fit in the record industry&#8217;s bottom 85% of recordings.  After laying out a balance sheet that shows just where the money goes, Albini concludes, &#8220;The band is now 1/4 of the way through its contract, has made the music industry more than 3 million dollars richer, but is in the hole $14,000 on royalties. The band members have each earned about 1/3 as much as they would working at a 7-11, but they got to ride in a tour bus for a month.&#8221;  I challenge you to read Albini&#8217;s full article and then tell me that the RIAA is really worried about how much money the artists might lose to file sharing. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p18">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p19"></a>
	By the way, I love this quote at the bottom of the RIAA&#8217;s anti-piracy page.  &#8220;As  recording artist &#8220;Tool&#8221; noted, &#8220;Basically,  it&#8217;s about music&#8212;if you didn&#8217;t create it, why should you exploit it?&#8221;  Tool, of course, was talking about fans.  I&#8217;m sure the recording industry didn&#8217;t intend the irony. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p19">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p20"></a>
	Look, I&#8217;m not against the record companies making money.  I can even see their point that it&#8217;s probably better for almost everyone if there&#8217;s a healthy industry investing in R&#38;D, discovering artists and consolidating the costs of distribution and delivery of product.  But the industry&#8217;s knee-jerk reaction to online file sharing has been so convulsive that I&#8217;m afraid they&#8217;re missing a grand opportunity to make the production and consumption of music better and more profitable for everyone. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p20">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p21"></a>
	Here&#8217;s the thing: according to a <a href="huwww.unc.edu/~cigar/papers/FileSharing_March2004.pdf">recent study</a> (PDF), it seems that file sharing statistically has zero effect on music consumption.  Another <a href="http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/archives/000573.html">study</a> even suggests that people who use the Internet buy more CDs.  And <a href="http://www.sfbg.com/38/22/lit_copyright.html">this article</a> suggests that publishing work under less-restrictive licenses hasn&#8217;t hurt the authors who&#8217;ve tried it.  And <a href="http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,1558,1563818,00.asp">this author</a>, like me, has stopped buying CDs in protest. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p21">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p22"></a>
	And what has been the RIAA&#8217;s response?  Well, their website contains no response to these studies and lists no evidence of their own to support their fervent pursuit of legal protection.  On its site, at least, the RIAA only admits that calculating the cost of file sharing is &#8220;difficult.&#8221; <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p22">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p23"></a>
	It seems to me that the RIAA is missing a golden moment to use the new technology to benefit artists, producers <em>and</em> consumers.  Indeed, the industry already quietly uses certain services which piggyback on P2P software to measure consumer interest in current music offerings.  By fully and openly embracing file sharing, the industry could profit handsomely. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p23">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p24"></a>
	What if record companies offered their entire catalogs of music online on their own servers?  By charging reasonable access fees, the industry could make a low-cost music library available to everyone, a cultural contribution which would rival the creation of the great libraries of the world.   By reducing prices, the industry could drive sales ever higher, while realizing greater profit through lower manufacturing and distribution costs.  The RIAA has access to a brand new method of promotion and distribution that they didn&#8217;t have to spend one dime to manufacture, yet they are killing the Golden Goose.  Record companies are willing to leave a gift of immense magnitude on the table in order to maintain a few more years of life as they know it. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p24">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p25"></a>
	And a few more years is likely all they&#8217;ll have if they can&#8217;t learn to change with the times.  Countless other industries have met a similar fate during periods of technological revolution, and this revolution will be even faster and more sweeping than ever before.  With tens of millions of users in this country searching for new ways to experience music, P2P as we know it will go the way of the Dodo and some new method of sharing music will spring to the forefront, making the current fuss irrelevant. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p25">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p26"></a>
	In fact one <a href="http://www.downhillbattle.org/itmsscript/index.html">such method</a> with the potential to give the music consumer greater power is currently under development.  It&#8217;s a service that could offer highly detailed song information, including whether the distribution company for a song is a member of the RIAA.  With better access to information, perhaps people will actively choose to <a href="http://www.riaaradar.com/">intentionally withhold money</a> from the recording industry in a much more effective way than they currently do, adding injury to insult by routing their dollars to more friendly organizations. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p26">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p27"></a>
	The RIAA has also been dealt a series of legal setbacks, which should raise a red flag in the organization that maybe they&#8217;re on the wrong side of this issue.  A Canadian judge, in a <a href="http://www.boingboing.net/2004/03/31/canadas_riaa_cant_pr.html">case involving</a> the RIAA&#8217;s sister organization in that country, denied a motion to reveal the names of alleged file swappers, noting that the existence of P2P programs is no different than putting a copy machine in the middle of a library of copyrighted material.  And just today the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals <a href="http://www.corante.com/copyfight/archives/003214.html">ruled that</a> fair use applies even to material that has originally been obtained illegally. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p27">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p28"></a>
	The struggle for control, the fight to maintain an old system of power, is one that the recording industry simply cannot win.  Prohibitions have never worked.  Suing your customers and creating a criminal class out of your biggest pool of consumers can only breed more virulent forms of protest.  So great is the desire for free choice and free access&#8212;ie. <a href="huwww.gnu.org">free as in freedom</a>, not <ins>free as in beer</ins>&#8212;that the people will not give it up.  The only question is how many casualties we&#8217;ll see before the bloody war is over. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p28">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p29"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/music-is-hell/#p29">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Pillars of parchment that hold up an entire nation</title>
		<link>http://www.stumax.com/pillars-of-parchment-that-hold-up-an-entire-nation/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stumax.com/pillars-of-parchment-that-hold-up-an-entire-nation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Mar 2004 16:46:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stumax</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Freedom Matters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stumax.com/?p=118</guid>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p0"></a>	If you&#8217;re ever interested in exploring the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and other of our nation&#8217;s important historical documents, head over to <a title="NARA | The National Archives Experience" href="http://www.archives.gov/national_archives_experience/charters.html">NARA | The National Archives Experience</a>.  There you&#8217;ll find high-resolution images of our national charters, along with plain-text transcriptions and essays on their development and meaning. <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/pillars-of-parchment-that-hold-up-an-entire-nation/#p0">#</a><p class="winerlinks-enabled"><a name="p1"></a><ul class="related_post"><li>No Related Post</li></ul> <a ref="permalink" title="Permalink to this paragraph" class="winerlink" href="http://www.stumax.com/pillars-of-parchment-that-hold-up-an-entire-nation/#p1">#</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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