• Socialist Seattle cracks down on renters, free speech - and common sens

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@1:229/2 to All on Sunday, June 10, 2018 19:01:46
    XPost: alt.politics.usa.constitution, alt.politics.socialism.democratic, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: misc.survivalism, sac.politics, misc.survivalism
    From: leroysoetoro@hrc-rejected.com

    http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2018/06/08/seattle-cracks-down-on-renters- free-speech-and-common-sense-good-luck-trying-to-rent- apartment.html?intcmp=ob_article_footer_text&intcmp=obnetwork

    The Seattle City Council seems to think the right to speak is a privilege
    it can grant or withhold at its pleasure. It has slapped a year-long ban
    on the use of certain housing websites that allow renters to place bids on advertised rental housing, while it reviews the sites.

    Officials say they fear the sites might violate local housing laws or
    inflate housing costs, so the City Council wants to study the sites while forbidding their use in the meantime. While city leaders try to figure
    things out, landlords are barred from posting ads on the sites, and
    renters can’t even do a simple search for Seattle housing on the sites.

    This is a clear restriction of speech protected by the First Amendment of
    the U.S. Constitution. Pacific Legal Foundation, representing a website
    called Rentberry and a small-time landlord, recently filed a lawsuit to
    raise this claim.
    The City Council will likely try to portray the website ban as modest and temporary, as if it is just pressing the “pause” button. But in fact, the
    City Council has resurrected a frightening government power – the power to censor speech until the government has decided to approve it.

    In First Amendment parlance, a law that forces speakers to receive
    government approval in advance of speaking (including publishing) is
    called a prior restraint – the most insidious form of government speech restriction.

    In 17th century England, for instance, anyone who wanted to publish a book
    or a pamphlet had to get the government’s permission from the royal
    Stationers’ Company. John Milton famously broke that rule in 1643 by
    publishing a pamphlet without asking for permission that called for the legalization of divorce.

    When scandalized officials called for the pamphlet to be censored and
    burned, Milton published another unapproved pamphlet called the
    “Areopagitica,” one of the greatest defenses of free speech ever written. Milton conceded that cultivating virtue was vital, “yet God commits the managing so great a trust, without particular Law or prescription, wholly
    to the demeanour of every grown man.”

    In other words, we’re all adults here – we’re just as wise or virtuous as
    the clucking politicians who would censor us for our own good.

    Our own Supreme Court has long frowned on prior restraints, and the prior restraints it has struck down share much in common with the website ban.

    In one case, an anti-Semitic tabloid lambasted a public official, who then
    sued to have the tabloid declared a “public nuisance.” The trial court
    issued a temporary restraining order to bar the tabloid from publishing
    until the court decided whether it was a nuisance or not.

    And in the famous Pentagon Papers case, the government sought to put a temporary halt on publishing secret Defense Department documents because
    the publication might endanger national interests.

    In both these cases, the government wanted to place a temporary hold on
    speech while it determined whether the speech was harmful. The Supreme
    Court’s position was firm – government couldn’t just hold speech hostage “predicated upon surmise or conjecture that untoward consequences may
    result.”

    The Seattle City Council dallies with the same unconstitutional pattern
    here; it wants to place a hold on use of websites – based on nothing but speculation and suspicion that these sites might be bad.

    We’ve been here before.
    The government’s behavior toward Milton or the Pentagon Papers may seem
    more oppressive than requiring pre-approval for a commercial website. But
    we enter dangerous territory when we let government decide what speech is worthy of protection and what speech isn’t.

    Certainly, Milton’s controversial pamphlet advocating legal divorce
    carries more gravity than a landlord posting an ad for a townhouse in
    Seattle. But speech is speech. And no one needs the government’s
    permission to speak.

    The message behind this website ban – whether the Seattle City Council
    realizes it or not – is that the Council members believe people are not
    free to speak until the City Council says they can.

    This is a distressing revival of ghosts that we long ago thought
    vanquished. The City Council’s conceit might be cured by a healthy dose of modesty. And perhaps a lesson in constitutional history.


    --
    Donald J. Trump, 304 electoral votes to 227, defeated compulsive liar in
    denial Hillary Rodham Clinton on December 19th, 2016. The clown car
    parade of the democrat party ran out of gas and got run over by a Trump
    truck.

    Congratulations President Trump. Thank you for cleaning up the disaster
    of the Obama presidency.

    Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
    The World According To Garp.

    ObamaCare is a total 100% failure and no lie that can be put forth by its supporters can dispute that.

    Obama jobs, the result of ObamaCare. 12-15 working hours a week at minimum wage, no benefits and the primary revenue stream for ObamaCare. It can't
    be funded with money people don't have, yet liberals lie about how great
    it is.

    Obama increased total debt from $10 trillion to $20 trillion in the eight
    years he was in office, and sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood queer
    liberal democrat donors.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)