Sunday, February 26, 2012

February 26, 2012

My signs that I have with me by the sides of main roads and near highway exits and entrances have the following messages on them:

SHATTUCK
CONGRESS

OCCUPY
BACHUS

Fight D.C. Corruption.
Amend the 1st Amendment.

What is your answer, Mr. Bachus?
(this is companion sign with preceding sign)

I need 7000 signatures by March 13th.

SHATTUCK for Congress.
Info:  @retire_Bachus

Please sign ballot access petition.
@retire_Bachus

My main station has been the vacant area next to the 280 turn off to Target.  I have also covered during rush hours the University Avenue exit from I65, the University Avenue entrance to I65, the 3rd Avenue exit from I65, the 23rd Street entrance to I20 East, the 3rd Avenue entrance to 31, and the Second Avenue exit from 31.  I have also been at 31 and Hollywood Blvd. corner and the Valley Avenue and 21 Street corner.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

February 11, 2012

I spent the past week displaying my signs at road and street intersections and near highway entrances and exits.  My main sign said "Shattuck for Congress.  Sign up @retire_Bachus."  At the end of the week I added a sign that said "Please sign ballot access petition. @retire_Bachus."

I learned about 23 CFR 1.23(b) of the Code of Federal Regulations, which provides:

(b) Use for highway purposes. Except as provided under paragraph (c) of this section, all real property, including air space, within the right-of-way boundaries of a project shall be devoted exclusively to public highway purposes. No project shall be accepted as complete until this requirement has been satisfied. The State highway department shall be responsible for preserving such right-of-way free of all public and private installations, facilities or encroachments, except (1) those approved under paragraph (c) of this section; (2) those which the Administrator approves as constituting a part of a highway or as necessary for its operation, use or maintenance for public highway purposes and (3) informational sites established and maintained in accordance with ? 1.35 of the regulations in this part.
I obtained a copy of a letter, dated January 12, 2012, from Mark D. Bartlett, P.E., Alabama Division Administrator to Mr. John R. Cooper, Director of the Alabama Department of Transportation, concerning political signs on highway right of way, saying that political signs are not an approved use under 23 CFR 1.23(b).

I was told by Mr. Don Crow, an Assistant Permit Manager in the Third Division of District 5 of the Alabama Department of Transportation, that some Ron Paul supporters standing with signs on the side of Highway 280 were told by the Alabama Department of Transportation that their activity was not permitted and they were told to remove themselves from where they were standing.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Watch out!

The 2012 Movement could get out of control.  I received the below email from the Florida Tea Party last night.

From: FLORIDA TEA PARTY - Not the Fake Political Party! <mail@floridateaparty.ning.com>
Date: Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 11:55 PM
Subject: Alert: Bill Pending to Destroy the US Constitution
To: "rdshattuck@gmail.com" <rdshattuck@gmail.com>

A message to all members of FLORIDA TEA PARTY - Not the Fake Political Party!

A BILL IS CALLING FOR THE CONGRESS OF THE U.S. TO CALL A CONVENTION TO AMEND THE U.S. CONSTITUTION

The proposal for a second Constitutional Convention (Con-Con) promoted by so-called conservatives, would likely result in a runaway convention in which extremist or revolutionary elements could high jack the convention and alter the Constitution to include harmful amendments, such as “second generation” or “positive” socialist rights while curtailing our nation’s traditional negative rights that protect our liberties from the government.
Stop Florida Con-Con Call
On Tuesday, January 10, 2012 House Concurrent Resolution 8005, was introduced to the Florida State House of Representatives. Bill HCR 8005 applies for the Congress of the United States to call a convention for proposing an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to provide for a balanced budget amendment (BBA).
Balanced Federal Budget Amendment; Urges Congress to call convention for purpose of proposing amendment to U.S. Constitution to achieve & maintain balanced federal budget.
Location: In committee/council (SAC)
Last Action: 01/30/2012 Referred to State Affairs Committee; Rules and Calendar Committee -HJ 309
Related Bills:  H 499  and S 1142 also propose an amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
However noble this proposed amendments to the U.S. Constitution may be in its attempt to balance the federal budget, grant the President the power of a line-item veto, and the adoptions of budgets to be submitted and adopted every two years rather than every year, the calling of a general Article V convention is not the proper route that should be taken to make or propose such an amendment to the Constitution.
The last time that such a convention was convened was in Philadelphia in 1787 when General George Washington, James Madison, and the various delegates from the thirteen United States assembled to propose amendments to the Articles of Confederation — the law of the land at the time.
Although called to strengthen and centralize the national government, the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 was convened to amend the Articles of Confederation rather than replace them. We were lucky then, seeing as the convention resulted in such an excellent Constitution. We were also fortunate to have had enlightened statesmen and drafters, such as James Madison, who understood the Lockean virtues and principles of individual liberty and limited government. Looking back, who among us today comes close to exemplifying the virtues of our Founding Fathers?
The answer is too few and far between, if any at all. The proposal for a second Constitutional Convention (Con-Con) promoted by so-called conservatives, would likely result in a runaway convention in which extremist or revolutionary elements could high jack the convention and alter the Constitution to include harmful amendments, such as “second generation” or “positive” socialist rights while curtailing our nation’s traditional negative rights that protect our liberties from the government.
What we need is not for the States to revise the Constitution, but rather to restore and enforce it as our Founding Fathers originally intended (for more information, click here for a free PDF article download).

Monday, January 30, 2012

Gingrich emailing

Over this weekend, I did a lot of emailing of the following email message in our Birmingham metropolitan area:

Subj: Gingrich and amending the First Amendment
To Whom It May Concern:

Newt Gingrich is now the poster boy in Florida for the evil of influence peddling and a symbol of the culture of corruption in Washington DC.

There is a movement afoot that has concluded Congress and the United States Supreme Court cannot and/or will not fix the corrupt political system on their own, and the people need to rise up and force Congress to amend the First Amendment so that it applies only to human beings; and that is the only way for the American people to reclaim their government.

Both the Republicans and the Democrats have their pyramidic structures. Those at the top of the pyramids (the politicians; the CEO's, union leaders, non-profit and government agency heads, etc., of the special interests; and the Washington lobbyists) profit stupendously from the corruption. Those lower down and most ordinary citizens are net losers from the corruption. The tops of the pyramids are very happy to divide up the spoils and don't want those lower down in their two pyramds (or from outside the pyramids) to unite and overthrow the tops of the pyramids. Thus, the tops keep the lower downs embattled, one side against the other.

The movement to amend the First Amendment would like Florida voters to question the Republican contenders about their views on the culture of corruption in Washington and amending the First Amendment as a solution. The Republican contenders are operating at the top of the Republican pyramid, the movement to amend is just starting to push from the grassroots up, and the movement is not going to get much recognition this week in Florida.

Nonetheless, the movement to amend wishes to try to utilize the national attention focused on Florida this week to continue to publicize in all parts of the country the case for amending the First Amendment.

Thank you.

Sincerely,
Rob Shattuck
Birmingham, Alabama, organizer for Move To Amend
Independent candidate for Congress in the Alabama 6th district (link)

Friday, January 27, 2012

Smith WSJ editorial

  • The Wall Street Journal
  • JANUARY 22, 2012, 6:16 P.M. ET

The War on Political Free Speech

Two years after the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling, the campaign to silence opponents is becoming more censorious.

Two years ago the Supreme Court upheld the right of an incorporated nonprofit organization to distribute, air and advertise a turgid documentary about Hillary Clinton called, appropriately enough, "Hillary: The Movie." From this seemingly innocuous and obvious First Amendment decision has sprung a campaign of disinformation and alarmism rarely seen in American politics.
From the start, reaction to Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission has bordered on the hysterical. Rep. Alan Grayson (D., Fla.) called it the "worst decision since Dred Scott"—the 1857 decision holding that slaves could never become citizens. In his State of the Union message, within days of the ruling, President Obama lectured Supreme Court justices in attendance that they had "reversed a century of law" to allow "foreign companies to spend without limit in our elections." Neither statement was true.
In 1907, Congress passed a law—the Tillman Act, named for segregationist South Carolina Sen. "Pitchfork" Ben Tillman—prohibiting corporations from contributing to political campaigns. This law was extended to unions in 1943, and in 1947 a provision of the Taft-Hartley Act extended the prohibition to cover spending done independently of campaigns.
Citizens United overturned only the 1947 independent-spending restriction, not the earlier prohibition on corporate contributions to campaigns. Not until 1990 did the Supreme Court uphold a prohibition on corporate political expenditures independent of campaigns. Citizens United, therefore, overturned not "a century of law," but a precedent 20 years old.
Moreover, the court specifically noted that it was not ruling on the viability of the prohibition on foreign political spending—and earlier this month it summarily upheld a lower-court ruling finding that the prohibition on foreign political expenditures was constitutional.
Meanwhile, regardless of the 1947 federal law, the majority of states—including many of the best governed, scandal-free states such as Virginia, Utah, Oregon, Florida and Washington—have long allowed unlimited corporate spending in state elections.
None of this has slowed the decision's critics. Then-Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.) began a committee hearing in September 2010 by arguing that in his small state, "it's easy to imagine corporate interests flooding the airwaves. . . . The rights of Vermonters . . . to be heard should not be undercut by corporate spending." Vermont has never prohibited corporate spending in state elections, yet it survived with its citizens' rights intact.
Mr. Leahy, at least, limited himself to foolish remarks. His junior colleague, Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.), proposed a constitutional amendment last month that would not only prohibit corporations from speaking on political elections, but would prohibit any group of citizens organized "to promote business interests" from speaking about elections. Presumably, this could extend to everyone from the Heritage Foundation and the National Federation of Independent Business to the Republican National Committee and local citizens organizing against a sales-tax referendum.
Because most newspapers are incorporated, UCLA law Prof. Eugene Volokh believes that the Sanders Amendment and a companion bill in the House would even authorize the government to prohibit newspaper editorials about elections.
A national coalition, Move to Amend, seeks a constitutional amendment providing that "artificial entities, such as corporations, limited liability companies, and other entities . . . shall have no rights." The coalition seems oblivious to the fact that this would apply to campaign committees and nonprofits such as the NAACP and the Sierra Club, and would allow legislatures to make the advocacy of Move to Amend's goals illegal for most of the coalition's "endorsing organizations" (which are themselves corporations).
These amendments are based on the leftist cry that "corporations aren't people," but the Supreme Court has never said that they are. "Corporate personhood" is a legal fiction that allows natural people to sue and to be sued, to own and transfer property, and to carry on their affairs as a group. Corporations have rights because the people who own them have rights.
As Chief Justice John Marshall explained nearly 200 years ago in Dartmouth College v. Woodward, corporations allow "a perpetual succession of many persons . . . to manage [their] affairs and to hold property without the perplexing intricacies, the hazardous and endless necessity, of perpetual conveyances for the purpose of transmitting it from hand to hand." The legal concept of a corporate "person" has been with the United States since its founding, recognized in literally hundreds of Supreme Court decisions.
If Move to Amend got its way, police could search businesses, unions, clubs and nonprofits at will, without a warrant. The state could seize business property without due process or just compensation, leaving pension funds and individual shareholders holding worthless stock. Partnerships and corporations would have no legal rights in court. Incorporated churches would have no right of worship.
The absurdity should be obvious. Yet city councils around the country, including New York and Los Angeles, have passed resolutions calling for such an amendment.
Super PACs have become the latest villain du jour of the anti-speech crowd, which plays off the general public distaste for the political rancor that surfaces every election year. Critics including Mr. Sanders say that Super PACs don't disclose their donors and rely on "secret" money. This is simply not true. Super PACs, like the traditional political action committees that have existed for decades, disclose all expenditures and all donors over $200.
There are organizations that spend on politics but don't disclose their donors: traditional nonprofits such as the NAACP, the NRA and Public Citizen. These groups have never had to disclose their donors—and the Supreme Court, over 50 years ago, upheld their right to keep supporters anonymous. But reformers intentionally seek to blur the lines between these traditional groups and Super PACs in order to whip up criticism of Citizens United.
The goal of this misinformation is clear. Reformers, who sit mainly on the political left, and their Democratic Party allies hope to silence voices that they perceive to be hostile to their political interests.
Two years after Citizens United, American democracy seems as robust as ever. This may be what its critics fear most—a vibrant debate that they cannot control and fear they will lose.
The U.S. government argued in Citizens United that it had the right to ban the publication of books, pamphlets and movies that advocated the election or defeat of a candidate if they were produced or distributed by unions or corporations, such as Random House, Barnes & Noble and DreamWorks. That position is the one that deserves scorn. Fortunately, no new amendment was needed to defeat it—only the First Amendment and a Supreme Court willing to uphold it.
Mr. Smith, who served as commissioner of the Federal Election Commission from 2000 to 2005, is chairman of the Center for Competitive Politics and professor of law at Capital University.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

WSJ editorial comment

I posted on this Wall Street Journal online webpage the below comment concerning a January 22, 2012 editorial entitled "The War on Political Free Speech," by Bradley Smith:

[text of posted comment]


How about the below as a campaign financing system?


Only human beings can make campaign contributions to candidates. There would be no dollar amount limits on such campaign contributions. There would no "bundling" allowed, and all contributions would be required to be made on the donor's credit card or by check mailed to the candidate or by cash given against a written receipt. Subject to possible provisions for allowing anonymous contributions to candidates (discussed below), names and addresses of donors, and amounts of contributions would be posted promptly on the internet. It would be a felony for a human being to receive compensation or payment from a corporation pursuant to an understanding that the employee or other natural person would make a campaign contribution to a candidate.

There needs to be debate about whether a human being should be able to make campaign contributions on an anonymous basis. There can be legitimate concern about retaliation by other members of society who disagree with what the donor's objectives are in making his or her contribution, and there can even be concern about retaliation by lawmakers and governmental regulators against donors by reason of their campaign contribution. To address this concern, there could be a governmental Campaign Contribution Remittance Agency, which would receive campaign contributions from human beings who would be identified in the confidential records of the agency and would pass along the contribution to the identified candidate accompanied by such statement of purpose of the contribution as the human being wished to make. The amount of the contribution, the candidate it is for, and the statement in question would be posted on the internet.

No dollar amount limit on campaign contributions by human beings does mean that there will not be equal free speech. Human beings with more money can make larger campaign contributions and it can be expected that candidates will pay more attention to what those human beings are saying than to other human beings making small contributions.

Congress regulates the campaign and electioneering speech of corporations and other entities and has a "Truth in Political Speech" law that says corporations and other entities, in their speech, shall not say anything that is false or misleading or fail to state a material fact that a voter or a lawmaker or other target of the speech would consider relevant in making a voting or other decision based on or taking account of the statements that the corporation makes in its electioneering speech. This is a well known standard that is used in the securities laws that in the selling of stocks, bonds and other securities in order for investors not to be misled or deceived in making their decisions to buy the investments in question. Much effort goes into making sure that information in offering documents is accurate and truthful.

In the securities law, there are "forward looking statements" that are based on management’s expectations, estimates, projections, and assumptions, and that the securities law requires to be made in ways that keep in front of the investor the uncertainties that attend expectations or projections about future events. As a result, such statements are accompanied by caveats saying that actual future results and trends may differ materially from what is forecast. This could have analogous application in electioneering speech of corporations and other entities.

Candidates and other human beings would not be subject to this truthfulness standard concerning their political speech. There could, however, result in significant improvement of the political speech of candidates and other human beings if corporations and other entities were making electioneering speech that was subject to the truthfulness standard. Candidates could then questioned about their statements by reference to the electioneering speech that is subject to the truthfulness standard, i.e, "You candidate X say doing this (e.g., a $100 billion stimulus program will reduce unemployment by 1% point). What support for your statement can you point to in the electioneering speech of a corporation or other entity that is subject to the truthfulness standard that lines up with what you say. If you can't, why should we voters believe what you say or even think that you yourself believe it?"

Subject to the above truthfulness standard, corporations and other non-human being entities could expend funds to advertise their positions on laws and other governmental mattes that affect their economic interests and to urge employees, customers and others (who are human beings) to make campaign contributions to specified candidates. All such advertising and communications shall identify the corporation, etc., expending the funds, and there shall be filing of reports and posting on internet about such expenditure of funds and activities.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Florida primary week

I am working with Move To Amend's Florida organizers to to try to take advantage this week of the national attention on Florida in order to try to publicize to the grassroots in Florida the movement to amend the Constitution.

This is the form of email I am pushing for use in Florida

Subject: Gingrich and amending the First Amendment:
To Whom It May Concern:
Newt Gingrich is now the poster boy in Florida for the evil of influence peddling and a symbol of the culture of corruption in Washington DC.
There is a movement afoot that has concluded Congress and the United States Supreme Court cannot and/or will not fix the corrupt political system on their own, and the people need to rise up and force Congress to amend the First Amendment so that it applies only to human beings; and that is the only way for the American people to reclaim their government. 
Both the Republicans and the Democrats have their pyramidic structures.  Those at the top of the pyramids (be they the politicians; the Presidents, CEO's, chairpersons, and other leaders of the special interests; or the Washington lobbyists) profit stupendously from the corruption.  Those lower down and most ordinary citizens are net losers from the corruption.  The tops of the pyramids are very happy to divide up the spoils and don't want those lower down in their two pyramds (or from outside the pyramids) to unite and overthrow the tops of the pyramids.  Thus, the tops keep the lower downs embattled, one side against the other.
The movement to amend the First Amendment would like Florida voters to question the Republican contenders about their views on the culture of corruption in Washington and amending the First Amendment as a solution.  The Republican contenders are operating at the top of the Republican pyramid, the movement to amend is just starting to push from the grassroots up, and the movement is not going to get much recognition this week in Florida.
Nonetheless, the movement to amend wishes to try to utilize the national attention focused on Florida this week to press the movement's case for amending the First Amendment.  This email is being sent to you in that vein.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
The above has been emailed to Lee County Democrats, several Florida Tea Party groups, and Florida GOOOH district contacts.

Other suggested forms of communication will be posted as they are developed.