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Parental Rights Amendment Introduced

A proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would preserve the longstanding traditional right of parents to direct the upbringing and education of their children was introduced last week in the U.S. Congress.

Lead sponsor Trent Franks (R-AZ) was joined by 32 cosponsors in introducing House Joint Resolution 110 in the House. The Senate version, Senate Joint Resolution 42, was led by Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC) and had 9 cosponsors at its introduction.

“We must protect the liberty of parents to direct the upbringing and education of their children,” DeMint declared. “Unfortunately, parental rights are under attack, and a safeguard like this amendment is necessary. Neither the federal government nor international law should micromanage how parents are able to raise their children. Parents are best equipped to decide how their children are raised and educated, not bureaucrats from Washington and the United Nations.”

Supporters anticipate a congressional hearing on the measure, given lead sponsor Trent Franks’ position as chairman of the Constitution Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, to which the House version will be assigned.

“In my three decades of public service, I have consistently focused on protecting the right of parents to make decisions for their children,” Congressman Franks says. “Put simply, there are really only two options when it comes to who will determine the substance of a child’s education: it will be either a bureaucrat who doesn’t know the child’s name, or a parent who would pour out their last drop of blood for the child.

“I intend to continue that fight in my role as Chairman of the Constitution Subcommittee, doing everything in my power to help advance the vital Parental Rights Amendment through Congress. Nothing is more important to America’s future than making sure that the education of the hearts and minds of our children is securely in the purview of the parents who love and understand them most.”

This marks the third straight session of Congress in which the PRA has been introduced, and support for the measure is growing. “The PRA had 141 cosponsors in the House during the last session of Congress, but we expect to see even more support this time around,” says Michael Farris, president of ParentalRights.org, which organizes grassroots efforts for the amendment.

“The Supreme Court has accurately said that parental rights are ‘perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized by [the] Court,’ yet those rights now lack sufficient legal protection under the Constitution,” Farris continues. “Thanks to concerned citizens and engaged leaders in Congress, we look forward to correcting that problem through the adoption of this amendment.”

For more information on the proposed amendment, visit ParentalRights.org online.

What Do the Wisconsin Governor Recall Results Mean for Ohio?

By Kevin Holtsberry

This is a question a lot of people are asking themselves in light of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s strong victory in the recall election Tuesday night. I offered some thoughts and reactions for ABC 6/Fox 28 here in Columbus yesterday (you can watch the video here).

I think one easy takeaway is that the basics still matter. Fundraising, voter turnout systems, a highly motivated base and a favorable calendar all still matter. Governor Walker raised a lot of money, motivated his supporters and ran a disciplined and effective campaign that won the turnout battle. He also had the added benefit of running on his record a year after the legislation passed and against a specific opponent.

But I also think the recall sends the message that public sector unions are not invincible. No matter how you slice it a loss, is a loss, is a loss. When Governor Walker embarked on the fundamental reforms needed to get control of Wisconsin’s budget and plan for a sustainable future he ran smack into the implacable opposition of public sector unions and their allies. They immediately set about to overturn this necessary reform by removing Walker from office. Many assumed they would be successful.

But what Tuesday’s results showed is that this opposition can be weathered and ultimately defeated. Walker stood his ground, built a large coalition and network of support, and used that foundation to run a focused and strategic campaign that communicated what was at stake to persuadable citizens.

This is a lesson worth remembering. Nothing is inevitable.

Which is good news because, despite the lingering effects of Issue 2, Ohio’s structural problems are not going to go away. An outdated, industrial, big government economic model has led to stagnation and growth deficits.

  • A lack of worker freedom is still a drag on Ohio’s economy and has been sending jobs and citizens to the South and West for decades, in fact we lost 614,000 private sector jobs from 2000-2010, more than any other state in the country except Michigan;
  • A public sector compensation system based on tenure and political power rather than talent and success still drives an unsustainable budget process, and poor service delivery, from the local level up to the Statehouse;
  • Gold plated pension benefits, and a system where all the risk is on the taxpayer, have created $70 billion and counting in unfunded liabilities.
  • Ohio must begin to address these issues if it is to be competitive and avoid the crippling crisis griping governments from Illinois to California to Greece and Spain.

    The answer lies in a sustained education, communication and engagement process that helps Ohioans understand why reform is in their best interest and will lead to better lives for their families and businesses; it will mean more jobs, better services and stronger communities. And this effort will require building a broad based coalition from across the state to counter the still-powerful groups that insist on the status quo.

    We at the Buckeye Institute are committed to researching and communicating solutions to these fundamental problems. We are committed to working as part of a larger coalition to build support for reform and to counter the misrepresentation and fear mongering that so often is involved in these types of debates.

    We come to work everyday seeking ways to engage Ohio citizens and policy makers and to communicate the urgent need for reform. The events in Wisconsin prove that success is possible, that bold reform can succeed.

    Nothing is inevitable. We can win. We can increase freedom and opportunity in Ohio.

    It won’t be easy, change never is, but it is what we must do to put Ohio back on the path to growth and prosperity – to build a future for our children and grandchildren.

    —————

    Kevin Holtsberry is President of the Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions

    Madrid Family Confab Mixes Concern with Hope

    By Piero Tozzi, J.D.

    (PHOENIX, C-FAM) As pro-life and pro-family leaders from around the world gathered in Madrid over the last weekend in May for the Sixth World Congress of Families, the man of the hour was clearly Bishop Juan Antonio Reig Pla. The Spanish bishop’s plainspoken honesty regarding the destructiveness of homosexual acts in the months leading up to the Congress earned him the enmity of leftwing rights activists and a standing ovation from conference participants.

    Homosexual and leftist groups have sought Bishop Reig Pla’s criminal prosecution for a Good Friday homily where he listed a host of sins, including sodomy, that lead to spiritual death.

    As such, his case has become Exhibit A in a “clash of rights” pitting traditional “negative” liberties grounded in the natural law – in Reig Pla’s case, freedom of expression and religion – against nebulous, newly-fabricated “rights,” such as those based on “sexual orientation and gender identity” non-discrimination. As the bishop discovered, proponents of such novel “rights” increasingly call upon the State to force dissenters to acquiesce.

    A last minute scratch from a panel on religious liberty was Italian parliamentarian Rocco Buttiglione, who in 2004 ran afoul of the emerging “soft totalitarianism” of the Latex Left when his candidacy for the European Commission’s justice post was scuttled due to pressure from European “progressives” who claimed his religious affiliation disqualified him. Replacing him in a pick-up speech was Alliance Defense Fund President Alan Sears, who warned of the intensifying assault on religious liberty evident in the United States.

    Several other panels also addressed the clash of rights theme and increasing restrictions placed on civil liberties. Dr. Gudrun Kugler of the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians chaired a seminar on the use of “Hate Speech” and antidiscrimination laws to marginalize believers. Other panels addressed State attempts to limit parents’ rights to act as the primary educators of their children – a right explicitly acknowledged in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    Among the signs of hope, however, was the engagement of Russian civil society organizations and Orthodox prelates in the conference, signaling the revival of Christianity in what was once the Soviet heartland. While respect for basic civil liberties in Russia is still somewhat tenuous, as the once-free West slides towards criminalizing religious expression and banishing reference to objectively-grounded moral norms, once-Communist Russia appears to be on a reverse trajectory. At the United Nations in recent years, for example, Russia has put forward a series of “traditional values” resolutions to counter the libertine sexual agenda of Europe and the Obama Administration while calling attention to the folly of population control programs amid demographic implosion.

    Participants credited the Spanish hosts for successfully staging the Congress, singling out ringmaster Ignacio Arsuaga for particular praise in keeping multiple concurrent events running on schedule. Local and national Spanish government officials also welcomed the gathering, and pro-family Spanish politicians such as European Parliamentarian Jaime Mayor Oreja were key participants.

    Current Spanish policy under Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy contrasts starkly with that of his predecessor, Socialist Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. Zapatero’s government aggressively “worked to subvert the natural family,” in the words of the Declaration issued at the conclusion of the Congress.

    The next World Congress of Families will be held in Sydney, Australia, in May 2013.

    Piero Tozzi is a Senior Fellow at the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute (C-FAM), whose article first appeared in the Friday Fax, an internet report published weekly by C-FAM, a New York and Washington DC-based research institute (http://www.c-fam.org/). This article appears with permission.

    Governor Kasich Stands for Health Care for Women and Their Unborn Children

    Governor John Kasich approved a new policy Tuesday that will grant pregnant women in need earlier access to Medicaid, making it easier to receive prenatal care. A faster route to coverage will now be offered to women for whom a lack of prenatal care could threaten the life of her unborn child.

    “Governor Kasich has consistently displayed his dedication to expectant mothers and their unborn children and this is an extension of that commitment to life,” said Mike Gonidakis, President of Ohio Right to Life. “This is a great display of how the state can provide health care options to women and empower them to become strong mothers of healthy babies.”

    Under current policy, women who are likely to be eligible for Medicaid can receive services for 60 days while they wait for their Medicaid application to be processed, but the request often takes the majority of that time to be approved, leaving the mother without adequate support.

    Governor Kasich’s new policy will eliminate the requirement for pregnant women and children to apply at the county job and family services office and allow them to instead receive approval directly through their health care provider. Children’s hospitals, federally qualified health centers, community action agencies and other
    providers will now be able to address the needs of expectant mothers more quickly.

    Ohio Right to Life commends Governor John Kasich for his unwavering support of mothers and children, and supports him in his effort to defend life.

    Europe, the Global Economic Outlook and the U.S.

    By Raymond J. Keating

    In its latest economic outlook published on May 25, the OECD is projecting further economic under-performance in the U.S. and among other developing nations in general.

    The OECD says that the global economy is “gaining momentum,” but that “the recovery is fragile, extremely uneven across different regions.”

    It’s forecasted that the Euro area will barely grow at 0.1% in 2012 and 0.9% in 2013. As for Japan, real GDP is expected to grow by 2% in 2012 and 1.5% in 2013.

    Meanwhile, in the U.S., the OECD forecasts that real GDP will grow at 2.4% in 2012 and 2.6% in 2013.

    It is crucial to remind ourselves that real GDP growth during economic recoveries in U.S. should be growing at better than 4%, and that even counting periods of recession, real annual GDP growth has averaged 3.3 percent post-World War II. So, if the OECD is right, this under-performing recovery is expected to labor on for the foreseeable future.

    Where is the uncertainty in the OECD outlook? It is stated in the report, “Risks around the projection are extensive and predominantly on the downside…”

    And what is the key downside risk? According to OECD Chief Economist Pier Carlo Padoan, “The crisis in the euro zone remains the single biggest downside risk facing the global outlook.”

    In the report’s accompanying statement, it was explained: “In Europe, business and household confidence is weak, financial markets are tight and the adverse impacts of fiscal consolidation on near-term growth may be significant, particularly in countries hardest hit by the euro crisis… Recovery in the healthier economies, while welcome, is not strong enough to offset flat or negative growth elsewhere in Europe… The OECD warns that failure to act today could lead to a worsening of the European crisis and spillovers beyond the euro area, with serious consequences for the global economy.”

    There is no doubt that Europe is a mess; is having negative effects on other economies; and threatens to do further damage to global growth.

    But it’s also critical to acknowledge that European leaders don’t seem all that interested in dealing with the key issue restraining growth and generating debt woes, i.e., the size of government. Among the 27 EU nations, government spending sucked up 49.1 percent of GDP in 2011. That’s a growth strangling level of government. Until the size of government is reined in, Europe will remain, at best, a slow growth economy.

    As for the U.S., the same basic issue is restraining growth. Total (federal, state and local) government spending as a share of GDP hit 36.5 percent in 2009 and 35 percent in 2010. Such levels were never reached in the post-World War II era. And compare those levels to the 28.8 percent level in 2000, and 30.9 percent as recently as 2007.

    Throw into the U.S. mix, increased taxes, more regulation, a lack of leadership on trade and misguided monetary policy, and a deep recession and grossly under-performing recovery are not surprising.

    No reason exists why the U.S. should not be leading the global economy, and taking others along with us to higher levels of growth, that is, other than the fact that all the wrong policy moves have been made for the past four-and-a-half years.

    Raymond J. Keating is chief economist for the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council. His new book is “Chuck” vs. the Business World: Business Tips on TV.

    A Historic Win for Reform in Wisconsin

    By Mike Brownfield

    The state of Wisconsin has once again lived up to its billing as a Midwestern incubator of Big Ideas. In yesterday’s case, when voters resoundingly defeated a liberal effort to recall Governor Scott Walker (R), the Big Idea was that reformers who come armed with the strength of their convictions can carry the day–even against mobs, labor unions, Hollywood, the media, academia and everything else the left throws up these days. All reformers need to do is lead.

    In Walker’s case, his weapon in the fight against out-of-control government was a promise to the voters of Wisconsin that, were he entrusted with their vote, he would bring sweeping reforms to state government. One year ago, Governor Walker fulfilled that promise, and last night the voters rewarded him for his leadership by resoundingly rejecting an effort to remove him from power.

    It was a historic recall election that focused nationwide attention on what has become an existential threat to state governments — the problem of public-sector employee pensions and benefits running states into the red. Walker unabashedly confronted that threat without straddling a fence or tiptoeing around Big Labor’s Maginot Line. Facing a $3.6 billion deficit and the fourth highest tax burden in the country, Walker instituted policies designed to bring some sanity to state government. Those reforms included asking public sector workers to contribute a modest 5.8 percent of their salaries to their pensions and at least 12.6 percent of their health-care premiums while also limiting the collective bargaining power of public sector unions. (Even that is a small amount, as Heritage’s Jason Richwine shows in a new paper examining the true costs of public pensions.)

    Those moderate policies sent labor unions and their allies into full-on crisis mode. Tens of thousands of protesters stormed Wisconsin’s capitol last spring, Democratic state senators fled the state in hopes of blocking a vote on the measures, and lawsuits were filed to block the law from taking effect. Ultimately, Walker’s reforms were upheld, yet a massive effort to recall the governor was undertaken.

    In short order, a massive campaign to unseat Walker was launched. Unions poured millions of dollars into the race to attack the governor, President Barack Obama weighed in on the eve of the election (albeit timidly, with a Tweet) and endorsed Walker’s opponent, and grassroots armies descended on the state to turn out the vote. Yesterday, the voters of Wisconsin had an opportunity to examine the governor’s reforms and render a verdict on whether they approved of the direction he has taken their state.

    One of Governor Walker’s reforms included giving government workers the option to choose whether they wanted to pay union dues. When given the option, tens of thousands of members chose to leave the union. And according to exit polls, a third of union households backed Walker. But union leadership remains out of touch with the fiscal crisis Wisconsin, and our nation, faces. Yet as the people of Wisconsin know, Walker’s reforms have helped Wisconsin turn the corner. Since Walker took office, the state unemployment rate has fallen from 7.7 percent to 6.8 percent— well below the national average of 8.2 percent. And last year, Wisconsin employers actually created 23,000 jobs. In other words, Wisconsin’s economy is growing all while the rest of the country faces very troubled economic time.

    Walker’s victory will send shockwaves across the country. Last year, the governor took a strong stand for the proposition that public sector unions should not negotiate their taxpayer-funded benefits with politicians they helped elect using mandatory dues. And he also stood for reforms that curbed spending and got his state’s budget under control — without raising taxes. Despite facing a recall election, Walker was ultimately rewarded for a job well done.

    There have only been three gubernatorial recall elections in U.S. history, and Walker was the first one to survive the challenge. As Louisana Governor Bobby Jindal said last night on Fox News, “What Scott Walker has proved tonight is that good policy makes great politics.”

    Mike Brownfield is Assistant Director of Strategic Communications at The Heritage Foundation. He serves as editor of The Foundry, Heritage’s public policy news blog where this article originally published on June 6, 2012.

    Sermon on the Mount: Spiritual Food

    By Daniel Downs

    In my previous three posts, the relevance of the Sermon given by Jesus on Mount Gerezim was discussed. It is still important today because of God’s concern for both those who are spiritually and materially poor. The blessed are those who discover God and His welfare plan, which includes gaining a challenging yet comforting coach and divine rights to property. (See Sermon on the Mount: Any Relevance Today, From Weeping to Laughing, and Property Rights).

    Jesus also taught that spiritual food would produce a high quality of life. In this part of the sermon, Jesus focuses on the quality of life the blessed are expected to live. As recorded in the gospel of Matthew, he said:

    Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. (Mt. 5:6 NASB)

    Here Jesus uses metaphorical language. Just as natural it is to feel hunger pains. It is natural for the blessed of God to strongly desire the presence of God. In a world filled every kind of immorality and injustice as well as arguments to justify them, it is impossible for God’s people to be unaffected. Because of this reality, thirsting for God’s righteousness is as natural as thirsting for cold water amidst a scorching summer day. Within our daily struggle with unrighteousness and our seeking first His righteousness, we find the presence of God the enabling power to live the way of Christ.

    It is in this interactive relationship with God that His righteousness develops in us.

    Notice, however, Jesus did not say blessed are those who hunger and thirst for God’s presence. It is in seeking the righteousness of God that His presence is experienced. That is what Paul meant when he wrote:

    Therefore, being always of good courage, and knowing that while we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord— for we walk by faith, not by sight. (2 Cor. 5:6-7 NASB)

    Yet, one of the rewards of our faith is knowing God. A real relationship is not based on belief or faith alone but experiencing the presence of the other person. How can we have a relationship with another (i.e., parent, child, spouse, friend) without being with, communicating with, and doing things with the other person? It is no different with our heavenly Father. The obvious difference is physically seeing God, but waning of feelings is normal in all relationships.

    The calling of the prophets provides us with the best example. For many of the Hebrew prophets had visions and dreams in which saw and heard God is a tangible way. They saw, heard, and felt God in a physiological manner. Overtime their descriptions of received revelation were limited to hearing the voice or word of the Lord. The reason is the prophets like us live a spiritual life through the flesh in a physical world where God is not physically visible. Being satiated with the materiality of nature is the human norm. In order for God to acclimatize them to His presence and will, they had to become familiar with Him in a physical way. Once familiar with God, they only needed to perceive the words of His voice. They otherwise lived according by a commitment to God by faith.

    One important caveat is the fact that Jesus is God’s physical revelation of His nature and will for our life and future. There is no excuse for immorality, injustice, deception, or unbelief in God.

    Nevertheless, the promise to those who do belief and follow Jesus’ way of righteousness is fulfillment. God does keep His word. When we keep our part of the covenant, God will be able to fulfill His part. Because He does, our hunger and thirst for His righteous is satisfied. This is the same spiritual food Jesus ate (Jo. 4:24).

    Come, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters;
    and he who has no money, come, buy and eat!
    Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price.
    Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread,
    and your labor for that which does not satisfy?

    Listen diligently to me, and eat what is good,
    and delight yourselves in rich food.
    Incline your ear, and come to me;
    hear, that your soul may live….
    Isa. 55:1-3a (ESV)

    More on the Slaughtered Convert to Christianity

    By Raymond Ibrahim
    Jihad Watch
    June 5, 2012

    I just received an email from the editor of a large website, who posted my story from yesterday about the slaughtered apostate. He writes:

    The story generated a huge number of commentaries from readers, some of them originating from Muslim Countries. They harshly dispute and deny the veracity of the facts you mention in your paper. Some argue that this abomination did not take place in Tunisia—and I do believe so—but somewhere in Iraq, that the young man is not a Christian but a Shiite, that he was not slaughtered for apostasy but for being a spy of the Americans, and so on… It’s true that the facts are not properly documented : we don’t know even the date of this event, the place, the name of this unfortunate young man… Do you have any additional details and data to help answering ? Many thanks for your kind and urgent attention.

    I responded with a quick list of facts, which I repost here, enlarged and augmented, for anyone else interested:

    Fact 1: The Egyptian TV host, who recently aired this video—which went viral on the Arabic blogosphere on Sunday, when I wrote my report—said this occurred in Tunisia. Yes, others have subsequently said that this was in Iraq, others in Syria; but, from what people have sent me, the only “evidence” is the same video—but with a title that indicates Iraq or Syria. Personally, I am inclined to believe a formal Arabic current events program devoted to the topic than an anonymous Internet posting with no further details. Either way, the issue is less which country, and more why the man was slaughtered. Read on.

    Fact 2: The Muslim narrator who speaks while the man is being slaughtered specifically names and continually condemns “apostasy”—the crime of leaving Islam—and even calls the executed man an apostate, i.e., the man is being slaughtered for apostasy, a capital offence in Islam. If the world is not surprised that the actual “government” of a Muslim nation, Iran, is preparing to execute a man simply for converting to Christianity, are we supposed to be surprised when roaming bands of jihadis take it upon themselves to execute apostates to Christianity in their midst?

    Fact 3: The Muslim narrator specifically names and condemns al-mushrikin, and calls the executed man a mushrik—i.e., a “polytheist”; in fact, he calls him a mushrik murtadd, an “apostate to polytheism”: this is the standard appellation for Christians, who are regularly called polytheists for “associating” Jesus with God. Yes, there are other religions deemed polytheistic in Islam, such as Hinduism, but one rarely if ever hears of Muslims in the Middle East converting to, and dying for, Hinduism, whereas conversion to Christianity—with all the attendant consequences—is a regular occurrence. Moreover, the overwhelming majority of apostasy cases, from one end of the Muslim world to the other, cases of attacks, imprisonments, etc., deal with Muslim converts to Christianity (see my monthly Muslim Persecution of Christians reports for an idea).

    Fact 4: My contacts in the Middle East, many well-connected with the doings of the region, regularly see and hear of such things, and are confident that he was beheaded for converting to Christianity. The reader is free to hold their opinions as biased or subjective; but if so, why hold the protests of Muslim apologists, equally biased and subjective, as more authoritative, especially in light of history, doctrine, and ongoing current events, which support the former opinion?

    Fact 5: Muslim apologists always deny anything and everything that makes Islam look bad and will, naturally, try to put the best spin on this video—turning the victim into the aggressor, portraying him as a “traitor,” a “spy,” etc.—just like the Iranian regime, after unequivocally stating that Pastor Nadarkhani is to be executed for converting to Christianity, began backtracking by saying he is to be executed for being a “Zionist spy,” an “extortionist,” etc.

    At day’s end—and here is the most indisputable fact all apologists and detractors need contend with—we are left with a man having his head sliced off while his murderers scream Islamic slogans and accuse him of apostasy.

    Raymond Ibrahim is a Shilliman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

    Whatever Happened to Justice? Supreme Court OKs Police Tasering Pregnant Women

    By John W. Whitehead

    Once again, the United States Supreme Court has proven Clarence Darrow, a civil liberties attorney and long-time advocate for the Constitution, correct in his assertion that “there is no such thing as justice—in or out of court.” In meting out this particular miscarriage of justice, the Supreme Court recently refused to hear the case of a pregnant woman who was repeatedly tasered by Seattle police during a routine traffic stop simply because she refused to sign a speeding ticket.

    Malaika Brooks, 33 years old and seven months pregnant, was driving her 11-year-old son to school on a November morning in 2004, when she was pulled over for driving 32 mph in a 20 mph school zone. Instructing her son to walk the rest of the way to school, Malaika handed over her driver’s license to Officer Juan Ornelas for processing. However, when instructed to sign the speeding ticket—which the state inexplicably requires, Malaika declared that she wished to contest the charge, insisting that she had not done anything wrong and fearing that signing the ticket would signify an admission of guilt.

    What happened next is a cautionary tale for anyone who still thinks that they can defy a police officer, even if it’s simply to disagree about a speeding ticket. Rather than issuing a verbal warning to the clearly pregnant (and understandably emotional) woman, Officer Ornelas called for backup. Officer Donald Jones subsequently arrived and told Brooks to sign the ticket. Again she refused. The conversation became heated. The cops called in more backup. The next to arrive was Sergeant Steven Daman, who directed Brooks to sign the ticket, pointing out that if she failed to do so, she would be arrested and taken to jail. Again, Malaika refused.

    On orders from Sgt. Daman, Ornelas ordered a distraught Brooks to get out of the car, telling her she was “going to jail.” Malaika refused, and the second cop, Jones, responded by pulling out his taser electro-shock weapon, asking her if she knew what it was and warning her it would be used on her if she continued to resist. Brooks told him “No,” and then said, “I have to go to the bathroom, I am pregnant, I’m less than 60 days from having my baby.”

    Jones and Ornelas then proceeded to discuss how best to taser the pregnant woman and forcibly remove her from the car. One officer said, “Well, don’t do it in her stomach; do it in her thigh.” Opening the car door, Ornelas twisted Malaika’s arm behind her back. Desperate, Brooks held on tightly to the steering wheel, while Jones cycled the taser as a demonstration of its capacity to cause pain.

    With the taser in a “drive-stun” mode, Officer Jones then pressed the taser against Brooks’ thigh while Ornelas held her hand behind her back. Brooks, in obvious pain, began to cry and honk her car horn—hoping someone would help. Thirty-six seconds later, Ornelas pressed it into her left arm. Six seconds later, he again stunned her, this time on the neck. After being tasered numerous times, Brooks’ pregnant body eventually gave way. As Malaika fell over and out of the car, the officers dragged her onto the street, placing the pregnant woman face down on the pavement, handcuffing her and transporting her to jail.

    Unfortunately, this is where what happened to Malaika Brooks at the hands of the police—behavior that should be roundly condemned and prohibited—becomes yet another example of the cowardice of our justice system and the corrupt nature of life in a police state. Even though the Ninth Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals recognized that Malaika posed no threat to anyone, nor did she pose a physical threat to the officers, that none of her offenses were serious, and that officers clearly used “excessive force” against her, the justices granted qualified immunity to the officers—a ruling that the U.S. Supreme Court ostensibly upheld when it refused to hear the case. In doing so, the courts have essentially given police carte blanche authority when it comes to using tasers against American citizens.

    Indeed, this case highlights a growing trend in which police officers use tasers to force individuals into compliance in relatively non-threatening situations. Originally designed to restrain violent criminals, tasers are now used with impunity against individuals who pose no bodily harm to the police. Rowdy schoolchildren, the elderly, and mentally ill individuals are increasingly finding themselves on the receiving end of these sometimes lethal electroshock devices. Cops who have been shocked in the course of their training have described being tased as “the most profound pain,” and “like getting punched 100 times in a row.”

    While law enforcement advocates may suggest otherwise, these incongruous and excessive uses of force by the police are quickly becoming the rule, not the exception. A 2011 New York Civil Liberties Union report showed that of the eight police departments surveyed across the state, over 85 percent of taser uses occurred in cases where suspects were not armed. Incredibly, 40 percent of taser uses were aimed at the elderly, children, the mentally ill, or the severely intoxicated.

    As John Lennon once remarked, “The trouble with government as it is, is that it doesn’t represent the people. It controls them.” Indeed, the varied expressions of the government’s growing power—the excessive use of tasers by police on non-threatening individuals, allowing drones to take to the skies domestically for purposes of surveillance, the government’s monitoring of our emails and phone calls, and on and on—which get more troubling by the day, are merely the outward manifestations of an inner, philosophical shift underway in how the government views not only the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, but “we the people,” as well.

    Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder and president of The Rutherford Institute. He can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org. Information about the Institute is available at www.rutherford.org.

    Gov. Kasich Set to Veto $30 Million to Nursing Homes

    Several sources have indicated to the Columbus Dispatch that Gov. John Kasich is prepared to veto the $30 million for nursing homes that Republican legislators added to the mid-biennium review (Source: “Nursing homes’ $30M pop may fizzle,” Columbus Dispatch, May 31, 2012).

    Nursing homes had won support in both the Republican-controlled House and Senate for the $30 million by pointing out that the industry has experienced more than $850 million in federal Medicare cuts this year; $39 million less in state funding compared to last year and that the money would be used to assist nursing homes in adhering to the governor’s new quality standards for long-term care.

    The amendment added to the mid-biennium review submitted by Republican state Rep. Barbara Sears of Toledo would create a pool of money to reward nursing homes for meeting more than five of those quality standards.

    However, administration officials point out that policy changes they have implemented to make it easier for Ohioans to seek care in non-institutional settings were expected to lead to a downsizing of the industry.

    “It’s clear to us that so far in (the state budget) we got this right,” said Greg Moody, director of the Governor’s Office of Health Transformation. “That’s what’s in our mind as we approach this final stage of reviewing the changes that were made to the (mid-biennium review).”

    Source:Ohio Health Policy Review, June 1, 2012.