On Aug 27, 2011, at 7:12 AM, Stephen Stubbs wrote:

> Just another example of the Social Justice experiment still going on in USA.
> 
> Basically,
> 
> Corporations are Bad.
> Social Justice is Good.
> 
> The last major Social Justice experiment made it all the way into the USA 
> Constitution as the 18th Amendment, (the Prohibition Amendment making it very 
> difficult to obtain alcoholic beverages legally) on January 17, 1920.
> 
> It took the 21st Amendment on December 5, 1933 to repeal the 18th Amendment.
> 
> I don't expect the irrational experiments being done by the current Attorney 
> General of the USA (Eric Holder) to continue after the next President and 
> Congress take office in January 2013.
> "The Other" Stephen Stubbs
> Champaign, IL


I hate to burst your bubble when you've obviously been saving up this little 
Republican bumper sticker for the right moment to plaster it on the lute list, 
but you got the subject wrong: this is about actions to enforce an 
international treaty by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Interior 
Department) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Department of Homeland 
Security).  It's the second time in a couple of years that Gibson has been 
raided on suspicion of using wood from protected species.

It has nothing to do with the Attorney General, the Democratic Party, 
corporations, or social justice (neither did Prohibition, which was an attempt 
to enforce morality; social justice legislation would be something like the 
1964 Civil Rights Act, which is still in effect, even in rural Illinois, 
regardless of whether it's considered untoward government interference to tell 
a business that it can't exclude customers because of their skin color).  

The documentation issue is a difficult one.  On the one hand, draconian, 
inflexible enforcement is unfair.  On the other hand, if enforcement 
authorities don't demand rigorous documentation it's far too easy to smuggle 
illegal substances.  This would defeat the purpose of environmental protection 
treaties, which are understood to be important by everyone in the world except 
members of the Republican Party in the USA.  I have owned pre-CITES  
instruments made of woods that have since been protected (my charango made of 
elephant-tusk ivory, strung with Barbary Sheep gut, in an rhinoceros-skin case 
lined with otter fur, comes to mind).  In the course of trying to sell a 
rosewood instrument a few months ago I made a point of telling potential buyers 
there could be problems taking it across borders.  A couple of overseas buyers 
expressed interest and then disappeared; I don't whether the CITES problems 
scared them away.  Sometimes we are inconvenienced by concerns (such as biodiv!
 ersity and deforestation) more important than our own little problems.

Anyway, if you really needed to offer an off-topic political rant, you should 
have saved it for a time when it was actually a propos of the subject.  I'm 
going back to my morning coffee.  You enjoy your tea party.



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