Wednesday, January 2, 2008                                                      
      Not paranoid? Read this and you will be                                   
           Be sure to read the final two paragraphs.
---
Predictions for 2008
The un-parodiable state of civil liberties in America
Radley Balko 

December 21, 2007
             As the end of the year approaches, it's time for another column of 
government overreach predictions for the New Year. What outrageous, 
beyond-parody grabs at power and erosions of civil liberties will transpire in 
2008? My predictions:
  • The Bush administration will claim it has the power to kidnap citizens of 
foreign countries for violating U.S. law, and extradite them to the U.S. for 
trial and imprisonment—even for white collar crimes unrelated to terrorism, and 
even for acts that aren't illegal in the countries where the target is a 
citizen.
  • Police will take enforcement of prostitution laws to a new level, by 
arresting and seizing the cars of anyone who merely talks to an undercover cop 
posing as a sex worker.  Good samaratans, beware.
  • The war on prescription painkillers will also reach new absurdities, as 
people will begin to be arrested and convicted of possessing painkillers for 
which they have a prescription .  Prosecutors will weirdly argue that there is 
no "prescription defense" to possessing prescribed medication.
  • How about sex crimes laws? I predict that here too, prosecutors will 
overreach. Watch, as some overzealous district attorney will charge middle 
school kids with sex crimes  for such childhood shenanigans as slapping fellow 
classmates on the buttocks.
  • While it continues to federalize crime and find new reasons to toss people 
in prison, members of Congress will simultaneously continue to attempt to put 
themselves above the law. I predict that the House of Representatives will 
attempt to prevent police from searching the computers of one of its members, 
even if that member is being investigated for soliciting sex with minors.
  • Public schools will teach not just reading, writing, and arithmetic, 
they'll start teaching students to spy on their parents , and to report their 
parents to local authorities for minor violations of city codes, such as 
failing to recycle, or failing to keep their lawn trimmed.
  • Pressed for revenue, at least one state in the country will pass draconian 
new traffic laws mandating fines of $1,000 or more for routine traffic 
violations, in a bald attempt to fill state treasury coffers. The bill will be 
sponsored by a lawmaker who, conveniently enough, also has a law practice that 
specializes in defending people accused of traffic violations. He will not 
disclose during the debate that the bill will almost certainly benefit him 
financially. He'll be reelected, anyway.
  • A state governor will propose legislation calling for two-year prison terms 
for people who play online poker . Rather shamelessly, the proposal will come 
in the same bill that calls for allowing the construction of three new casinos 
in the same state.
  • While we're talking about gambling, states will continue to crack down on 
the poker craze. Even VFW posts won't be immune. Soon, we'll see cops sent to 
break up $5 cribbage games, and SWAT teams to break up charity poker games.  In 
fact, cops will raid bars where it merely looks like people are gambling, even 
if no gambling is actually taking place. Meanwhile, states will continue to 
spend millions promoting their own lotteries.
  • Standing on the sidewalk will become a crime .
  • Cities will begin seizing the cars of people who play their stereos too 
loud . In fact, they'll seize the cars based on little more the word of someone 
else that the car's owner was playing his stereo too loud.
  • Proving there's no part of your life the Nanny State can't reach, states 
will begin asking bars to install talking urinal cakes, which will warn men as 
they relieve themselves that drinking and driving isn't cool.
  • Another state's lawmakers will propose a bill that bans "eating, drinking, 
smoking, reading, writing, personal grooming, playing an instrument, 
interacting with pets or cargo, talking on a cell phone or using any other 
personal communication device" while driving.
  • Two years after banning traffic cameras in the name of "liberty," the 
Virginia legislature will decide that revenue is more important than liberty, 
and will revoke the ban .
  • The FBI will imply to Congress that sometimes it has to let it's undercover 
informants get away with murdering American citizens  so as not to disrupt drug 
investigations.
  • Following up on the enormous "success" (that's sarcasm) of laws putting 
cold medicine behind the drug store counters because they can be used to make 
meth, legislators will propose putting baking soda behind the counter , too, 
because it can be used to make crack.
  Too over-the top?  Too paranoid?  As you may have guessed from clicking the 
embedded links, none of the bullet points above were actual predictions. Each 
of the above already happened in the past 12 months, in 2007. 
  Each year, government at all levels encroaches a bit more on our personal, 
economic, and political freedom. One prediction that I'm pretty confident will 
come true: Come December 2008, there will be more than enough material for 
another column like this one.
             
                                     Posted by           CRIMES AND CORRUPTION 
OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER NEWS mparent7777 Marc Parent CCNWON                      
              at                    11:42 AM                                    
   
                                   Labels:                        civil 
liberties,                        freedom                                  


                                            MARC PARENT, mparent7777, mparent, 
ccnwon
CRIMES AND CORRUPTIONS OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER NEWS
http://mparent7777-2.blogspot.com/
http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/blog/38

      
    


   
   























       
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