Disclaimer

By accessing this blog, you agree to the following terms:

Nothing you see here is intended or offered as legal advice. The author is not an attorney. These posts have been written for educational and information purposes only. They are not legal advice or professional legal counsel. Transmission of the information is not intended to create, and receipt does not constitute, a lawyer-client relationship between this blog, the author, or the publisher, and you or any other user. Subscribers and readers should not act, or fail to act, upon this information without seeking professional counsel.

This is not a safe space. I reserve the right to write things you may agree or disagree with, like or dislike, over which you may feel uncomfortable or angry, or which you may find offensive. I also don't speak for anyone but myself. These are my observations and opinions. Don't attribute them to any group or person whose name isn't listed as an author of a post on this blog.

Reading past this point is an acknowledgement and acceptance of the above terms.

Men's Rights Edmonton needs your help


For those who want to help but cannot attend: Please click on the link to watch this video on youtube instead of here on my blog, then click on the "share" link and share the video on your various social media so that awareness of the call to action will spread.

Thanks :)

My view from the bus on my way home from the international men's issues conference 2014

I totally forgot I had this until I was going through my phone pics today. It's not a men's rights issue so much as an interesting thing. The southbound Greyhound bus I was on was stopped just south of Toledo, Ohio, by the United States border patrol, complete with drug sniffing dog. I took a cell phone pic out the window.

Thought I'd share.

The dog, apparently not trained to sniff out ibuprofen and fruit flavored gummy vitamins,
showed little interest in the baggage compartment of the bus.
No aliens were found, either, but you know,
Greyhound did transport a wild honey badger to Detroit and back.

Fortunately, that's not Border Patrol's area of interest,
and they did not return me to the sammich mines.

§ 287 (a) (3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 66 Stat. 233, 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(3), which provides for warrantless searches of automobiles and other conveyances "within a reasonable distance from any external boundary of the United States," as authorized by regulations to be promulgated by the Attorney General. The Attorney General's regulation, 8 CFR § 287.1, defines "reasonable distance" as "within 100 air miles from any external boundary of the United States."

Border patrol's buffer zone, called a "constitution-free zone" by the ACLU, extends as far south as Columbus.

Selective Service: Code for slavery

The purpose of selective service is to provide rich politicians with the power to force middle class and poor (mostly poor) male citizens into military service to support a war the public isn't behind enough to inspire citizens to volunteer for military service.

It's really the last bastion of overt slavery in the U.S. It presumes government command of men, representing the assertion of state ownership of a man's will, his body, and his life, and of the right to sacrifice all three for the state's chosen purpose, whether he agrees or not. With significant penalties resulting from failure to register; imprisonment, limitations on access to programs they're required to fund through taxes, and exclusion from citizenship if they are immigrants. Requirement to register is not like being required to have a license in order to do or have something special. These are not conditions placed on men based on any choice or a trade. These are conditions placed on men merely because of their existence and their sex.

There is no other honest description for coerced registration except slavery. There is no other honest description involuntary military conscription except slavery.  The government essentially owns every man in the United states, and reserves the right to demand any man risk everything to support any conflict into which the government chooses to place him, and if he refuses to submit to that, the government reserves the right to punish him.

In recent conflicts, the U.S. population and the military have demonstrated that even if the draft were justified and not an abuse of power, it isn't needed. Our population has been able to support extensive and widespread military action without it, even without full public support. Even in controversial actions, enough people have enlisted that while our military is active on multiple fronts, there's been no involuntary conscription by the U.S. government.

This is partly due to the existing level of public support for the current efforts. Even though it is not universal, it has been high enough. It's also partly due to the high rate of enrollment in recent decades, so that the military could rely on recalling Individual Ready Reserves.

The reason enrollment and recall have been enough is due to the second factor; advancements in technology and resulting advancements in tactics, which have greatly reduced the rate of injury and death occurring on the American side of a military action. Compare the current actions to the actions of the 20th century, and you'll see a decline in injury and death between the world war eras and today. Because of that, the military isn't having to constantly replenish its ranks to replace large losses (and there's a whole other discussion in that which I won't get into here,) and there is no legitimate excuse to claim a shortage of military personnel in an all volunteer military.

The only reason state officials would have left to want to keep this antiquated, discriminatory and abusive system in place is to retain the power to enslave and exploit men in the event the administration decides to execute military action that isn't so approved and accepted by the population as to draw volunteers. There is no justification for that; only a sense of entitlement which a society has no business tolerating while considering itself modern and civilized... especially when that entitlement is discriminatory. It's really time this ended. It never should have been enacted in the first place.

On a side note, 20th century presidential actions on the draft; who did what, and when:
  • 1917 - original Selective Service Act, signed by Woodrow Wilson.
  • 1940 - Burke-Wadsworth Act (first peacetime conscription), signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt
     
  • 1948 - Elston Act (established the current system), signed by Harry Truman
     
  • 1951 - Universal Military Training and Service Act (lowered draft eligibility age by 6 months, increased time of service mandate) signed by Harry Truman
     
  • 1963 - Executive Order 11119 (exempts married men) signed by John F. Kennedy
     
  • 1965 - Executive Order 11241 (revokes exemption for married men if childless/no dependents) signed by Lyndon B. Johnson
     
  • 1967 - Military Selective Service Act (expanded conscription ages to 18-35, modified student deferment to end at age 24 or completion of 4 year degree, whichever first) signed by Lyndon B. Johnson
     
  • 1969 - Amendment to Military Selective Service Act (created the draft lottery used during the Vietnam war) signed by Richard Nixon
     
  • 1971 - Amendment to Military Selective Service Act (made registration compulsory, set up registration classifications - eligible or conscientious objector - and eliminated all student deferments except divinity school, changed draft board membership requirements) signed by Richard Nixon
     
  • 1973 - creation of an all-volunteer armed forces announced by Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird during the presidency of Richard Nixon
     
  • 1975 - Proclamation 4360, Terminating Registration Procedures Under Military Selective Service Act (Eliminated registration requirement) signed by Gerald Ford
     
  • 1980 - Proclamation 4771, Registration Under the Military Selective Service Act (retroactively re-established registration requirement for anyone born on or after 1/1/1960) signed by Jimmy Carter
     
  • 1986 - Executive Order 12553 (eliminated executive orders 11119 and 11241, by Kennedy & Johnson, respectively, along with a long list of other executive orders) signed by Ronald Reagan

With one click... help hungry and homeless veterans. The Veterans Site.




















google-site-verification: googlefdd91f1288e37cb4.html