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Broken
by
Edgar J. Steele
May 13, 2009
"Posterity -- you will never know how much it has cost my generation
to preserve your freedom. I hope you will make good use of it."
---John Quincy Adams, sixth US President
"I
believe that all government is evil, and that trying to improve it
is largely a waste of time."
--- H. L. Mencken (1880 - 1956)
My name is Edgar J. Steele.
The Constitution of the
United States of America is in trouble.
Yeah, so what else is new?
We are in trouble.
You, specifically. All of us, in
fact.
Oh, you figured
that out, did you? What are you doing
about it? Oh. Well, then, what are you
going to do about it? No? Stick
around, then - I have a plan. Or do
I?
Cause to Wonder
I like to say that,
while everybody knows that the American justice system is broken,
you simply have no idea just
how broken it really is.
I do, because I have been in the
belly of that beast for 30 years now. You know how I rant and rave
and carry on, after all.
Many openly wonder
how it is that I have not yet been disbarred. Frankly, so do I.
Not until I finally resign from all my bar affiliations will I be
able to tell you some of the stories about judges and lawyers that
will make your hair stand on end. Not until then will you know all
that I know. Even now, I wonder why it is that what I already
publicly have shared has not, in itself, been enough to get you out
into the streets with pitchforks, firebrands and lynch ropes in
hand.
During my time in
the American legal system, I also have had more than my share of
brushing up against and doing battle with the American political
system. Trust me on this one, too:
You simply have no idea just how broken is our political system.
You think that you simply can
elect someone new and make a difference?
How's that been working out for you,
Bunky? Beginning to suspect that Mr. Obama just might be the
fire for which we all have leaped out of the frying pan? Why do you
keep voting for Republicans or Democrats at any level with other
party candidates available?
The Wages of Voting for Evil
What's that? You
say your vote for McCain wasn't a total waste? What about your vote
for Obama? I voted for Chuck Baldwin in the last Presidential
election, candidate of the Constitution Party. Now,
that was a vote that wasn't
wasted, folks. Think about it.
Well, at least not as wasted as it would have been if cast for
either McCain or Obama. A vote for the lesser evil still is a vote
for evil. As you are about to learn below, Baldwin may not have
been the right candidate, either, but I would do it again in a
heartbeat, despite my developing concerns about the Constitution
Party (also as you are about to learn down below).
How would you vote
if you had it to do over again today, knowing that your vote
wouldn't make any difference in the outcome? By voting for Baldwin,
at least I know I did not help to create the monstrous problems now
devouring America.
You think that you can run
for office and make a difference?
Think again. If you are the sort who could or would make a
difference, never will you get
anywhere near a meaningful public office. Hell, you likely won't
even get anywhere near a ballot
position for any office at any
level. Too cynical, you say? Do you really think it is possible to
be too cynical about American politics?
Broken
Repeat after me:
Broken. The American system is
broken. Irretrievably, irredeemably, irreparably broken.
Broken. Here, let me say it
again:
Broken. Is it beginning to sink in yet?
Well, you might
reply: then we need to concentrate on
getting a third party into power. Work for its candidates.
Vote for them. You know the drill.
Yeah, right. You already forgot
what I told you, didn't you? Tell me: just what part of
"broken" is it that you do not
understand?
Broken Political Parties
Today I am going to
tell you about the Constitution Party. I could as easily tell you
about any other political party. The lesson is made more easily
using the Republican or Democrat parties, but let's make it tough by
choosing a party with a platform that I could have written for
myself. Even so, the basic plot is the same for every political
party, varying only in the number of players involved.
Remember - despite
my misgivings and bemoaning the hopelessness of it all, I keep going
back into courtrooms, hoping always to eke out a little justice for
someone, somehow. I feel the same way about the American political
system. Call me nuts. Many do.
Some define
insanity as doing the same thing again and again, each time
expecting a different result. While I admit that there is more than
a little truth to that homily, still I regularly sally forth to do
battle with the windmills. Call it a weakness. After all, we must
have something to do while awaiting the opportunity for
real change.
Let me illustrate
my assertion that all political parties are the same by following up
with you about last week's message.
REJECTED
Those who follow my
writings know that, last week, I ventured into the lion's den by
attending a local Constitution Party meeting at which county
officers were to be elected. This followed my having received my
Constitution Party membership application back in the mail from its
state chairman, Paul Venable, with "REJECTED" stamped across its
face in giant, red block letters.
Chairman Venable is
Black (yes, in Idaho, no less). It appears that his advisors
largely are drawn from the same stock that has infiltrated all
American political parties, best exemplified by the self-righteous
and intolerant denizens of so-called "Human Rights Task Forces" or
the ADL or the SPLC or so many other, similar thought-control groups
throughout America. They all disapprove of my temerity in daring to
discuss things racial, the very thing that Attorney General Eric
Holder recently called all of us cowards for
failing to do.
Damned if you do
and damned if you don't. Maybe I deserve that "Attorney for the
Damned" label, after all. So much for equal opportunity, free
speech, free association, due process and all the other rights that
the Constitution Party claims to be out to protect on our behalf.
As you are about to learn, however, there is a great deal more about
the Constitution Party that would confound America's founding
fathers, particularly.
A
Party of Men, Not Law
At last week's
meeting, rather than following a tradition adopted years ago by the
Taxpayers' Party and continued when it changed its name to the
Constitution Party, Mr. Venable chose to follow state law to the
letter in conducting the Kootenai County CP officer election.
Although state law allows only properly-designated party precinct
committeemen to vote in such elections (and just a select,
designated few of them to vote at state-level elections and
conventions), in the past, anybody who showed up at a meeting,
filled out a membership form and paid his or her dues was allowed to
vote at any elections during the ensuing meeting. That is why I
encouraged local citizens to show up at last week's meeting with
membership forms filled out. Mr. Venable did not allow them to
vote, of course.
What is
particularly ironic about Mr. Venable's insistence upon sticking to
the letter of state law is the fact that he headed up a contingent
that illegally seized control of the Constitution Party at its June
2006 state convention by busing in a large enough group (thirty is
all it took) to block vote out all the existing party officers and
vote themselves in. How? They filled out membership forms just
before the convention began, then voted as a block.
Yes, yes ... I
know. I asked the same question. The answer was,
"Well, we always did it that way."
The old guard, discouraged and dispirited, packed up and moved on,
disbanding the single largest county party affiliate (Bonner County)
in Idaho in the process and leaving the fate of the Idaho chapter of
the Constitution Party in Mr. Venable's hands, where it has festered
ever since.
Over the course of
the past year, I finally concluded that things might well
deteriorate to the point in America by this time next year where
people actually will be willing to listen to what people like I have
to say and think that we might have some good ideas for fixing
things. Maybe. It's a long shot,
I realize, but now is the time to prepare to take advantage of just
such an eventuality, should it happen to come about. That is why I
began to consider running for Governor in next year's election. The
Constitution Party seemed the only possible vehicle for me, aside
from an independent bid, and it seemed a perfect fit, since its
platform appeared exactly to reflect my personal political
philosophy. Appearances can be deceiving, however, as I was about
to learn.
Rejected for What,
Exactly?
As I explained last
week, Paul Venable told me that he will find someone to run against
me in the state primary if I persist and actually run for the
Constitution Party nomination for Governor of Idaho.
Then came the real
insult: the big, red "REJECTED" stamped on my membership form.
Last week, readers and listeners (many of whom have voted for and
contributed to Constitution Party candidates down through the years
at my urging) created a huge uproar at both the state and national
levels of the Constitution Party, protesting my treatment at the
hands of the Idaho Chairman. Not
enough to get him to reverse course, however.
Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them
At the close of
last week's meeting, Mr. Venable threw the floor open and proceeded
to answer my pointed questions about membership and why I was
rejected. Though he declined to state the reasons for my rejection,
Mr. Venable assured everybody present that rejecting my mere request
to be deemed a member of the Constitution Party of Idaho was the
"unanimous" decision of the Idaho CP Central Committee. I since
have learned that Mr. Venable's representation was
false, as guaranteed me by the
only member of that Central Committee with whom I spoke and who also
advised me that he didn't even get to
cast a vote.
Mr. Venable also
claimed that the Kootenai County membership unanimously was opposed
to me. Again, that representation by Mr. Venable was false, as I
have been assured by more than one member of the Kootenai County
chapter.
Mr. Venable also
claimed that the previous chairman of the Kootenai County chapter of
the party resigned because I was being considered for the
gubernatorial slot. Though that ex-county-chairman, Clay Howard,
refused to speak with me directly, he reportedly told a mutual
friend of ours that Mr. Venable again was misrepresenting the truth,
as he resigned in disgust with the party's state leadership.
In other words, he resigned because of
Paul Venable, not because of me. He did allow, however, that he
was "appalled that (I) was not allowed
to become a member" of the party.
"You have
no rights!"
Paul Venable also
promised immediately to advise me in writing as to the exact reasons
for my rejection and the names of those who had rejected me, in
response to my demand for such as my right.
"You have no rights," nastily
exclaimed Mary Rutkowski, present at Mr. Venable's right hand
throughout the meeting, thereby clearing up for me the source of the
local (and, likely, state-level) discontent with my name. Though I
never before had lain eyes upon Ms. Rutkowski, she acted every bit
the part of those who police the community for the local "Human
Rights Task Force." Trust me when I tell you that I have extensive
experience with them and can spot them from a mile away. Mr.
Venable's written explanation has not been forthcoming, of course,
though I promised to hold any further public statements until it was
in my hand or I had to prepare this week's rant and radio show,
whichever came first.
Though I had to ask
the question five or six times, Paul Venable did finally admit to me
that, during his tenure as Chairman,
not one single other human being ever had been rejected for
membership in the Idaho Constitution Party.
So much for Paul
Venable's credibility, leadership and political savvy. My rejection
as a member of the Idaho Constitution Party stands, though it
clearly is illegal. Running for anything with the Party's blessing
is out of the question, too, of course.
Nor have either
Chuck Baldwin, the most recent Constitution Party candidate for
President, or Jim Clymer, current National Constitution Party
Chairman, bothered to return my phone calls or reply to my emails.
In addition to the many other unconstitutional actions of its Idaho
chairman, it appears that there is no right to appeal available
within the Constitution Party.
I have shared the
foregoing vignette with you in detail to illustrate my assertion
that all American political parties are the same: corrupt, unfair
and riddled with their own patronage systems.
But there is more
about the Constitution Party that you need to know - things that are
not at all apparent until you get into the trenches and interview
the players to the degree that I now have gone. And in two of those
things, the Constitution Party outdoes even the Republicans and
Democrats, despite a platform that seems the very model of
Constitutional propriety.
A
Ship Run Aground
No, I do not speak
about infiltration of the Constitution Party by the politically
correct, though its rejection of me (obviously because of my
outspokenness on racial issues) and untoward reliance upon the likes
of the execrable Mary Rutkowski, not to mention its erection of a
Black Chairman in a state with an image of being, at best, a safe
harbor for White Separatists, clearly mark the party as firmly in
the grasp of the same traitors who now are running America aground.
The Church of America
I am speaking of
the Constitution Party's ridiculous infighting and self-destruction
over the most subtle and ridiculous of differences and, more
importantly, of its clear intent to establish a state religion in
direct violation of the single most inviolate of the intentions of
America's founding fathers. Yes, you heard me correctly:
The Constitution Party seeks to
establish a state religion - a Church of America, if you will.
Let me explain.
First, because it
is so illustrative of my primary contention that the party intends
to establish a state religion, let's look at an issue that has
fractured and caused endless grief for the Constitution Party for
years: abortion. Abortion isn't really much of a divider in any
other political party. Pro-Lifers and Pro-Choicers shout back and
forth at each other at the conventions, then go out for drinks
together afterward.
Are You Pro-Life or Anti-Abortion?
With the
Constitution Party, however, it is taken for granted that you must
be Pro-Life. Just how pro-life
you might be determines whether you even get to be
in the party. Several state
chapters have "disaffiliated" from the National Party simply over
the issue of whether a woman should be allowed an abortion that is
necessary in order to save her life. Yep. You heard me right.
Hard to believe, I know, but it's a fact.
Here is a snippet
ripped from a conversation I had just last night with an official of
the Constitution Party: (Me) "So, if your pregnant wife was lying
in a coma in a hospital bed, thus unable to speak for herself, and
the doctor told you to choose between her or the unborn child, as
only one could survive, you would allow her to die?" (Him) "Yes."
Now, I confess to
being Pro-Life, or anti-abortion, as I prefer to characterize it.
However, I have my limits and they clearly end short of the example
I set for the man on the other end of that phone conversation. Most
people who think of themselves as Pro-Life, I think, primarily
object to abortion for social reasons (e.g.,
"We can't afford another child.") and never would enforce their
beliefs upon another by law. After all, that would be the same
thing as now takes place in China, where the government
forces women to undergo abortions
against their will.
Think about it for
a moment: reverse Roe vs. Wade
and you have the exact opposite of forced abortion:
forced gestation and delivery. I
remember full well what America was like before
Roe vs. Wade and am here to tell
you that some sort of compromise really is necessary between the two
extremes. I may be Pro-Life, but that does not mean that I believe
you have to be the same way if you honestly support Pro-Choice.
There really should be room enough in America for both points of
view. After all, that's what the founding fathers had in mind with
the different states and with the tenth and fourteenth amendments to
the Constitution. Not the issue of abortion, of course, which was
not an issue at the time due to lack of technology, but the right to
live with others who thought as you did and different from those in
other states. Thus sprang the Right to Travel and the Right to Free
Association, you know.
Logic vs. Faith
Now, I have reached my
Pro-Life belief through reflection and logic, not because some guy
in a pulpit told me to believe that way. I used to be Pro-Choice,
but had my mind changed by those whose opinions I respected and to
whose arguments I listened long and hard, then thought about at
length.
What's more, I believe that
life begins at conception. Abortion in the first trimester is, I
believe, every bit as much a killing as abortion in the
forty-eighth trimester (which I
used to point out to my fifteen-year-old children with a smile on my
face). But I never would presume to make another endure a pregnancy
and birth (and the consequent life-long attendant complications,
commitments and psychoses) because of my belief.
After all, I may be wrong. The
Constitution Party will admit to no such possibility, however.
Abortion is the very litmus paper passed around at all Constitution
Party meetings and that is because of the party's religious
grounding. Admit it - religion is
where Pro-Life beliefs are rooted for most people.
In fact, remember the coup
engineered in the 2006 Idaho Constitution Party convention by Paul
Venable and others? Reportedly, that occurred because of Idaho's
insistence that the National CP office "disaffiliate" the Nevada CP
because it insisted upon "radical" exceptions to its Pro-Life
platform plank, such as abortion when necessary to save the mother's
life. I kid you not.
Whacked-Out, Intolerant Bigots
Idaho's CP gubernatorial
candidate in 2006 was a fellow named Marvin Pro-Life Richardson.
Look, I couldn't make something like this up, so ridiculous is it
upon its face. He actually had his middle name legally changed to
"Pro-Life," so that there would be no mistaking his ideology, then
threw a fit because the state insisted upon listing him on the
ballot simply as "Marvin P. Richardson." Idaho's Constitution Party
simply traded one set of whacked-out, intolerant bigots for another,
it seems, at that 2006 convention, based upon their treatment of me
now.
Thousands Wouldn't Believe You, But I Do
The abortion issue is of
paramount importance in the Constitution Party because of the
unspoken requirement that its membership be exceptionally Christian,
and of a singularly fundamentalist bent, at that. They will deny
that abortion is a religious issue:
"It's a matter of morality - of ethics." Sure. Right.
Thousands wouldn't believe you, but I do. That's why they are so
willing to let blood over what would be a minor nuance in the
Pro-Life contingent of either the Republican or Democrat parties.
There is no question whatsoever of tolerating anybody who actually
believes in a woman's right to choose for herself whether or not to
have an abortion.
You're still not convinced,
are you? Well, then, you explain to me exactly why it is that the
Constitution Party's most recent Presidential candidate is a
bona-fide, practicing pastor of a thriving Baptist church. What's
more, the party's real Pro-Life
purists think that even he is a
heretic because he isn't as ardently Pro-life as was his
predecessor, Michael Peroutka. Go on - 'splain me that.
A
Mormon Behind Every Tree
And, while I hate to keep
beating up on Paul Venable, current Chairman of the Idaho
Constitution Party, it needs to be said that he is a Mormon and
that, reportedly, most of those who helped him oust the "old guard"
at that 2006 state convention also were Mormons. I don't know how
many of those Mormons remain as members or might occupy positions of
power in the state party, as statistics like that are not spoken
about in polite company. However, the rumor is that the Nevada
state chapter, over whose Pro-Life apostasy Idaho's "old guard" had
such issues and was, as a result, ousted by Venable and his band of
Mormon friends, was and is itself controlled by Mormons.
Oh, and after Paul Venable
took over, he was quoted as having stated that he was "here to save
the Constitution" for us Idahoans. Of course, that gives rise to
the question of who will save the Constitution from Paul Venable.
But, something you might not know is that there is a very specific
Mormon prophecy (or "revelation," as Mormons like to call them) in
which it is predicted that America's constitution will be saved by a
particular religion. Guess which religion it is that Mormons
believe is to be involved? Guess who sent us Paul Venable from Ohio
in the first place?
Mormons do constitute pretty
fundamentalist Christian thinking, you know, but I do not know how
deeply Mormonism has penetrated the Constitution Party in states
other than Nevada and Idaho (and, presumably, Utah, of course). I
mention this and the Mormon element to the Idaho coup of 2006 merely
to support my thesis that the Constitution Party is bent upon
establishing a form of state religion, in fact, if not in actual
name. There is, of course, a party platform plank that holds that
"there shall be no religious test to hold political office," but
that seems to me to be mere window dressing.
Now, fact is that I happen to
be Christian enough for the Constitution Party, though I'm not sure
I'm proud of the implications of that fact. And how ironic that I
happen to subscribe to the very flavor of Pro-Life belief that seems
to have propelled the current band of miscreants into the leadership
of the Idaho Constitution Party, so I guess I'll pass muster on that
test, too. But ... here's where I fall down, of course: I vocally
am anti-affirmative action and all of its correlates.
What if Nobody Came to Your Party?
You have to wonder how hardly
anybody manages to pass muster with the Constitution Party. Well,
here's your answer: hardly anybody
does. Witness my experience with them just recently. Think
you would pass muster with them?
That, of course, is why the
Constitution Party has practically no membership anywhere except in
that chapter in California that doesn't even carry its name, yet
which it claims only because otherwise the Constitution Party would
not be the third-, fourth- or, even, fifth-largest political party
in America.
Sigh. So, why do I care, if the
Constitution Party really is so inbred, self-defeating and, in a
word, seemingly doomed? I'm not sure I do, but I surely do like the
published party platform and the general philosophy therein
espoused, if not the manner in which it is practiced by those
currently in charge of the Constitution Party, both in Idaho and at
the national level. Kind of like what I might say about America and
her constitution, of course. In fact,
just like that.
New America - an idea whose
time has come ... or, maybe it should be
"the New Constitution Party - an idea whose time has come."
My name
is Edgar J. Steele. Thanks for listening. Please visit my
web site,
www.NickelRant.com, for other messages just like this
one.
-ed
Copyright ©2009, Edgar J.
Steele
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