Civil Liberties

The Appropriate Response to Totalitarians

By Justin Katz | January 14, 2012 |

The aggressive and heated response to Jessica Ahlquist, upon her success in leveraging the power of the federal government to impose her religious preferences on her community’s public high school, is ignorant, unproductive, and completely at odds with the message of the prayer banner that the federal judge ordered removed and the broader faith espoused…

East Coast Law Enforcement

By Justin Katz | January 13, 2012 |

Two items have found their way to my long list of stories on which to post, and it occurs to me that they’re sufficiently related to be presented together. And fortunately, they are so stark that additional commentary is scarcely necessary. One: McKay is the young father who, seeing a local druggie breaking into his…

Unconstitutional Judiciary Orders Destruction of Prayer

By Justin Katz | January 13, 2012 |

So U.S. District Court Judge Ronald R. Lagueux has decreed (PDF) that the 46-year-old, mildly Christian prayer banner at Cranston High School West be removed. Judging from his description of its installation, as an old paper banner practically painted into the wall, the ruling appears tantamount to a decree that the prayer be destroyed. One…

Bending the Truth in Cicilline’s Favor

By Justin Katz | January 2, 2012 |

In an illustration of how its methods can serve the politicians that the editors like — covering their fundamental dishonesty with a focus on minutia — PolitiFact Rhode Island has given David Cicilline a “half true” for this: “Earlier this week, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives — with the enthusiastic support of Sarah Palin, Texas…

Negative Outlook, but Still Able to Confiscate

By Justin Katz | November 29, 2011 |

Like a lot of conservatives, I’m sure, I find the prospect of our nation’s credit begin downgraded, or at least given a negative outlook, as Fitch Ratings just applied to the United States, a somewhat hopeful sign that the game of government taxing, borrowing, and spending cannot go on in perpetuity. But as I watch…

Now *THIS* is Something to Protest About

By Patrick Laverty | November 13, 2011 |

In my wish that more people would pay attention to the “little things” that our government does, I wish they’d see things like this happening and react accordingly. On Friday, the US House Judiciary Committee passed a bill that would require all Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to track all online activity for all of their…

Sheldon Whitehouse Wants to Roll Back the First Amendment

By Carroll Andrew Morse | November 2, 2011 |

Rhode Island junior Senator Sheldon Whitehouse thinks the First Amendment of the United States Constitution goes too far. He has used his Senate seat, from the state that traces its lineage to early freedom-of-speech advocate Roger Williams, to introduce a Constitutional Amendment that would carve out a First Amendment exception allowing the government to restrict…

David and PolitiFact on the Same Wavelength

By Justin Katz | September 18, 2011 |

It’s funny what different people find to be of interest in political documents. When I read the letter that David Cicilline sent to Monique regarding his vote against an amendment to Congressional legislation intended to ease rules of engagement restrictions for U.S. troops, what struck me were the careful words related to the right to…

The Cop-Media Connection

By Justin Katz | July 20, 2011 |

The Rupert Murdock media eavesdropping controversy in England illustrates the general risk of giving an organization broad access to information and spy technology… even if that organization is the saintly Big Government: Scotland Yard’s assistant commissioner resigned Monday, a day after his boss also quit, and fresh investigations of possible police wrongdoing were launched in…

Who Is Pulling the Trigger?

By Justin Katz | July 11, 2011 |

Given that the mainstream media has appeared less interested in this story than in such critical events as royal weddings and the accuracy of Republicans’ references to history, Anchor Rising should help in the effort to prevent it from slipping through the cracks: In Fall of 2009, the Obama Administration conceived Operation Fast and Furious,…