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	<title>Comments on: Prosecutors  or Persecutors?</title>
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	<description>A gloves off discussion of life.</description>
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		<title>By: Rycke Brown</title>
		<link>http://unscriptednews.com/your2cents/2007/12/17/prosecutors-or-persecutors/comment-page-1/#comment-15</link>
		<dc:creator>Rycke Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Dec 2007 08:03:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://unscriptednews.com/your2cents/2007/12/17/prosecutors-or-persecutors/#comment-15</guid>
		<description>Dear BB,

The title of your piece deserves further exploration.

What is prosecution?  What is persecution?

Prosecution is stopping people who harm or threaten harm to others, who have no respect for the rights of others.  It may involve holding them for a while to reflect on their bad behavior, but mainly to protect the rest of us.

The purpose of incarceration is not deterrence.  It is to stop the harm being done.  Deterrence depends less on the severity or length of the punishment than the likelihood of being caught and punished.

Persecution is using force against those who have not violated anyone’s rights.  It is breaking into people’s houses, stealing their stuff, kidnapping them, holding them for ransom, and even enslaving them, over differences of opinion over what it good or bad for them.

A pot smoker or a meth addict who has done no harm to his fellows should not be taking up space in a jail cell or the time of our justice system.  Neither should their fellows who sell them their medicine.  Each is benefitting the other, or they would not engage in the transaction.  

Neither should the fellow who makes it, unless he does so in a manner dangerous to his neighbors.  Meth making a perfect example of the need for licensing rather than bans, in that it would stop pollution that is now uncontrolled.

Persecution goes along with holy war, and holy war is what we have had in our country for about 90 years, since the onset of Prohibition and the accompanying ban on other recreational and painkilling medicines.  It has now come to the point where it interferes greatly with prosecution, to the extent that we cite and release thieves and drunk drivers in this county and throughout the state of Oregon.  

It has always quietly interfered with prosecution, because when you remove an entire market from the rule of law, you also remove the people within it.  More laws make more outlaws.  People who engage in the black market try to avoid dealing with police at all.  If they report a crime, they are apt to be arrested themselves—especially if their drugs are stolen.  Their only choice is to eat the loss or take the law into their own hands—never a good thing for the rule of law.

California’s prison system is sucking so many guards that there aren’t enough to go around.  Court calendars are full, and cases take years to come to judgment.  Defendants don’t show for trial, knowing that the convicted are held over the merely accused, and they will be released again and again.

This gives us, the persecuted, a unique window of opportunity. We can stop this civil war against us, simply by peaceful non-cooperation with our persecution, digging our heels in every inch of the way, making our persecution expensive and unprofitable.

Never plead guilty.  Don’t accept conditional release.  Don’t bail out in Oregon; they can steal your bail money to pay your fine.  Hold out for release on your own recognizance.  

Go to trial, even if you have to defend yourself, and ignore the threatened maximum sentence:  It’s only there to scare you into pleading.  And you won’t have to serve any long sentence, if you remember that people who don’t eat in captivity can’t be enslaved, or held for longer than a month. They get released and dropped at the door of the hospital.  Counties can&#039;t afford hospitalizations.

If you are convicted, refuse to pay the fine.  Refuse to cooperate with probation, which would turn your home and life into a jail, and make you pay for the “supervision” to boot.  

Dare them to jail you.   You will find that they will free you instead.  At least that what they did with me.  Read the entire entertaining story, “The Cookie Monster Beats the Cops,” at www.libertyunbound.com/archives/2007_12/brown-cookie.html.

Live Free and Prosper,

Rycke</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear BB,</p>
<p>The title of your piece deserves further exploration.</p>
<p>What is prosecution?  What is persecution?</p>
<p>Prosecution is stopping people who harm or threaten harm to others, who have no respect for the rights of others.  It may involve holding them for a while to reflect on their bad behavior, but mainly to protect the rest of us.</p>
<p>The purpose of incarceration is not deterrence.  It is to stop the harm being done.  Deterrence depends less on the severity or length of the punishment than the likelihood of being caught and punished.</p>
<p>Persecution is using force against those who have not violated anyone’s rights.  It is breaking into people’s houses, stealing their stuff, kidnapping them, holding them for ransom, and even enslaving them, over differences of opinion over what it good or bad for them.</p>
<p>A pot smoker or a meth addict who has done no harm to his fellows should not be taking up space in a jail cell or the time of our justice system.  Neither should their fellows who sell them their medicine.  Each is benefitting the other, or they would not engage in the transaction.  </p>
<p>Neither should the fellow who makes it, unless he does so in a manner dangerous to his neighbors.  Meth making a perfect example of the need for licensing rather than bans, in that it would stop pollution that is now uncontrolled.</p>
<p>Persecution goes along with holy war, and holy war is what we have had in our country for about 90 years, since the onset of Prohibition and the accompanying ban on other recreational and painkilling medicines.  It has now come to the point where it interferes greatly with prosecution, to the extent that we cite and release thieves and drunk drivers in this county and throughout the state of Oregon.  </p>
<p>It has always quietly interfered with prosecution, because when you remove an entire market from the rule of law, you also remove the people within it.  More laws make more outlaws.  People who engage in the black market try to avoid dealing with police at all.  If they report a crime, they are apt to be arrested themselves—especially if their drugs are stolen.  Their only choice is to eat the loss or take the law into their own hands—never a good thing for the rule of law.</p>
<p>California’s prison system is sucking so many guards that there aren’t enough to go around.  Court calendars are full, and cases take years to come to judgment.  Defendants don’t show for trial, knowing that the convicted are held over the merely accused, and they will be released again and again.</p>
<p>This gives us, the persecuted, a unique window of opportunity. We can stop this civil war against us, simply by peaceful non-cooperation with our persecution, digging our heels in every inch of the way, making our persecution expensive and unprofitable.</p>
<p>Never plead guilty.  Don’t accept conditional release.  Don’t bail out in Oregon; they can steal your bail money to pay your fine.  Hold out for release on your own recognizance.  </p>
<p>Go to trial, even if you have to defend yourself, and ignore the threatened maximum sentence:  It’s only there to scare you into pleading.  And you won’t have to serve any long sentence, if you remember that people who don’t eat in captivity can’t be enslaved, or held for longer than a month. They get released and dropped at the door of the hospital.  Counties can&#8217;t afford hospitalizations.</p>
<p>If you are convicted, refuse to pay the fine.  Refuse to cooperate with probation, which would turn your home and life into a jail, and make you pay for the “supervision” to boot.  </p>
<p>Dare them to jail you.   You will find that they will free you instead.  At least that what they did with me.  Read the entire entertaining story, “The Cookie Monster Beats the Cops,” at <a href="http://www.libertyunbound.com/archives/2007_12/brown-cookie.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.libertyunbound.com/archives/2007_12/brown-cookie.html</a>.</p>
<p>Live Free and Prosper,</p>
<p>Rycke</p>
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