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Di Leo: Peanut the Squirrel and an Election Brought into Focus at Last
Illinois Review ^ | November 4, AD 2024 | John F. Di Leo

Posted on 11/04/2024 3:16:04 PM PST by jfd1776

Peanut the Squirrel, and an Election Brought into Focus at Last

by John F. Di Leo

As the 2024 election approached, many voters found themselves with a dilemma. They’ve been told for a decade that they must dislike President Trump, though he did a good job as president. They’ve been told that they should like Kamala Harris, though everything about her from policies to behavior seems weird.

So, while many have been able to comfortably cast early votes with confidence, others put it off until the last minute, hoping perhaps for a flash of clarity, a winning argument, or maybe even a sign from Heaven to help with their decision.

And then, in the final days of the campaign, the clarity came from the weirdest of places: the story of the killing of Peanut the Squirrel by the state of New York.

The story can be summed up simply. A fellow well known on the internet for his animal rescue operation has been raising a pet squirrel named Peanut for seven years, sharing the antics of this squirrel on his social media pages, making him and his nonprofit, P’Nut’s Freedom Farm, somewhat famous. Some Karen (for lack of a more precise word) reported him to the state and demanded that the bureaucrats enforce some rarely enforced rules concerning the keeping of normally-not-domesticated animals). The New York State bureaucracy kicked into gear, raided and searched his home in SWAT team style, and confiscated both Peanut the squirrel and his raccoon named Fred.

As these petit fascists were manhandling the animals, the squirrel bit one of the petnappers – perfectly understandably, since any scared animal will do so when provoked and terrified – so the government used that bite as an excuse to kill them both.

Naturally, when you’re talking about animals, you’ll use the euphemistic term for it – “they were euthanized” – but, euphemism or no euphemism, the man’s pets are still dead, at the hands of bureaucrats, for no good reason.

Most of us think of pets as being dogs or cats alone, but there are tons of programs out there that focus on wild animals. (full disclosure: this writer’s daughter has worked for several such programs that care for injured and/or endangered wild animals, from owls to sea lions; it’s not nearly as rare an activity as you might think).

Should government regulate such programs? Sure, a case can be made that there’s a role for government in ensuring that animals aren’t mistreated by such programs. And the Longo family’s program is a legitimate nonprofit, though they were still in the permitting process for the aspect that brought the full jackboot of government down upon them last week.

But would anyone have agreed that this acknowledged government role should be so powerful, so threatening, as to descend on a family with a SWAT team, throw them out of their house for the day while ransacking their home, then confiscating and killing the animals under investigation?

As Mark Longo and New York Congressman Nick Langworthy pointed out in the immediate aftermath, it’s not like New York doesn’t have genuine needs that government could be addressing. They shouldn’t be so lost for projects to occupy their time that they attack a harmless nonprofit and kill the guy’s domesticated squirrel.

All weekend, Americans have been asking themselves, how on earth did things get to this point?

Well, once upon a time, some people wanted government to be strong enough to help this demographic or that demographic. They wanted government to be powerful enough not only to protect our rights, but to provide certain privileges as well. And somehow, they forgot, somewhere along the way, the old dictum that a government strong enough to give you everything you want is strong enough to take away everything you have.

Different interest groups, whether local, state, or federal, have spent decades gradually growing the powers of government, always with the intention of doing good, of course, but as the bureaucracies have grown ever stronger with the years, it has become more of a challenge to define just what that “good” is that they’re allegedly fighting for.

How did we get to the point where to guarantee a girl’s right to have an all-girls boxing or wrestling team, government insists that they have to allow a boy to join that team if he just calls himself a girl?

How did we get to the point where to guarantee a gay couple the privilege of getting married, the government claims the power to force a private bakery to cater the event?

How did we get to the point where, in order to guarantee a girl, her right to sexual determination, government insists on providing taxpayer-funded abortion on demand to all and sundry without so much as requiring parental consent when the young mother is a minor?

How did we get to the point where to help wheelchair-bound sports fans, government can force the doubling or trebling of construction prices, singlehandedly transforming a potentially successful business into an economically unfeasible project, just by citing the ADA?

Over the decades, the federal agencies originally created with such good intentions – EPA and CDC, FDA and OSHA, and so many more – have grown powerful beyond their inventors’ wildest dreams. Maybe they attract megalomaniac applicants from the start? Or maybe good, generous applicants are hired and gradually get warped once they’re there?

But there’s no denying the ultimate result.

Four years ago, when a Chinese lab unleashed Covid-19 on the world, our own mayors and governors mandated the wearing of pointless masks and banned people from government buildings if they weren’t worn. They mandated ridiculous direction arrows on grocery store floors and made factories install acrylic dividers at face level on assembly lines. They surrounded playgrounds with chains and disabled slides, swings, and basketball hoops, just to prevent children (who were immediately proven to be naturally immune to Covid-19 anyway) from playing together. They closed churches in violation of the first amendment. They closed public meetings in violation of open meetings acts. They shut down schools in violation of their state constitutions.

Five years ago, nobody would have expected governments to ever claim such powers. Today, we forget that it happened, and our minds are clouded to forget what a shock such authoritarian actions were.

As the election approaches – and as our minds are reawakened by the image of a government storming into an animal sanctuary as if it were a den of terrorists and slaughtering a family’s innocent pets – we suddenly remember those closed schools and barricaded playgrounds. We suddenly remember how our elderly grandparents, aunts and uncles were locked away, denied visits from loved ones in their final days and weeks of life. We suddenly remember how a nation that was literally born in the cause of religious freedom had its churches and synagogues shut down by authoritarian governments.

And if we take the time to think about it – and as we face an upcoming election, we are finally making time for such thoughts, even if we do usually put them out of our minds – we finally come to the sudden realization that these excesses aren’t nearly as rare as they would appear.

In fact, our government has been exceeding its boundaries for generations.

Not always so blatantly, sure, but bit by bit, they’ve shut down grazing land so that we’d have fewer cattle. They’ve slowed down oil drilling permitting so that gasoline and diesel would be much more expensive. They’ve closed coal plants and nuclear plants, and then insisted on utterly inefficient wind and solar replacements, so that we’d have much less energy to power our overtaxed grid. They’ve even forbidden automakers from building as many gas-powered cars as we want to buy from them and forced them instead to make electric cars that we don’t want and can’t afford.

The public never voted for any of this.

We didn’t vote for a government that could weaponize every agency and flex its muscles over every American business or nonprofit. It just happened, slowly, sneakily, because we weren’t watching closely enough.

On Election Day 2024, we have the chance to right this course.

It’s not a course correction that a single change can accomplish. Electing President Trump alone won’t be enough. He’ll need help. He’ll need a Senate and House on his side. He’ll need honorable federal judges. We’ll need our state and local governments to become constitutional again too.

It’s time to return to the limited government philosophy of America’s Founding Fathers.

Whether federal, state, county or municipal, no level of government has the right to behave unconstitutionally. No level of government should have the power to flex like the New York Department of Environmental Conservation did against Mark Longo and his squirrel. It’s insane that we let it get this far, but now that we’ve seen it and understood it at last, we know what to do.

The Republican Party isn’t perfect, but the Democratic Party has gone full-authoritarian and there’s no coming back from that. The Democratic Party is a lost cause. It’s time for the Democratic Party to be purged from every branch of government. We must defeat these tyrants so decisively at the polls that they never so much as qualify as a major party again. They have forfeited the right to enjoy the honor of being an American political party.

Maybe then the GOP will need to split up, or maybe new parties will spring up. Fine. Let it happen naturally. As long as these megalomaniac Democrat politicians are no longer in a position to abuse the American people as they have instinctively done for so long.

Copyright 2024 John F. Di Leo

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based trade compliance trainer and transportation manager, writer, and actor. Once a County Chairman of the Milwaukee County Republican Party in the 1990s, after serving as president of the Ethnic American Council in the 1980s, he has been writing regularly for Illinois Review since 2009. Professionally, he is a licensed Customs broker, and has worked in freight forwarding and manufacturing for over forty years. John is available for very non-political training seminars ranging from the Incoterms to the workings of free trade agreements, as well as fiery speeches concerning the political issues covered in his columns.

His book on vote fraud, “The Tales of Little Pavel,” his three-volume political satires of the Biden-Harris regime, “Evening Soup with Basement Joe,” and his new non-fiction work covering the 2024 campaign, "Current Events and the Issues of Our Age," are available in eBook or paperback, only on Amazon.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Miscellaneous; Politics
KEYWORDS: bureaucracy; constitution; dalek; deleo; freedomfarm; governmentoverreach; leviathan; limitedgovernment; longo; marklongo; nicklangworthy; overreach; overregulation; pnut; pnutthesquirrel; power; powercorrupts; regulation; tyranny
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To: jfd1776
Go Trump!


21 posted on 11/04/2024 3:56:41 PM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: TigersEye

If they run an animal rescue, they know the state will kill any wild animal kept as a pet. Deer, raccoons, turtles, squirrels, etc.... The DNR or Fish & Game will blast away any of the king’s (state’s) wildlife in a pet circumstance. There’s a very short list of reasonable explanations.


22 posted on 11/04/2024 3:57:54 PM PST by blackdog ((Z28.310) Be careful what you say. Your refrigerator may be listening & reporting you.)
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To: dragnet2

You would think Trump would have gotten the PETA endorsement.


23 posted on 11/04/2024 3:58:14 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: apillar

Every vote counts.

May there be more like him.


24 posted on 11/04/2024 3:59:38 PM PST by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus”)
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To: dfwgator

25 posted on 11/04/2024 3:59:58 PM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: blackdog

“First, they came for the squirrels.....”


26 posted on 11/04/2024 4:00:26 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: metmom
Re: Immigration status inquiries......"I'm just here to vote and get free stuff until my MS-13 nephews get here"

No more questions.

27 posted on 11/04/2024 4:01:00 PM PST by blackdog ((Z28.310) Be careful what you say. Your refrigerator may be listening & reporting you.)
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To: .30Carbine

“The private life is dead.”


28 posted on 11/04/2024 4:01:33 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dragnet2

Daaaaaang…😂😂


29 posted on 11/04/2024 4:02:14 PM PST by Allegra (“As I was saying…”)
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To: metmom

Yes, and even more so in light of the 325,000 missing illegal alien children.

Children who were not simply allowed to come in by the Biden/Harris admin but encouraged to come here and assisted with plane flights and NGOs all over the world funded by them for the purpose of finding people to come here, give them maps, cash, contacts and hook them up with coyotes.

This is evil beyond imagination. They are working with the cartels to smuggle in drugs and slaves. Children as slaves for sex trade and otherwise.


30 posted on 11/04/2024 4:03:20 PM PST by TigersEye (If you vote for Kamala you're a squirrel murdering communist!)
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To: dfwgator
To keep my conscience clear, I will shoot and kill any squirrels in or near my yard. They are tree dwelling gremlins that feed on my fruit trees, vegetables, attic wiring, tomatoes (always two bites and throw), and gorge themselves needlessly on my bird feeders.

When in doubt I refer to my dog on the subject. She says Opossums are ok. Armadillos are ok but fun to toss around. Squirrels are nothing but trouble.

31 posted on 11/04/2024 4:07:09 PM PST by blackdog ((Z28.310) Be careful what you say. Your refrigerator may be listening & reporting you.)
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To: blackdog

We actually have very few squirrels around our property.

I put up a suet feeder for the winter birds one year and the squirrels gorged on them.

I’m tempted to put them up again and get some range time in from the back porch.


32 posted on 11/04/2024 4:21:41 PM PST by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus”)
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To: metmom

33 posted on 11/04/2024 4:24:51 PM PST by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: blackdog
You are right that it is not about the squirrel. A animal native to the area and so not an invasive species threat and a animal that Americans have been keeping as pets since there was an America.

It is about the government saying "we do not want you doing that" and rather then doing what was normal a few years back and going up, knocking on the door and giving him a ticket at most they do a multi-person, multi-hour RAID.

That is abuse of power.

And it is an over reaction of the highest order. And it is now the standard.

Is your child playing in the back yard for an hour? We will send the CPS to your door.

Did you walk the wrong way down a street? We will arrest you off the street, beat the crap out of you and throw you in jail.

Did the officer fumble finger in your license plate and it return no such plate found? Well that is grounds for yanking elderly ladies out of a 20 year old car and making them kneel on rough gravel.

Are you sitting in a McDonald's parking lot having a meal with your girl friend and Officer friendly decides that your car may vaguely resemble one that got away from him the other day. Come up, yank open the door and lay violent hands on you without identifying himself and then shoot you repeatedly when you try to get away from what any sane person would conclude is a car jacking?

All of these are things that have been come common.

And it is all wrong.

34 posted on 11/04/2024 4:40:01 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear ( Not my circus. Not my monkeys. But I can pick out the clowns at 100 yards.)
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To: dfwgator
PETA likes killing animals.

No. Seriously. I think they get off on it.

35 posted on 11/04/2024 4:41:39 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear ( Not my circus. Not my monkeys. But I can pick out the clowns at 100 yards.)
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To: blackdog
...and gorge themselves needlessly on my bird feeders.

I had the same problem, but I outsmarted them.
36 posted on 11/04/2024 4:47:51 PM PST by Dan in Wichita
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To: dragnet2

RIP, Peanut and Fred.


37 posted on 11/04/2024 5:44:55 PM PST by telescope115 (I NEED MY SPACE!!! 🔭)
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To: jfd1776

Here is a similar case in India, where a farmer rescued an endangered crane.
The crane was raised, was healthy, and enjoyed a life of freedom, though it became quite bonded to the farmer. And if the farmer hadn’t taken care of it, it would have been devoured by a predator probably that evening, never having a chance to breed anyway.

But then once a story appeared in social media of this bird and the village, the state got involved, and confiscated the bird. So now the unfortunate bird is being held in solitary confinement - isolated from both humans AND other cranes...and out of its accustomed habitat and daily free flying, because they hope they can possibly break its established social bonds with humans and get it to bond with another crane. And now it is stuck in a pen, where it cannot fly out each morning.

I don’t think solitary confinement is healthy for any animal or human even if intended to be. For birds that form powerful lifetime bonds, iisolation and boredom can bring on severe depression and self mutilation, or weakened immune response.
Odds are that if left alone, eventually the crane would encounter others in the fields of home and take an interest in one of them after exhausting attempts to nest with its human. It is just a matter of time before a partner gives up on one that cannot meet its needs. While a bird won’t take to just any bird it sees of the opposite sex, I have seen many human-imprinted birds eventually find an avian partner among the many they see which they do prefer over all humans.

Love verses Legality
https://edgeeffects.net/complexity-of-human-crane-encounters/#:~:text=Who%20are%20Sarus%20Cranes%3F,bird%20of%20Uttar%20Pradesh%2C%20India.


38 posted on 11/06/2024 4:11:09 PM PST by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
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