Posted on 07/25/2018 8:05:52 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
In 2004, the Supreme Court ruled, in the Kelo v. City of New London decision, that eminent domain could be used to seize private property from one owner and give it to another in the name of "economic development." It remains one of the most controversial decisions the court has made this century.
Yesterday, Congress belatedly addressed the troubling issues raised by the decision by passing the Private Property Rights Protection Act. As Ed Morrissey at Hot Air points out, no major media outlets covered this seminal issue regarding the rights of citizens to be secure in their property.
Amazingly, not one major media outlet picked up on this, not even to note that it took thirteen years for Congress to address the issue. It might not have gone far even now had it not been for renewed interest in the case from the recent independent film Little Pink House, starring Catherine Keener as Susette Kelo and Jeanne Tripplehorn and produced by Ted Balaker, formerly of Reason.
It's tough to understand the indifference. The House vote didn't have much drama to it, but the issue directly aims at the relationship we have with government and the nature of private property, a core right recognized in the Constitution. Kelo perverted that relationship, putting everyone's property rights hostage to politicians who want to hand off spoils to bigger entities. The case prompted some states to step in and redefine eminent domain to prevent another New London abuse, but Congress has remained relatively passive about it until now.
There are many justifiable instances where the needs of the community might be best served by employing eminent domain. The argument isn't if states and local governments have the right to invoke eminent domain,
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Unconstitutional on 10th Amendment grounds.
But what will the Senate do?
Eminent Domain is federal from the takings clause of the fifth amendment, but it is limited to takings for public use. Kelo perverted that by equating public "use" with public "good." That was the unconstitutional act.
-PJ
bkmk
Face it mass media is anti personal rights except when it comes to infanticide.
Kelo= David Souters masterpiece. Love me some evolving Republican SCOTUS appointees.
In the original Kelo decision it was appealed directly to the Supreme Court anyway since Article III says that when the state is a party then the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction. The amendment shouldn't be needed.
No reason why a do-over should lead to a different ruling. Nothing in the Constitution gives the federal government the power to define "public use". Therefore it's the state's power on 10th Amendment grounds.
About damn to time! WORST decision since Plessy v. Ferguson. AND,it was a liberal decision.
An awful, awful decision that openly allows the government to take your rights away.
Where is "public use" defined in the Constitution? If it isn't then defining it is a power reserved to the states per the 10th Amendment.
“It’s tough to understand the indifference”?
Seriously? The belief in a fundmental right to property stems from a belief in Natural (divine) Law. Oliver Wendell Holmes and his simpaticos, steeped in social darwinism and atheism, did a good job intentionally expunging those concepts from our educational institutions in general, the media, and public discourse in general. To most people, there is no “higher law” protecting “certain inalienable rights.” They believe that whatever rights we have are granted by the government according to “the felt necessities of the time.” And since liberals almost universally believe a strong central government with “the right people in charge” will usher in utopia, well... of course they don’t care if government tramples individual rights to property, free speech, religious expression, or self protection.
Another question I’ll ask is that after the Kelo decision over 30 states passed legislation restricting how eminent domain can be used. Would you rather the federal government was making that decision for them?
I want my language back!
Unchecked, Unlimited taxing power CAN NEVER BE "the Public Good..."
We need an additional law...
The legislature is forbidden to use ambiguous, deceptive, fraudulent and Felonious language in the title of any new Law.
e.g. The Affordable Care Act
Why so little media scrutiny? Because the liberal judges voted FOR it.
The new legislation does not affect the States that have forbid taking ala what happened in Kelo.
It punishes those that permit it by denying federal economic development money to the state for 2 years.
A second component of the legislation forbids the federal government from taking ala Kelo. This part of the legislation is necessary since no law a state passes could supercede the federal government if this part is not included.
Maybe we should look for the definition of the word "constitution" while we're at it? Maybe the Framers really meant their "daily constitutional?"
-PJ
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.