Posted on 05/28/2003 5:10:57 PM PDT by RJCogburn
According to the Washington Times, Six Washington-area lawyers ... say theyd be happy to file suit against [a] landlord ... who ... cited a prospective tenants Republican affiliation when rejecting [his] request for housing. I assume someone will inform [the landlord] about the fair-housing laws, one self-described partisan Republican, writing from Texas, told the Times.
The ruckus began when the parents of a young intern for Rep. John Linder (R.-Ga.), contacted a Mr. Peter Kelley about renting a room for their son while he was working in Washington for the congressman. In response, Kelley told them he was quite alarmed about Rep. Linders [voting] record, and therefore would not feel right about having someone stay at [his] place who was working to advance views with which he, Kelley, disagreed. And so, he wrote, I must decline your request for a room here.
No one can deny that this is a blatant case of discrimination. But rather than cite fair-housing laws, Representative Linder should boldly take to the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives and instead offer this moral lesson to the political Left:
Mr. Kelley, you are absolutely right in your refusal to have your property used to further a cause with which you do not agree and by someone with whom you do not care to do business. In a society based on limited government, property rights, and individual freedom, your actions are the ultimate test of that foundation: Nothing better demonstrates the values we hold than to allow someone to do something we dont like with his own property, as long as it does not infringe on the equal rights of others to do the same.
Through a myriad of laws, rules, and regulations, the federal government has sought to inject itself, in violation of the Constitution, into the private relationships of its citizens and whittle away at the once-strong bulwark that private property provided between a free people and their political leaders.
Once upon a time, a man could obtain, use, expand, sell, or trade his private property without so much as a nod from the government. Today, through its smorgasbord of fair-housing, environmental, equal-opportunity, revenue, labor, safety, zoning, and similar laws, not to mention an expansive definition of eminent domain, government has established itself as the caretaker of all the property in the country and doles out to citizens only so much control over it as serves the interests of the government.
Mr. Kelley, the congressman could proclaim, you dont like Republicans, and so have taken a principled stand against helping one. We wont question, in law, the basis of your dislike for us. We applaud, if not your ideology and beliefs, then at least your refusal to have your property used as a means to anothers ends. We unhesitatingly respect your absolute right to control the circumstances under which your own property will be used.
We ask only this in return: that you grant, to every single American, equal consideration.
Drag his butt into court. That's the only way "Mr. Kelly" will understand that he has very little property rights. Make him hire a lawyer at $300 per to teach him the lesson of discrimination and "due process".
A liberal activist, will almost assuradly cause problems, and some kid who walks into the office wearing a Castro or anti-capitalism shirt is a guaranteed headache, as over-regulated as NYC real estate laws are, political discrimination is okay, and thank god it is, the last thing I need is another law telling me who I can and can't rent to.
If it's Republicans today you have to take in, it will be homosexuals tomorrow. - Tom
In New York City, it is. Real Estate Brokers may not discriminate based on orientation, and I'm pretty sure, landlords individually can't either, even if they do there own rentals.
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