Posted on 02/04/2006 5:19:45 PM PST by Zeroisanumber
WEARE, N.H. - Residents on Saturday rejected a proposal to evict U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter from his farmhouse to make way for the "Lost Liberty Hotel."
A group angered by last year's court decision that gave local governments more power to seize people's homes for economic development had petitioned to use the ruling against the justice.
But voters deciding which issues should go on the town's March ballot replaced the group's proposal with a call to strengthen New Hampshire's law on eminent domain.
"This is a game," said Walter Bohlin. "Why would we take something from one of ours? This is not the appropriate way."
Souter, who grew up in Weare, a central New Hampshire town of 8,500, has not commented on the matter and was not at the meeting.
Joshua Solomon, a member of the Committee for the Protection of Natural Rights, was disappointed with the vote.
"We lost today, not because there isn't support in this town but because the turnout wasn't here," he said. "It's not exactly the message we intended to have."
Solomon had said the group was formed because the Supreme Court has given courts and legislatures "permission to chip away at our freedoms."
The Supreme Court ruling allowed New London, Conn., to take several waterfront homes for a private development. The city argued that the project would benefit the public by generating tax revenue and new jobs.
The Legislature is considering several proposals to limit government's ability to use eminent domain.
oops!3:35am--I'm going to bed!!
I believe that one is standing straighter than Souters.
F#cktard. Souter has nothing in common with NH, 'cept those rat pucker-holes in Durham, Hanover, and Keene.
Does anyone have the actual election returns?
It's hard to tell from those photos, but it looks like the house and property are in disrepair.
The place is a dump. Wonder what the inside looks like?
Is this a summer home only or is it his primary residence when not in Washington?
Is this a summer home only or is it his primary residence when not in Washington?
Not facts, just my recollections.
Do not know if he spends anytime there. Doesn't look like it, does it?
Weare ping--looks like we lost this battle...
thanks for the update. well, it was fun while it lasted.... :)
Dang!
I was SO hoping...;o)
Thank you for keeping the ping list.
Hang on to it........just in case. ;o)
I sure will! :-D
Souter said it was an appropriate way. Who is this ham-hock to argue with a SCJ?
The people of Weare that attended the town deliberative session did NOT vote for strengthened eminent domain laws. What the group of 93 unguided activists did is violate the US Constitution (art. 14) as well as the NH State Constitution (art. 10).
The activists are asking for the Town of Weare government to grant special protection for an individual by name; David Souter. This is illegal.
I was there and I sat appalled to see the article rewritten and bastardized. This is a violation of a groups right to petition its own government, violating their rights.
Walter Bohlin may think he is a patriot, or a superhero, but he is indisputably a coward in my circle(s). A man afraid of democracy, fearful of the remainder; 4900 registered Weare voters.
This is not the appropriate way
Easy words, especially without presenting an effective plan that IS deemed appropriate
My one year old daughter could have entered the word Not in three places.
Not all animals are created equal.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11827131/
>snipped<
Voters decided 1,167 to 493 in favor of the reworded measure that asked the Board of Selectmen not to use their power of eminent domain to take the farmhouse, and instead urged New Hampshire to adopt a law that forbids seizures of the sort sanctioned by the Supreme Court.
Gee! I wonder what it looks like inside! The last intellectual we lived next to left the door open so she could find the exit.
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