Milk Freedom Act of 2014

It’s about time we had someone try to bring some sanity to the issue of criminality behind raw milk. Thank you, Rep. Massie!

Massie Drops Two Bills in Defense of Raw Milk Distribution

 

rawmilk

Farmers across America continue to be harassed and fined for distributing unprocessed milk. This has been a problem to hard-working American families even before former congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) introduced his Unpasteurized Raw Milk Bill, HR 1830, in 2011.

Now, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) has announced he is dropping two separate bills addressing the same issues with the goal of restoring the farmers’ right to distribute milk, and the consumer’s right to choose what he or she wants to put in their own bodies.

Dairy farmers across the country find themselves in trouble with the law over the Food and Drug Administration’s strict guidelines, which end up pushing the raw milk business to the sidelines, turning it into a black market and thus increasing the risks associated with the poor processing quality. When laws are too strict, farmers can no longer make use of the protection of an open market where they compete freely. Consumers are the ones who lose.

While many doctors continue to defend the reasons why people may prefer to drink raw milk, many others will say that raw milk is in fact hazardous and must be kept from consumers, for their own good.

While the open debate is always important, banning a consumer item solely on the premises that it may eventually cause somebody harm is just not compatible with living in a free society, where individuals are aware they might have to face certain risks every now and then but are also entirely free to opt out.

Rep. Massie’s “Milk Freedom Act of 2014,” which reportedly counts on the support of least 18 co-sponsors, would provide relief to small and local farmers who have been directly affected by the harassment perpetrated by federal government bullies for distributing raw milk.  The “Interstate Milk Freedom Act of 2014” would keep the federal government from interfering with the process of distribution of raw milk across the lines of two states in which the sale of raw, natural milk is already legal.

“As a producer of grass-fed beef, I am familiar with some of the difficulties small farmers face when marketing fresh food directly to consumers,” Massie said in a statement. “Our bills would make it easier for families to buy wholesome milk directly from farmers by reversing the criminalization of dairy farmers who offer raw milk.”

“The federal government should not punish farmers for providing customers the foods they want, and states should be free to set their own laws regulating food safety,” the Kentucky Republican added.

Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-ME) is the leading Democrat on both bills. According to Massie’s office, both bills have received the support from both Heritage Action and Campaign for Liberty.

Folks concerned with the sovereignty of state laws regarding the sale and distribution of raw milk can rest assured that none of the bills’ provisions would interfere with state laws.

The following representatives are co-sponsoring the “Interstate Milk Freedom Act of 2014”: Paul Broun (R-GA), Walter Jones (R-NC), H. Morgan Griffith (R-VA), Andy Harris (R-MD), Raul Labrador (R-ID), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), Tom McClintock (R-CA), Mick Mulvaney (R-SC), Ted Poe (R-TX), Jared Polis (D-CO), Scott Rigell (R-VA), Steve Stockman (R-TX), Marlin Stutzman (R-IN), Dana Rohrbacher (R-CA), Louie Gohmert (R-TX) and Scott Perry (R-PA).

Co-sponsors of the “Milk Freedom Act of 1014” include Polis, Rohrbacher, Gohmert, McClintock, Rigell, Jones, Stockman, Broun, and Rep. Justin Amash (R-MI).

 

Russia Won’t Accept GMO’s

Russia will not import GMO products – PM Medvedev

RIA Novosti / Maksim Bogodvid

RIA Novosti / Maksim Bogodvid

Russia will not import GMO products, the country’s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said, adding that the nation has enough space and resources to produce organic food.

Moscow has no reason to encourage the production of genetically modified products or import them into the country, Medvedev told a congress of deputies from rural settlements on Saturday.

“If the Americans like to eat GMO products, let them eat it then. We don’t need to do that; we have enough space and opportunities to produce organic food,” he said.

The prime minister said he ordered widespread monitoring of the agricultural sector. He added that despite rather strict restrictions, a certain amount of GMO products and seeds have made it to the Russian market.

 

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev speaks at a meeting of United Russia deputies from Russian rural villages in Volgograd on April 5, 2014. (RIA Novosti / Ekaterina Shtukina)

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev speaks at a meeting of United Russia deputies from Russian rural villages in Volgograd on April 5, 2014. (RIA Novosti / Ekaterina Shtukina)

 

Earlier, agriculture minister Nikolay Fyodorov also stated that Russia should remain free of genetically modified products.

At the end of February, the Russian parliament asked the government to impose a temporary ban on all genetically altered products in Russia.

The State Duma’s Agriculture Committee supported a ban on the registration and trade of genetically modified organisms. It was suggested that until specialists develop a working system of control over the effects of GMOs on humans and the natural environment, the government should impose a moratorium on the breeding and growth of genetically modified plants, animals, and microorganisms.

Earlier this month, MPs of the parliamentary majority United Russia party, together with the ‘For Sovereignty’ parliamentary group, suggested an amendment of the existing law On Safety and Quality of Alimentary Products, with a norm set for the maximum allowed content of transgenic and genetically modified components.

There is currently no limitation on the trade or production of GMO-containing food in Russia. However, when the percentage of GMO exceeds 0.9 percent, the producer must label such goods and warn consumers. Last autumn, the government passed a resolution allowing the listing of genetically modified plants in the Unified State Register. The resolution will come into force in July.

 

A new Problem Arises…

This is a very interesting article. As one who often skims and also often has to print out -at least portions- of lovely government documents so I can be sure to read them in depth, this makes perfect sense to me. We’ve lengthened the short attention span theater affect to not only our information gathering, but I think to our personal relationships as well. I also wonder if there is a correlation here to Kindle reading and right or left brain dominance associated with learning patterns.

Truthfully, there are news sites I avoid because they have entirely too much going on in sidebars and too much flash. It makes me feel like I am being visually raped. Or perhaps a better analogy is being forcefully beer bonged by over caffeinated frat boys.

I find it deeply intriguing that the movement to deepen reading patterns is looking to the slow food movement for some inspiration! Please read this lengthy article and let me know what you think about the observations given and whether or not you have experienced or noticed this in your life.

Serious reading takes a hit from online scanning and skimming, researchers say

By Michael S. Rosenwald, Published: April 6

Claire Handscombe has a commitment problem online. Like a lot of Web surfers, she clicks on links posted on social networks, reads a few sentences, looks for exciting words, and then grows restless, scampering off to the next page she probably won’t commit to.

“I give it a few seconds — not even minutes — and then I’m moving again,” says Handscombe, a 35-year-old graduate student in creative writing at American University.

But it’s not just online anymore. She finds herself behaving the same way with a novel.

“It’s like your eyes are passing over the words but you’re not taking in what they say,” she confessed. “When I realize what’s happening, I have to go back and read again and again.”

To cognitive neuroscientists, Handscombe’s experience is the subject of great fascination and growing alarm. Humans, they warn, seem to be developing digital brains with new circuits for skimming through the torrent of information online. This alternative way of reading is competing with traditional deep reading circuitry developed over several millennia.

“I worry that the superficial way we read during the day is affecting us when we have to read with more in-depth processing,” said Maryanne Wolf, a Tufts University cognitive neuroscientist and the author of “Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain.”

If the rise of nonstop cable TV news gave the world a culture of sound bites, the Internet, Wolf said, is bringing about an eye byte culture. Time spent online — on desktop and mobile devices — was expected to top five hours per day in 2013 for U.S. adults, according to eMarketer, which tracks digital behavior. That’s up from three hours in 2010.

Word lovers and scientists have called for a “slow reading” movement, taking a branding cue from the “slow food” movement. They are battling not just cursory sentence galloping but the constant social network and e-mail temptations that lurk on our gadgets — the bings and dings that interrupt “Call me Ishmael.”

Researchers are working to get a clearer sense of the differences between online and print reading — comprehension, for starters, seems better with paper — and are grappling with what these differences could mean not only for enjoying the latest Pat Conroy novel but for understanding difficult material at work and school. There is concern that young children’s affinity and often mastery of their parents’ devices could stunt the development of deep reading skills.

The brain is the innocent bystander in this new world. It just reflects how we live.

“The brain is plastic its whole life span,” Wolf said. “The brain is constantly adapting.”

Wolf, one of the world’s foremost experts on the study of reading, was startled last year to discover her brain was apparently adapting, too. After a day of scrolling through the Web and hundreds of e-mails, she sat down one evening to read Hermann Hesse’s “The Glass Bead Game.”

“I’m not kidding: I couldn’t do it,” she said. “It was torture getting through the first page. I couldn’t force myself to slow down so that I wasn’t skimming, picking out key words, organizing my eye movements to generate the most information at the highest speed. I was so disgusted with myself.”

Adapting to read

The brain was not designed for reading. There are no genes for reading like there are for language or vision. But spurred by the emergence of Egyptian hieroglyphics, the Phoenician alphabet, Chinese paper and, finally, the Gutenberg press, the brain has adapted to read.

Before the Internet, the brain read mostly in linear ways — one page led to the next page, and so on. Sure, there might be pictures mixed in with the text, but there didn’t tend to be many distractions. Reading in print even gave us a remarkable ability to remember where key information was in a book simply by the layout, researchers said. We’d know a protagonist died on the page with the two long paragraphs after the page with all that dialogue.

The Internet is different. With so much information, hyperlinked text, videos alongside words and interactivity everywhere, our brains form shortcuts to deal with it all — scanning, searching for key words, scrolling up and down quickly. This is nonlinear reading, and it has been documented in academic studies. Some researchers believe that for many people, this style of reading is beginning to invade when dealing with other mediums as well.

“We’re spending so much time touching, pushing, linking, scroll­ing and jumping through text that when we sit down with a novel, your daily habits of jumping, clicking, linking is just ingrained in you,” said Andrew Dillon, a University of Texas professor who studies reading. “We’re in this new era of information behavior, and we’re beginning to see the consequences of that.”

Brandon Ambrose, a 31-year-old Navy financial analyst who lives in Alexandria, knows of those consequences.

His book club recently read “The Interestings,” a best-seller by Meg Wolitzer. When the club met, he realized he had missed a number of the book’s key plot points. It hit him that he had been scanning for information about one particular aspect of the book, just as he might scan for one particular fact on his computer screen, where he spends much of his day.

“When you try to read a novel,” he said, “it’s almost like we’re not built to read them anymore, as bad as that sounds.”

Ramesh Kurup noticed something even more troubling. Working his way recently through a number of classic authors — George Eliot, Marcel Proust, that crowd — Kurup, 47, discovered that he was having trouble reading long sentences with multiple, winding clauses full of background information. Online sentences tend to be shorter, and the ones containing complicated information tend to link to helpful background material.

“In a book, there are no graphics or links to keep you on track,” Kurup said.

It’s easier to follow links, he thinks, than to keep track of so many clauses in page after page of long paragraphs.

Kurup’s observation might sound far-fetched, but told about it, Wolf did not scoff. She offered more evidence: Several English department chairs from around the country have e-mailed her to say their students are having trouble reading the classics.

“They cannot read ‘Middlemarch.’ They cannot read William James or Henry James,” Wolf said. “I can’t tell you how many people have written to me about this phenomenon. The students no longer will or are perhaps incapable of dealing with the convoluted syntax and construction of George Eliot and Henry James.”

Wolf points out that she’s no Luddite. She sends e-mails from her iPhone as often as one of her students. She’s involved with programs to send tablets to developing countries to help children learn to read. But just look, she said, at Twitter and its brisk 140-character declarative sentences.

“How much syntax is lost, and what is syntax but the reflection of our convoluted thoughts?” she said. “My worry is we will lose the ability to express or read this convoluted prose. Will we become Twitter brains?”

Bi-literate brains?

Wolf’s next book will look at what the digital world is doing to the brain, including looking at brain-scan data as people read both online and in print. She is particularly interested in comprehension results in screen vs. print reading.

Already, there is some intriguing research that looks at that question. A 2012 Israeli study of engineering students — who grew up in the world of screens — looked at their comprehension while reading the same text on screen and in print when under time pressure to complete the task.

The students believed they did better on screen. They were wrong. Their comprehension and learning was better on paper.

Researchers say that the differences between text and screen reading should be studied more thoroughly and that the differences should be dealt with in education, particularly with school-aged children. There are advantages to both ways of reading. There is potential for a bi-literate brain.

“We can’t turn back,” Wolf said. “We should be simultaneously reading to children from books, giving them print, helping them learn this slower mode, and at the same time steadily increasing their immersion into the technological, digital age. It’s both. We have to ask the question: What do we want to preserve?”

Wolf is training her own brain to be bi-literate. She went back to the Hesse novel the next night, giving herself distance, both in time and space, from her screens.

“I put everything aside. I said to myself, ‘I have to do this,’ ” she said. “It was really hard the second night. It was really hard the third night. It took me two weeks, but by the end of the second week I had pretty much recovered myself so I could enjoy and finish the book.”

Then she read it again.

“I wanted to enjoy this form of reading again,” Wolf said. “When I found myself, it was like I recovered. I found my ability again to slow down, savor and think.”

 

 

FBI Seizes 91 year old man’s Artifact Collection…Because they can!

This is unbelievable. The man has things, and the FBI takes them and cites NO reason for seizing the man’s property. Frankly, if this doesn’t hack you off, you must not have a pulse!

FBI Seizes Thousands of Artifacts from Rural Indiana Home
WALDRON, Ind. — FBI agents Wednesday seized “thousands” of cultural artifacts, including American Indian items, from the private collection of a 91-year-old man who had acquired them over the past eight decades.

An FBI command vehicle and several tents were spotted at the property in rural Waldron, about 35 miles southeast of Indianapolis.

The Rush County man, Don Miller, has not been arrested or charged.

Robert A. Jones, special agent in charge of the Indianapolis FBI office, would not say at a news conference specifically why the investigation was initiated, but he did say the FBI had information about Miller’s collection and acted on it by deploying its art crime team.

FBI agents are working with art experts and museum curators, and neither they nor Jones would describe a single artifact involved in the investigation, but it is a massive collection. Jones added that cataloging of all of the items found will take longer than “weeks or months.”

“Frankly, overwhelmed,” is how Larry Zimmerman, professor of anthropology and museum studies at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis described his reaction. “I have never seen a collection like this in my life except in some of the largest museums.”
FBI agents work around a home in Waldron, Ind., to confiscate what the agency is calling artifacts April 2, 2014.(Photo: Kelly Wilkinson, The Indianapolis Star)
The monetary value of the items and relics has not been determined, Jones said, but the cultural value is beyond measure. In addition to American Indian objects, the collection includes items from China, Russia, Peru, Haiti, Australia and New Guinea, he said.

The items were found in a main residence, in which Miller lives; a second, unoccupied residence on the property; and in several outbuildings, Jones said. The town originally was Iroquois land.

The objects were not stored to museum standards, Jones said, but it was apparent Miller had made an effort to maintain them well.

The aim of the investigation is to determine what each artifact is, where it came from and how Miller obtained it, Jones said, to determine whether some of the items might be illegal to possess privately.

Jones acknowledged that Miller might have acquired some of the items before the passage of U.S. laws or treaties prohibited their sale or purchase.

In addition, the investigation could result in the “repatriation” of any of the cultural items, Jones said.

I have never seen a collection like this in my life except in some of the largest museums.
Larry Zimmerman, professor of anthropology and museum studies
Dark Rain Thom, a Shawnee descendant who served on the Indiana Native American Indian Affairs Commission under three governors, said the motives of such collectors vary, and that it’s not uncommon for collections to come to light when an elderly person dies and descendants try to figure out what to do with artifacts.

Often, she said, family members then quietly donate them to museums or arrange to return them to specific tribes — if that provenance can be determined.

Some collectors are motivated by money, as the artifacts’ sale can be lucrative, Thom said. But others with interests in archaeology or anthropology are motivated by a desire to understand the development of a culture through its art items and everyday implements. And others, Thom said, are in it for the thrill of discovery.

The FBI and its partners might have a daunting task determining the origins and provenance of all of the items, Thom predicted.

“It may be 30 years — or never — before they have it all cataloged.”

Contributing: The Associated Press

URGENT! Direct Unregulated Trade Bill Hearing Wednesday April 2nd

UPDATE:::::

Please email your comments on this bill to: Mike.Moon@house.mo.gov . Representative Moon will bring your testimony to the hearing for you!

HB 2138, which would allow for direct unregulated trade of farm produced goods, is scheduled to have a hearing tomorrow, April 2nd at 12:00pm in Jefferson City.

This bill is important for food choice, economic freedom and the most basic of human rights, the right to decide what one wants to eat and from whom one wishes to get their food. The issue of control of access and ability to produce food for our neighbors and friends is a huge concern. We say that we are “free”, but we have regulatory controls prohibiting our neighbor from selling us 5 pounds of beef out of their freezer. We can’t buy cheese our neighbor made. We can’t buy raw milk unless we go directly to the farm. We have to worry continually about whether or not we are breaking regulations in providing sustenance for our community. Sometimes, we even get visits from meat detectives running on anonymous tips of “illegal meat and poultry sales”!

The fact is, through the Commerce Clause, the federal agencies have expanded their authority to control every aspect of human life.

HB2138 would restore the most basic of human rights, the right to decide what we want to eat, to the purview of the individual.

I am trying to see if Ron Calzone of Missouri First will be able to get witness forms for the bill. Please check back for that update. But in the interim, write up your thoughts on whether Missourians are smart enough to decide what they want to eat or not, and be ready to send them to the committee.

Here’s the hearing notice:

PROFESSIONAL REGISTRATION AND LICENSING
Date: Wednesday, April 02, 2014
Time: 12:00 PM
Location: House Hearing Room 7

The list of all members of the Committee:

Committee
Burlison, Eric, Chair
Elmer, Kevin, Vice Chair
Allen, Sue
Anderson, Sonya
Bahr, Kurt
Brown, Wanda
Carpenter, Jon
Cornejo, Robert
Fraker, Lyndall
Frame, Michael
Franklin, Diane
Frederick, Keith
Hinson, Dave
Keeney, Shelley
Kratky, Michele
Lant, Bill
Lichtenegger, Donna
Mayfield, John
McCann Beatty, Gail
Moon, Mike
Muntzel, Dave
Nichols, Mary
Peters, Joshua
Rhoads, Shawn
Swan, Kathryn
Swearingen, Jay
Walton Gray, Rochelle

And finally, here is the complete text of the bill:

262.293. 1. The residents of Missouri shall have the right to sell directly to a buyer or purchase directly from a seller any farm-direct goods produced within this state. The seller of farm-direct goods shall retain the right to choose whether or not such farm-direct goods and the sale thereof shall be subject to regulation by the state, any political subdivision of the state, or any state or local regulatory agency. Any seller of farm-direct goods not subject to such regulation shall, at the time of the direct sale, declare to the buyer via a sign, label on the package, or verbally that such farm-direct goods are not subject to regulation by the state, any political subdivision of the state, or any state or local regulatory agency. The buyer of farm-direct goods shall retain the responsibility to ensure the process of production of the farm-direct goods purchased meets the buyer’s approval.

2. For purposes of this section, the following terms shall mean:

(1) “Buyer”, a buyer of farm-direct goods for personal consumption who purchases directly from a seller;

(2) “Farm-direct goods”, goods produced on a farm in this state by a seller and sold by such seller directly to a buyer;

(3) “Seller”, a producer of farm-direct goods who sells such goods directly to a buyer.

3. The state, any political subdivision of this state, and any state or local regulatory agency shall not interfere or otherwise attempt to regulate the sale and purchase of farm-direct goods not subject to regulation under this section.

4. Nothing in this section shall be construed to provide any civil or criminal immunity from liability for an intentional act or an act of gross negligence by a seller or buyer under this section which constitute a violation of any civil or criminal laws of this state.

Your Tax Dollars at Work….Sigh

This is just stupid. I don’t doubt it’s true, but it is still stupid.

Recently my youngest has been very concerned about IQ and what that means. I’ve stressed to her that it indicates only the capacity to learn, and doesn’t make one more intelligent or less intelligent than another. I may have to equivocate on that statement and state that there may be variance if one is employed by the government and approves grants for idiotic studies.

Sigh…And no, I am not aroused.

Feds Spending $53,282 to Study Sighs
‘Sighs also play an important role in triggering arousal’

BY: Elizabeth Harrington
March 26, 2014 11:50 am

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is paying a researcher over $53,000 to study sighs.

The new study, which began in January, will focus on the role that brain cells play in “sigh generation.”

“Periodic sigh generation is required to maintain normal blood gas levels, and the inability to generate sighs is related to serious respiratory conditions such as lung atelectasis,” the project’s grant said. “Sighs also play an important role in triggering arousal, and the loss of sighs has been related to an increased risk of SIDS [Sudden Infant Death Syndrome].”

Tatiana Dashevskiy, a senior researcher at Seattle Children’s Hospital, is leading the study, which is scheduled to last until 2016. The grant said the project is important because the origination of sighs is unknown.

“The role of sighs in maintaining blood gas levels and triggering arousal during hypoxia suggests that sighs may be produced when metabolic activity is altered with the purpose of coordinating and resetting the sparsely connected central respiratory networks,” the grant said. “Unfortunately, the mechanisms underlying sigh generation and periodicity remain unclear.”

“Specifically, we propose to examine neuron-glia interactions for novel signaling pathways that underlie sigh generation and periodicity,” it said. Glia are brain cells that support neurons, and are believed to play a pivotal role in breathing.

“The central respiratory network controls breathing and produces three distinct patterns of activity: eupnea [quiet breathing], gasping, and sighs,” the grant said.

The researchers said figuring out how sighs are produced will lead to a better understanding of the respiratory system.

“By creating a new model of the respiratory network, which incorporates the collected data, we will be able to mimic different neuromodulatory and metabolic states of the system and thus use this model to investigate new testable hypothesis,” it said.

The cost for the first year of the study is $53,282.

Facebook and Monsanto: top shareholders are identical

If you’re a regular follower of my blog, you may know I quit Facebook on Constitution Day. I didn’t know the following info at the time, but I simply do not want to be assimilated. Rappoport has done some incredible work in exposing the control paradigm for a good long time now. I hope you benefit from this information.

Unregulated Direct Trade Bill Introduced in Missouri (HB2138)

At last, at long last, Missouri has a bill that will solidify in statute a right we actually already have, but which is being impeded by agencies who think they have the right to act as gods over people in this nation. Rep Mike Moon has introduced a Direct Trade bill and 17 reps co-sponsored in very short order! My thanks to Mike Moon for having the courage to finally get this bill into the process!!

The point of this bill is simply to empower people and provide the ability for people to benefit from locally grown and produced food. In reality, the ability eat is to have food in abundance is the only thing that allows us to be civil to each other. Most people are still going to want the anonymous, consolidated, centralized, corporate,  “food” supply. That’s fine, let them have their mega-chain goods! But for those of us who want to buy directly from the farmer, or sell directly to the consumer, it won’t be a potentially criminal act if this goes through.

I wish I had more time to pontificate about this, but alas, I do not.

Please call your representatives and encourage them to support HB2138 and get it through the process clean and quickly…Here is the text of the bill:

  262.293. 1. The residents of Missouri shall have the right to sell directly to a buyer or purchase directly from a seller any farm-direct goods produced within this state. The seller of farm-direct goods shall retain the right to choose whether or not such farm-direct goods and the sale thereof shall be subject to regulation by the state, any political subdivision of the state, or any state or local regulatory agency. Any seller of farm-direct goods not subject to such regulation shall, at the time of the direct sale, declare to the buyer via a sign, label on the package, or verbally that such farm-direct goods are not subject to regulation by the state, any political subdivision of the state, or any state or local regulatory agency. The buyer of farm-direct goods shall retain the responsibility to ensure the process of production of the farm-direct goods purchased meets the buyer’s approval.

            2. For purposes of this section, the following terms shall mean:

            (1) “Buyer”, a buyer of farm-direct goods for personal consumption who purchases directly from a seller;

            (2) “Farm-direct goods”, goods produced on a farm in this state by a seller and sold by such seller directly to a buyer;

            (3) “Seller”, a producer of farm-direct goods who sells such goods directly to a buyer.

            3. The state, any political subdivision of this state, and any state or local regulatory agency shall not interfere or otherwise attempt to regulate the sale and purchase of farm-direct goods not subject to regulation under this section.

            4. Nothing in this section shall be construed to provide any civil or criminal immunity from liability for an intentional act or an act of gross negligence by a seller or buyer under this section which constitute a violation of any civil or criminal laws of this state.

(Go to the General Assembly Homepage  and then you can punch in the bill number in the search box and bring it up and keep track of the legislation)

VA Bill Helps Protect Farmer’s Rights

This is good news….For a change!

Virginia Adopts Bipartisan Law Protecting Farms, Property Rights

Property owners and farmers in Virginia are celebrating after another victory in the battle against what critics said was oppressive government schemes infringing on private-property rights under various pretexts. Known as the “Boneta Bill,” SB 51 was quietly signed last week by Democrat Gov. Terry McAuliffe following a public uprising over draconian regulations and harassment targeting family farmers — and Martha Boneta’s (shown) small farm in particular. In Virginia and nationwide, however, the battle continues.

Among other key elements, the new Virginia law reins in the power of state and local officials to violate the rights of property owners in agricultural areas. Farmers, for example, will generally no longer be required to have permits for a wide range of activities on their land: agritourism, food preparation, and more. The measure also protects farmers from incomprehensible mazes of red tape and regulation while allowing them to sell their products directly to consumers without bureaucratic permission in most cases.

While the measure is a good start, more still needs to be done to properly protect property rights in the state, supporters of the bill said. “Virginia’s SB 51 is a positive step in the right direction, freeing farm commerce and culture from some restrictive and needless red tape, thanks to Martha Boneta’s tireless efforts,” constitutional attorney Mark Fitzgibbons, who played a major role in the battle, told The New American. He was referring to the farmer whose struggle against local officials resulted in the new law.

Still, even with the victory, “more corrections are needed,” added Fitzgibbons, who helped organize “pitchfork rallies” on behalf of Boneta as local officials sought to trample her rights and fine her into oblivion. “The Virginia Code still gives too much subjective discretion to localities, which allows them to discriminate, and does not include penalties against counties that violate farmers’ rights.” Legislation to address some of those issues is already in the works.

The story behind the new law began on Martha Boneta’s little farm in Fauquier County, Virginia, which she purchased from the Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC). In addition to organic farming on the land, Boneta rescues animals and sells farm products she produces directly to local consumers. When she bought the farm from PEC, however, the organization slipped in a so-called “conservation easement” into the agreement purporting to severely limit her rights to the property.

In short order, county bureaucrats began doing what they so often do: threatening Boneta with fines and ordering her to obtain “permits” to do just about anything on her own property — even host private events. When the county obtained pictures of a private birthday party she hosted for a handful of young children taking place at her barn, Boneta was threatened with fines of $5,000 per day for each alleged “violation.” Soon, the PEC was even demanding to look into her private closet in search of more supposed “violations,” according to reports.

The whole drama quickly escalated and snowballed out of control. Eventually, the battle began making headlines nationwide as powerful officials and their allies harassed and viciously persecuted Boneta over every trivial “violation” they could concoct. Faced with thousands of dollars in expenses and the perpetual threat of more fines, Boneta finally had to shut down her little store. Her farm was in serious jeopardy.

As the ordeal began attracting statewide and even national attention, rallies ensued, and an outraged public demanded an end to the abuses. Watchdog.org’s Virginia Bureau also poured fuel on the fire by digging into the case and shining the spotlight on the nightmare Boneta was being forced to endure. With support from citizens across the state, numerous grassroots organizations, the Virginia Farm Bureau, and more, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle joined together to pass the legislation by a landslide.

“I want to thank Gov. McAuliffe, the members of the General Assembly, the Farm Bureau and all those who have rallied to the defense of family farmers,” Boneta said in a statement after the legislation was signed into law. “After all my family and I have been through, it is a blessing that the rights of farmers as entrepreneurs can be upheld.” Speaking to Watchdog.org, she added: “Now farmers can farm without fear or fees…. It gives hope to farmers and landholders in the fight for property rights.”

Democrat and Republican lawmakers alike also praised the bill and its being signed into law, saying the measure would protect the rights of farmers. “I’m very pleased to see that the governor signed SB 51,” Democrat State Sen. Chap Petersen was quoted as saying. “This will guarantee that farmers can continue to use their farms and sell their wares without unnecessary state interference.” GOP legislators also celebrated the bipartisan effort.

The Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund, one of myriad organizations that actively supported the legislation, also praised the measure and its enactment. “This will keep more of Virginia food dollars in state, and keep the most environmentally conscious stewards on the land,” Fund President Pete Kennedy said in a statement.

Despite the new law, which takes effect on July 1, the saga is far from finished. “This county government has been absolutely out of control,” said Tom DeWeese, president of the pro-property rights American Policy Center, a national organization that also backed the measure and others like it. “They have been trying to control these farms and businesses, so this bill was designed to help farmers to not have to have permits for every little thing.”

DeWeese said that organizations like the PEC and the “conservation easements” they market represent a major danger to property rights, not just in Virginia, but across America. “Organizations like this and these self-proclaimed stakeholders are in every single community,” he told The New American in a phone interview. “The regulations they are pushing are the same everywhere and we’re seeing this in every corner of the country. This all ties in, of course, to sustainable development and UN Agenda 21programs.”

However, while the assault on property rights continues, efforts to stop it are accelerating as well. “What we’re doing across the country is helping local communities and state legislators protect private-property rights in their jurisdictions,” DeWeese continued. “We have to define what property rights are, and then we have to fight for these rights and pass legislation with strong property-rights language. These efforts are already having an effect.”

DeWeese, whose organization has played a leading role in the national battle to protect Americans’ unalienable rights to control their property, also had some advice for activists across America working on the issue in their own communities. “This seems so vast, and the other side seems so powerful, so our people get confused and down and they don’t see a way around it,” he explained. “We have to focus, and the property-rights issue is the place to focus.”

Without being able to curtail property rights, the whole scheme crumbles. “They can’t implement sustainable development without infringing on property rights, so that’s where we can begin to chip away on this a little bit at a time,” DeWeese concluded. “They put it in place piece by piece, so we’re going to have to tear it down piece by piece.”

Indeed, across the country, as all levels of government continue waging a silent war on property rights, resistance and the public outcry is growing louder by the day. Just last week, the Oklahoma House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly for legislation that would protect property rights from federal and international machinations. Before that, Alabama became the first state to officially ban UN Agenda 21. Many state and local governments have also come out forcefully against the international scheme. Even the Republican National Committee came out strongly against the plot in the GOP platform.

Activists have been celebrating their recent victories, but few doubt that much work remains if private-property rights are to be properly protected from the accelerating attacks. The UN, for example, has been making increasingly outlandish demands, and the Obama administration remains an ardent supporter. At the state and local level, the assaults, often funded with taxpayer resources, are continuing as well. However, with enough effort and awareness, the American people can still emerge victorious from the battle.

Photo of Fauquier County, Virginia, farmer Martha Boneta: AP Images

Alex Newman is a correspondent for The New American, covering economics, politics, and more. He can be reached atanewman@thenewamerican.comFollow him on Twitter @ALEXNEWMAN_JOU.

Woman Sues City of Tulsa For Destroying Her Garden

As most of you know, there has been a war on gardening going on in many municipalities. The genesis of these destructive actions is usually code enforcement. If you live in a city, the proactive thing to do is to go to the city council meetings and begin the process to have gardening protected in your city. A resolution by the council can be enough to halt any destruction that is planned by the code enforcers. Getting an ordinance specifically to protect urban food production is even better, but a longer process than a resolution. It is worth the investment of time and energy to get this done as just beginning the process and a press release about that will get more people to plant gardens and help the general health and well being of your community.

It isn’t terribly difficult in most of the smaller cities to begin this process. In really big cities, the difficulty level is going to be much higher, but in places with less than one million people, it shouldn’t be too terrifically difficult to get an appointment to address the council. There’s plenty of information out there about the problems with our food supplies stability, the benefits of fresh fruits and vegetables, as well as positive impacts on health with gardening.

Here’s the article with link so you can watch the video as well:

TULSA, Oklahoma –

A Tulsa woman is suing the city’s code enforcement officers after she said they cut down her garden with no cause.

Denise Morrison said she has more than 100 plant varieties in her front and back yards and all of them are edible and have a purpose.

She knows which ones will treat arthritis, which will make your food spicy, which ones keep mosquitoes away and treat bug bites, but she said none of that matter to city inspectors.

Last August, Morrison’s front and back yards were filled with flowers in bloom, lemon, stevia, garlic chives, grapes, strawberries, apple mint, spearmint, peppermint, an apple tree, walnut tree, pecan trees and much more.

She got a letter from the city saying there had been a complaint about her yard.

She said she took pictures to meet with city inspectors, but they wouldn’t listen, so she invited them to her home so they could point out the problem areas.

“Everything, everything needs to go,” Morrison said they told her.

When she heard they wanted to cut it all down, she called police. The officer issued her a citation so it could be worked out in court.

She said she went to court on August 15, and the judge told them to come back in October. But the very next day, men were cutting down most of her plants.

They even cut down some of her trees -– ones that bore fruit and nuts -– and went up next to her house and basically removed everything in her front flower bed.

“I came back three days later, sat in my driveway, cried and left,” Morrison said.

Morrison said she had a problem at her last property with code enforcement, so this time, she read the ordinance, which says plants can’t be over 12-inches tall unless they’re used for human consumption. She made sure everything she grew could be eaten, which she told the inspectors.

“Every word out of their mouth was, ‘we don’t care,'” Morrison said.

Morrison said she used many of the plants that were destroyed to treat her diabetes, high-blood pressure and arthritis.

“Not only are the plants my livelihood, they’re my food and I was unemployed at the time and had no food left, no medicine left, and I didn’t have insurance,” Morrison said. “They took away my life and livelihood.”

Morrison finally went to court last week for the citation she got last August at another property. The garden portion of the citation was dismissed and she pleaded no contest to having an inoperable truck in her driveway.

She filed a civil rights lawsuit this week, accusing the inspectors of overstepping their authority.

The City of Tulsa said it hasn’t received the lawsuit yet, so it couldn’t comment.

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