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Searching for Alex Kozinski.


It's depressing enough to hear city planners routinely dismiss the concerns of property owners faced with eminent domain eminent domain, the right of a government to force the owner of private property sell it if it is needed for a public use. The right is based on the doctrine that a sovereign state has dominion over all lands and buildings within its borders, which has its origins in . But Judge Alex Judge Alex is a United States syndicated courtroom television show that debuted September 122005. The host/arbitrator is Hon. Alex Ferrer. The show tapes in Houston on KRIV-TV.  Kozinski's comments about the Kelo case are chilling if he's supposed to be the most libertarian judge in America ("Searching for Alex Kozinski Judge Alex Kozinski (born July 23, 1950) is a judge in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and a popular essayist. Youth, education and early career ," July). Judge Kozinski claims that he can't understand why Americans are so upset about government efforts to take homes for a Costco, or to take small businesses for artificial "lifestyle centers." He should ask just about anyone on the street whether these types of takings should happen in America. He will find almost universal outrage at the prospect of the government taking their homes simply to give them to another private (and wealthier) person or business favored by the government.

Perhaps they understand something the judge doesn't, but that Justice Sandra Day O'Connor Sandra Day O'Connor (born March 26 1930) is an American jurist who served as the first female Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1981 to 2006. She was considered a strict constructionist.  did in her dissent in Kelo: that the burden of eminent domain will inevitably fall on those least able to protect themselves in the process that he thinks is sufficient. Judge Kozinksi asserts that average Americans shouldn't care about eminent domain abuse because they receive compensation for their property. Leave aside the fact that property owners in eminent domain situations often receive grossly unfair "just" compensation. If the government came into the judge's home and took a precious family heirloom or a prized collection to give to someone it thinks is more deserving of such items, but leaves behind the approximate market value of these items on the dresser, would he feel any less robbed or violated?

Incredibly for someone influenced by Milton Friedman Noun 1. Milton Friedman - United States economist noted as a proponent of monetarism and for his opposition to government intervention in the economy (born in 1912)
Friedman
 and Ayn Rand Noun 1. Ayn Rand - United States writer (born in Russia) noted for her polemical novels and political conservativism (1905-1982)
Rand
, and who claims to understand and respect property rights and the free market, Judge Kozinski says that "if the city thinks there should be a private business instead of a private house, it has to make that decision," stating that he doesn't "see who else would make those decisions." How about private parties in an open market negotiating freely without government force? That's the way economic development was done throughout most of our nation's history and, even with the rampant abuse of eminent domain today, that's still the way most development occurs in a nation that values private property rights. The Founders carved out a narrow exception to the sanctity of property ownership for truly necessary public use projects, not for Costco.

Judge Kozinski says anyone who has the temerity te·mer·i·ty  
n.
Foolhardy disregard of danger; recklessness.



[Middle English temerite, from Old French, from Latin temerit
 to think the Constitution prevents government from transferring property from one private owner to another "can go live in a forest." With four Supreme Court justices and millions of other Americans, that would be a pretty crowded forest.

Chip Mellor William H. "Chip" Mellor serves as the President and General Counsel of the Institute for Justice, which he founded with Clint Bolick in 1991. Prior to the Institute for Justice
Mellor received his B.A. from Ohio State University in 1973 and his J.D.
 

President & General Counsel

Scott Bullock Scott G. Bullock is a senior attorney at the Institute for Justice a public interest law firm in Arlington, Virginia founded in 1991 by Chip Mellor and Clint Bolick. He was lead counsel for Susette Kelo in the landmark case, Kelo v.  

Senior Attorney

Institute for Justice

Washington, D. C.

reason should be lauded for its recent interview with Judge Alex Kozinski. But I wonder how many other readers were left scratching their heads about this enigmatic judge who is the "closest" thing we have to a libertarian on the federal bench.

Kelo v. New London was the biggest assault on property rights by the U.S. Supreme Court in the last 50 years. Judge Kozinski's dismissive attitude toward the victims--"They were paid for [their property]. They were not dispossessed"--should raise eyebrows.

Kozinski also questions whether the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is a "rubber stamp" court. According to the The Washington Post, the Washington Post, The

Morning daily newspaper published in Washington, D.C., the dominant paper in the U.S. capital and one of the nation's leading newspapers. Established in 1877 as a Democratic Party organ, it changed orientation and ownership several times and faced
 court approved 18,748 wiretap wiretap n. using an electronic device to listen in on telephone lines, which is illegal unless allowed by court order based upon a showing by law enforcement of "probable cause" to believe the communications are part of criminal activities.  warrant applications and rejected only five between 1979 and 2004.

I know a lot of people who are holding their breath waiting for the first true libertarian to get on the Supreme Court bench. Judge Kozinski gives me enough pause to want to keep holding my breath.

Jay Fisher

Atlanta, GA

Kozinski declares: "You are objecting to Kelo because property was taken for privately owned businesses. But the businesses provided services to lots of people. So if the city thinks there should be a private business instead of a private house, it has to make that decision. If you want to decide on your own, you can go live in a forest."

Private property rights are the objective means of identifying and adjudicating disputes among members of society; they are the protectors of individual rights, which would not be possible without them. To believe that such rights should be legally and ethically subjected to the whims of a public auction block is such a gross and disastrous abrogation The destruction or annulling of a former law by an act of the legislative power, by constitutional authority, or by usage. It stands opposed to rogation; and is distinguished from derogation, which implies the taking away of only some part of a law; from Subrogation,  of intellectual consistency and integrity as to be positively unbelievable. To hear it coming from the "most libertarian" judge in the country makes it positively scary.

Bradley T. Harrington

Milwaukie, OR
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Article Details
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Author:Harrington, Bradley T.
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Letter to the editor
Date:Nov 1, 2006
Words:756
Previous Article:Treason of the Clerk.(Letter to the editor)
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