Randomness
June 23, 2005
Today, the Supreme Court ruled that governments can seize private property for
private development. What the supreme court has effectively done is given the power to wealthy
corporations and businesses to stomp all over individual families and
competition. Let’s play a little exercise, shall we…
Let’s say you own a farm. It’s farmland that’s been in your family since the
1800s. Your great-great-grandfather worked this land, and everyone in your
family has worked it since. At one time, it was way, way out from the city but
in the years urban growth has sprawled out closer and closer to your land. Along
with sprawl has come subdivisions and shopping centers. Now, Wal-Mart has seen
fit to build a super-center in town, and has chosen your land.
Under this new ruling, Wal-Mart can tap-tap-tap on the shoulder of the city
council and say, “Hey, we want that land over there, look at all the tax money
we’re going to bring in” and the city council can kick you off your land using
eminent domain provisions that were once reserved for building roads and
schools, and give you whatever arbitrary amount they decide is “market value”
for your property. Instead of forcing Wal-Mart to compete and pay true value for
the land, they can now leverage the city government against you and get the land
for fractions of what it is worth.
This is one of the worst rulings I’ve ever seen come out of the Supreme Court
and a complete kick in the balls to individual liberty in this country.
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