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Wednesday, May 18, 2022

The road to hell is paved with rules

 

Poor Man Survival

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The road to hell is paved with rules

The old saying is, of course, that "the road to hell is paved with good intentions."

It is why we have come to a place where freedom to travel is not a right.

It is where we have submitted ourselves to what would have once been considered gross violations of our rights, for the "privilege" of using public roads that we pay for.

It is why official state sanction is needed to simply obtain the right to drive a car, much less move about.

Car commercials depict Americans as constantly driving off-road, flying across any terrain we wish without a care in the world. When was the last time you had that much freedom when driving?

Can you imagine the 19th century American pausing to make sure he had his papers before embarking on a trip? The man or family might consider whether they were properly provisioned — food, water, clothes, bedroll, etc. — but the notion of needing a license to legally travel the roads on horseback or in a wagon was unheard of.

Today, as many people begin planning summer travel by car, you are automatically aware that if you don't have the official signature and photograph-emblazoned imprimatur from government (also known as a driver's license), and properly approved permission from the corporatist masters (also known as proof of insurance) you're subject to fine and/or arrest should you get "caught" disobeying the hundreds of rules of the road.

We've surrendered our right to unfettered travel with hardly a whimper of protest. Now, traveling the nation's roads is considered a "privilege" rather than a right.

Worse, under implied consent, civil penalties and evidentiary consequences can be invoked on motorists who refuse to comply with tests when they've been arrested on suspicion of driving while impaired. Qualified immunity grants a police officer broad latitude to do whatever he feels necessary to enforce the law. Law enforcement officers are free from lawsuits for the performance of their jobs unless willful, unreasonable conduct is demonstrated.

When we were free

Writing for the Oklahoma City University Law Review (Summer, 2005) Roger I. Roots, J.D., Ph.D., says we reached this point over the course of a few decades after the introduction of the automobile.

"When automobiles were first introduced around the turn of the twentieth century, drivers relied on common law traditions that protected the right of every person to travel upon public roadways without a license," Root writes. "Courts repeatedly wrote of an individual's 'right to travel' by automobile and struck down regulations aimed at limiting the liberties of automobile drivers on constitutional grounds. With the passage of time, however, automobile regulators generally prevailed in legislative halls and courtrooms. Today, the public has accepted a degree of travel regulation which would have seemed almost tyrannical to nineteenth century Americans."

As Root explains it, courts prior to the 20th century generally held that public roadways were open to everyone. Their mode of travel was irrelevant and a requirement for licenses or specific travel permissions — had anyone deigned to attempt to require them — was considered a violation of rights. During the first 150 years of America's existence, no wagon or carriage licenses existed outside of the context of business licenses.

His research shows that not a single license law excluded any nonmerchant from traveling on the roads with wagons, horses or buggies of any kind. And courts suggested that no such requirement could be upheld even if it were to exist.

Prior to the 20th century the right to travel was understood to mean by any means of travel available. When bicycles hit the roads in the 1880s, attempts to regulate them through local ordinances were repeatedly struck down by the courts. In 1907 the Supreme Court of Iowa put travel by automobile in the same category as travel by horse, carriage or other vehicle.

"The right to make use of an automobile as a vehicle of travel," wrote Justice Ladd, "is no longer an open question. The owners thereof have the same rights in the roads and streets as the drivers of horses or those riding a bicycle or traveling by some other vehicle."

Likewise, the Minnesota Supreme Court, in 1910, held that, "There can be no question of the right of automobile owners to occupy and use the public streets of cities, or highways in the rural districts, [yet] they have no exclusive right."

But even then, the tide toward regulation was already turning. The New York Times, in 1902, editorialized that regulating the automobile by licensing drivers would be necessary. In 1905, citing "flagrant cases of reckless driving of automobiles," the Providence Journal opined that the people of Rhode Island and the rest of the country were becoming "incensed."

The more cars that took to the roads, the more regulations, rules and ordinances began to creep into the system, and courts began to allow them to stand. In 1916 the Supreme Court took a state's rights (or 10th Amendment) approach, upholding the power of each state to regulate the use of motor vehicles on its own highways, according to Root. This was done despite the prevailing view among jurists only a decade earlier that driving without unnecessary regulation was a fundamental right under the U.S. Constitution.

After the 1920s, federal courts were completely looking the other way regarding "the right to travel by vehicle of choice." Licensing and more regulation of travel became accepted and commonplace. Root tells us that since 1950, no court has described driving an automobile as a "right." The constitutional right to travel became increasingly interpreted not as a right to locomotion by the means of one's choice, but as a mere right to emigrate between states.

He writes that, "As Gregory B. Hartch pointed out in a recent law review article, this narrow interpretation of the right to travel came about more from judicial neglect than from any clear doctrinal justification. Today, traffic bureaus refer to driving a motor vehicle only as a privilege. In 1994, the California legislature passed the Safe Streets Act of 1994, stating expressly that 'driving a motor vehicle on the public streets and highways is a privilege, not a right.' The Fourth Appellate Court of California, in Buhl v. Hannigan, echoed this view by writing, 'there is no fundamental right to operate a motor vehicle; rather, driving is a privilege.' The North Dakota Supreme Court was even more explicit, when it stated in State v. Kouba, 'the use of the public highways is ... a privilege which a person enjoys subject to the control of the State.'"



So in 100 years we've gone from the right to unfettered and unregulated travel to a time where we are registered, our vehicles are registered and we're forced to purchase a product from a private company (insurance) all for the "privilege" of driving a vehicle.

We no longer have liberty to operate our own private property with no government restriction.

Beyond that, automakers now claim the software driving the computers that operate the cars we purchase belongs to them, and we just lease it from them. More drivel to make you accept that you will own nothing and be happy, as the architects of the attempted "Great Reset" being perpetrated on us have already admitted.

Do not let your mind be tricked into giving your rights away to the state. This has serious consequences.

The natural order of the state is a migration from freedom to tyranny. Remember this next time someone suggests more "common sense" laws to "ensure your safety" on the roads or anywhere else in your life. These laws ensure nothing but servitude to the state and submission to an "authority" that should be subservient and answer to "We The People," not the other way around.

Yours for the truth,

Bob Livingston
Editor, The Bob Livingston Letter®

 

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Believe it or not, there’s a surprising variety of foods that can actually make you hungrier, and quite interestingly some of these foods are thought of as being healthy. They are frequently eaten for an afternoon snack, quick lunch, or breakfast that’s supposed to fill you up and keep you going for at least a few hours. But, they’re rarely up for the call of duty; instead, they can end up adding extra calories to your diet that your waistline and health could really do without.

Here are 10 foods that make you hungry and what to eat instead:

  • Chips and other salty snacks: Whether potato chips, tortilla chips, pretzels, or crackers, these easy-to-overconsume snack foods provide plenty of salt (an average of 170 mg per serving), which can make you thirsty. Unfortunately, it’s very common to confuse hunger for thirst. What’s more, because salty snacks are low in fiber or nutrition in general, they can lead you to keep going for more yet never really fill you up.
  • Snack bars made with artificial sweeteners: Non-calorie artificial sweeteners provide the sweet taste but not the actual sugar reward. Even though your taste buds may be deceived, your belly often isn’t, and you’re left craving the real thing.
  • White pasta: Unlike whole-grain pastas, white pastas are made with bleached-out, nutrient-stripped grains. Without the filling fiber, it’s easier to eat that large calorie-laden plate of pasta followed by seconds or even thirds. You aren’t a bottomless pit, but it can feel that way when you’re staring at a large plate of pasta.
  • Boxed cereal: Combine a grain with the fiber stripped away with a sugar bomb and a dash of thirst-inducing sodium, and what do you get? Foods that make you hungrier! For many, it’s tempting to skip the small bowl altogether and just consume the entire box. Even if you have just one small serving, because boxed cereals are made up of refined grains and sugars, they’re digested and absorbed quickly. That means they spike blood sugar, which is followed quickly by a crash that leaves you feeling ravenously hungry long before lunchtime.
  • White breads: While bread is good for filling you up quickly, it typically doesn’t provide long-lasting energy. This is true of most baked goods made with refined flour, such as donuts, croissants, and bagels. Once again, this is because much of the fiber has been stripped, leaving a food that spikes blood sugar, which raises insulin levels, which leads to a blood sugar crash. In other words, shortly after you just ate, you’re hungry again!
  • Low-fat yogurt cups: It’s tempting to believe all the advertising that tries to convince us that low-fat yogurt cups are a super healthy and filling option. Unfortunately, low-fat or fat-free yogurts often use sugar to overcome the change in texture caused by removing the fat. Some brands can have up to 20 grams of sugar per serving. Again, that big dose of sugar can cause a big energy spike followed by a crash and the desire for something to fill the hunger void soon after.
  • Store-bought granola bars: They look so healthy, but many granola bars are as high in sugar as a candy bar. All that sugar acts as an appetizer, making you even hungrier between 30 and 90 minutes after you consume that bar.
  • Rice cakes: Another common “diet food” is rice cakes. They’re crunchy, light, and low-calorie. As such, though, they aren’t going to fill anyone up. Now, if rice cakes are a go-to snack, there’s no reason to give them up. Just top them with a high-protein food like hummus, cottage cheese, or nut butter, so they have more staying power. This simple addition can transform them into a much healthier and more satisfying option.
  • High-sugar treats like cookies, cakes, and candies: It can be difficult to keep your fingers out of the cookie or candy jar, especially when faced with hunger pangs. But these sugary treats only lead to more cries from the belly to eat. Worse, they can heighten cravings.
  • French fries: Loaded with refined fat and high in sodium, French fries transform a highly satiating food into the opposite. Combine with the high sugar (in the form of high fructose corn syrup) found in most ketchups, and you get a double whammy.

No matter what food you choose, if you only have a small portion, especially right before a meal, it’s likely to stimulate your appetite or crank up your cravings. So, instead of choosing to munch on a small snack, it can help to eat a bit more of something that’s actually going to fill you up and fuel your energy levels for hours.

A great option to turn to is a protein smoothies.  They are very easy to make, here’s the exact template that my clients and I use:

  • 2 – 3 scoops of high-quality protein (providing 25 – 30+ grams of protein)
  • 2 fists full of veggies (I use spinach; I promise, it’s tasteless!)
  • 1 – 2 cupped handfuls of carbs (e.g., berries, banana, oats)
  • 1 – 2 thumb-sized portions of fats (e.g., mixed nuts, avocado, coconut oil)
  • Liquid (e.g., water, unsweetened almond milk or skim milk)
  • Ice (more ice for a thicker shake, less for a thinner one)

That’s it. Just put all of the ingredients in a blender and enjoy! It only takes a few minutes to put together, yet it keeps your appetite and cravings at bay for hours all while giving you sustained energy.

My Wife's Favorite - 2 scoops of vanilla protein, 1 cup of blueberries, add in some skim milk and a few ice cubes...blend and enjoy!  

My Favorite - 2 scoops of chocolate protein, 1 banana, small spoon of peanut butter, add in some skim milk and a few ices cubes... blend and welcome to what I call the peanut-butter cup shake!

 

 

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4 comments:

Brad said...

In 1970 we had 75 million rules/laws to choke us-w/ Obama we had nearly 300 million laws...on average, each day, we break 20 rules. Government is the 8,000 lb gorilla which is on our back!

Sam said...

Government has become the master instead of the servant.

Rick said...

Gun laws are an example of Leftist over bearing. AZ, for example, has always been an open carry state and has little gun crime compared to Chicago, which has some of the strictest laws in the nation.

Rhonda said...

the road to hell is paved w/ democrats-every days their are headlines exposing their anti-American crap.