Monday, January 31, 2022

Marxism - Thought Police - Michigan High School - It's Real and It's Scary

https://www.theepochtimes.com/high-school-student-sues-school-for-suspending-him-for-talking-about-christian-beliefs_4245709.html?utm_source=ref_share&utm_campaign=bn-cc 

 Michigan High School Student Sues School for Suspending Him for Privately Talking About Christian Beliefs By Steven Kovac January 31, 2022 Updated: January 31, 2022 

A Plainwell, Michigan, high school junior has gone to federal court to fight for his right to talk about his religion. The case arose when Plainwell High School student David Stout was suspended for three days for expressing his Christian beliefs and opinions in a private conversation with a like-minded student on school property and in private text messages outside of school with friends. In his conversations and text messages, Stout put forth the biblical teaching of the love of God through Christ for sinners and expressed his own love for his peers. He shared the Judeo-Christian doctrine that homosexual conduct was a sin and that God created only two biological genders—man and woman. 

Before being suspended, Stout alleges he was asked by a faculty member why he had not “self-reported” his sharing of his religious and political beliefs with fellow students to school officials. Stout also alleges he was told that talking about religious or political beliefs was not allowed anywhere on campus for fear of hurting someone’s feelings. He alleges the faculty member told him that he must stop all religious conversations with other students because, if overheard, they might feel offended and unsafe. 

Stout said the whole thing seemed to him to be a one-sided method to shame, intimidate, and silence conservatives and Christians. The superintendent of Plainwell Public Schools did not respond to a request for comment. 

The complaint, which was filed Jan. 27 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan, states that the school’s principal and assistant principal allegedly explained to Stout that it was a student’s responsibility, not only to stop hurtful comments and behaviors, but to preempt such conduct. Stout said that the administrators warned him that anything he did or said in school, outside of school, or on social media could negatively affect his future employment prospects—a statement that Stout alleges was a threat. 

On Oct. 25, 2021, Stout’s parents received notice that their son had been suspended. David’s father, David Stout, Sr., stated, “We have always taught our son to be respectful of everyone’s opinion and to be polite to others…(He) is entitled to properly express his faith and beliefs without being disciplined and suspended by Plainwell schools. We trust the court will uphold David’s constitutional rights and his school record will be cleared.” 

The Stouts’ attorney, David Kallman of the Great Lakes Justice Center, said, “David was suspended for three days last fall for stating his Christian beliefs in a private text conversation and in a hallway at school. He is also being punished for not policing and reporting the inappropriate jokes of fellow students. He was instructed to stop posting his religious comments on all his social media platforms, and was disciplined for the offensive behavior of some other students; something he was unaware of and did not participate in. 

“David is a good student with a clean record. Nothing he did caused a disruption or any problem at the school. He has the right to express his opinion in accordance with his religious beliefs without vilification or punishment from the government.” 

Stout asked the court for a declaratory judgment that the Plainwell School District violated his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, and his civil rights under the Michigan Constitution, and other state statutes. He is asking his suspension be expunged from his school record and is seeking compensatory and/or nominal damages, costs and attorney fees.

REPORTER
Steven Kovac is an Epoch Times reporter who covers the state of Michigan. He is a former small businessman, local elected official, and conservative political activist. He is an ordained minister of the Gospel. Steven and his wife of 32 years have two grown daughters. He can be reached at steven.kovac@epochtimes.us

Thursday, January 20, 2022

New McCarthy-ism but now it's the Democrats

Glenn Greenwald Jan 20, 2022


In its ongoing attempt to investigate and gather information about private

U.S. citizens, the Congressional 1/6 Committee is claiming virtually absolute

powers that not even the FBI or other law enforcement agencies enjoy.

Indeed, lawyers for the committee have been explicitly arguing that nothing

proscribes or limits their authority to obtain data regarding whichever citizens

they target and, even more radically, that the checks imposed on the FBI

(such as the requirement to obtain judicial authorization for secret

subpoenas) do not apply to the committee.

As we have previously reported and as civil liberties groups have warned,

there are serious constitutional doubts about the existence of the committee

itself. Under the Constitution and McCarthy-era Supreme Court cases

interpreting it, the power to investigate crimes lies with the executive branch,

supervised by the judiciary, and not with Congress. Congress does have the

power to conduct investigations, but that power is limited to two narrow

categories: 1) when doing so is designed to assist in its law-making duties

(e.g., directing executives of oil companies to testify when considering new

environmental laws) and 2) in order to exert oversight over the executive

branch.

What Congress is barred from doing, as two McCarthy-era Supreme Court

cases ruled, is exactly what the 1/6 committee is now doing: conducting a

separate, parallel criminal investigation in order to uncover political crimes

committed by private citizens. Such powers are dangerous precisely because

Congress’s investigative powers are not subject to the same safeguards as

the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. And just as was true of the

1950s House Un-American Activities committee (HUAC) that prompted those

Supreme Court rulings, the 1/6 committee is not confining its invasive

investigative activities to executive branch officials or even citizens who

engaged in violence or other illegality on January 6, but instead is

investigating anyone and everyone who exercised their Constitutional rights

to express views about and organize protests over their belief that the 2020

presidential election contained fraud. Indeed, the committee's initial targets

appear to be taken from the list of those who applied for protest permits in

Washington: a perfectly legal, indeed constitutionally protected, act.

This abuse of power is not merely abstract. The Congressional 1/6

Committee has been secretly obtaining private information about American

citizens en masse: telephone records, email logs, internet and browsing

history, and banking transactions. And it has done so without any limitations

or safeguards: no judicial oversight, no need for warrants, no legal limitations

of any kind.

Indeed, the committee has been purposely attempting to prevent citizens who

are the targets of their investigative orders to have any opportunity to contest

the legality of this behavior in court. As we reported in October, the committee

sent dozens if not hundreds of subpoenas to telecom companies demanding

a wide range of email and other internet records, and — without any legal

basis — requested that those companies not only turn over those documents

but refrain from notifying their own customers of the request. If the companies

were unwilling to comply with this "request,” then the committee requested

that they either contact the committee directly or just disregard the request —

in other words, the last thing they wanted was to enable one of their targets to

learn that they were being investigated because that would enable them to

seek a judicial ruling about the legality of the committee's actions.

But now the committee is escalating its aggressive investigative actions. They

have begun sending subpoenas to private banks, demanding the banking

records of private citizens, and doing so such that either the person never

finds out or finds out too late to obtain a judicial order about the legality of the

committee's behavior. In one case, they targeted JP Morgan with these

subpoenas while knowing that that bank is being represented by former

Obama Attorney General Loretta Lynch; Lynch — unsurprisingly — then

directed her client not to accommodate any requests from its own clients to

ensure judicial review

On November 22, the 1/6 Committee served a subpoena on Taylor Budowich

— a former spokesman for the Trump campaign who never worked for the

U.S. Government — that requested a wide range of documents as well as his

deposition testimony. On December 14, Budowich voluntarily complied by

handing over a large amount of his personal records, and then, on December

22, he flew to Washington at his own expense and submitted to questioning.

There is no suggestion that Budowich was engaged in any violence or other

illegal acts at the Capitol on January 6. Their only interest in this private

citizen is his connection to the Trump campaign and his stated view that he

believed the 2020 election was marred by fraud.

After he furnished the committee with those documents and then testified,

Budowich learned from others that the committee was issuing subpoenas

directly to the banks used by other individuals for their personal accounts. He

thus requested that his lawyer notify his own bank, JPMorgan Chase, that he

would object to their cooperation with any subpoena without first providing

notice to him so that he can have time to seek a legal ruling in court.

Typically, citizens learn when law enforcement agencies such as the FBI

serve subpoenas to third-party providers such as banks or internet

companies. That allows a crucial right: to contest the legality of the action in

court before the documents are supplied. But when such a subpoena is

concealed from the person, it prevents them from obtaining judicial review. In

general, citizens learn of FBI subpoenas, and the FBI (with rare exceptions)

has the power to impose a "gag order” or otherwise prevent the person from

learning about it only if they first persuade a court that such an extreme

measure is warranted (by arguing, for instance, that a terror suspect will flee

or destroy evidence if they learn they are being investigated). That safeguard

ensures that in most cases, a citizen has the right to seek judicial protection

from an illegal act by an investigative body.

But the 1/6 Committee recognizes no right of any kind and no limits on its

power. On November 23 — the day after it served a subpoena on Budowich

himself — it served a subpoena on Budowich's bank, JPMorgan. The original

date for the bank to produce the records was December 7, but JPMorgan —

advised by Loretta Lynch as its legal counsel — bizarrely requested that the

deadline be extended until December 24: the day before Christmas, knowing

that courts would be closed that day and the next. It was only on December

21 — when Budowich was in Washington for his testimony before the

committee — did JPMorgan send him notice at his home that it had received

a subpoena and intended to produce the requested documents on December

24: just three days later. As JPMorgan and Lynch knew would happen,

Budowich did not see the letter until he arrived home on the evening of

December 22: less than forty-eight hours before the bank told him they were

going to give up all of his financial records to the committee.

Upon discovering that the committee had subpoenaed his bank, Budowich's

lawyers immediately advised JPMorgan that they had legal objections to the

subpoena, and requested that — given it was about to be Christmas Eve and

the courts would be closed — the bank seek an extension from the

committee to enable Budowich to seek a judicial ruling. But the bank, advised

by Loretta Lynch, refused — and told him they intended to turn the

documents over on Christmas regardless of whether that gave him time to

request judicial intervention. The bank even refused to provide a copy of the

subpoena they received from the committee, which Budowich, to this very

day, has not seen.

Budowich's lawyers did everything possible to seek judicial intervention

before JPMorgan gave all his financial documents to the committee, but the

timing agreed to by the committee, Lynch and the bank — documents

produced on Christmas Eve, with notice to him arriving just a couple days

before when he was testifying in Washington — made it impossible, by

design. As a result, JPMorgan gave all of his banking records to the

committee without even seeking an extension.

Budowich was therefore left with no alternative but to file an after-the-fact

lawsuit against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the committee members,

seeking an emergency injunction against the committee's use of his banking

records. In response, both the committee and JPMorgan argued that the

entire question was “moot” given that they already handed over the

documents.

In other words, lawyers for the committee and Loretta Lynch created a plot

whereby JPMorgan would notify Budowich of its intent to hand over the

documents right before Christmas, so as to purposely deny him time to seek

a court ruling, and then used the fact that he was "too late” in filing as a

ground for arguing that the court should shut its doors to him and refuse to

even give him a hearing. The court agreed that Budowich's request for an

emergency injunction was “moot” given that the bank already handed

supplied the documents, but agreed to rule on the merits of the arguments

about whether the subpoena was legal.

The parties’ briefs on this question were submitted to an Obama-appointed

federal judge, James Boasberg, in Washington. The oral argument on

Budowich's request to enjoin the use of his banking records by the committee

was held earlier on Thursday, and Judge Boasberg quickly rejected

Budowich's objections to the subpoena. It will now be appealed to the Court

of Appeals, but the issues presented by the committee's arguments are

chilling.

At the hearing, the committee's lawyers essentially repeated the same

argument they advanced in their legal brief: namely, that none of the legal

safeguards imposed on the FBI and other law enforcement agencies to guard

against abuse of power apply to this Congressional committee, which

therefore enjoys virtually absolute power to do what it wants.

That is not an exaggerated summary of the committee's argument. The

primary law on which Budowich is relying is The Right to Financial Privacy

Act (“RFPA”), which prohibits any “financial institution, or officers, employees

or agent of the financial institution” from "provid[ing] to any Government

authority access to or copies of, or the information contained in, the financial

records of any customer” unless they have first complied with the requirement

of that law. Among the key requirements is that a “financial institution shall

not release the financial records of a customer until the Government authority

seeking such records certifies in writing to the financial institution that it has

complied with the applicable provisions of this chapter.” As Budowich's

lawyers argued, the key to the law is that a person whose financial records

are sought must receive notice of that attempt and be given sufficient time to

challenge it in court:

Both 12 U.S.C. §§ 3405 (administrative subpoena or summons) and 3408

(formal written request) require that a copy of the subpoena or request

“have been served upon the customer or mailed to his last known address

on or before the date on which the subpoena or summons was served on

the financial institution” together with a formal statutory notice allowing ten

(10) days from the date or service or fourteen (14) days from the date of

mailing the required notice. See 12 U.S.C. §§ 3405, 3408. Additional

provisions of RFPA establish the right of a financial institution customer to

challenge a request for their financial records in an appropriate United

States District Court, and that proceedings involving such challenges

should be completed or decided within seven (7) calendar days of the filing

of any Government response. See 12 U.S.C. § 3410(a)-(b).

The committee did not deny that it failed to meet these requirements.

Obviously, they could not argue that, given that the plan they created with

JPMorgan and its lawyer, Loretta Lynch, was designed to ensure that

Budowich have no time to obtain a judicial ruling before his bank records

were handed over. Instead, the committee's response is they do not have to

comply with this law. “The Act restricts only agencies and departments of the

United States, and the Select Committee is neither,” the committee's lawyer

contended. In fact, they explicitly argued that these safeguards were meant to

be imposed only on the FBI and other law enforcement agencies, but were

intended to exempt Congress even when, as here, they are clearly engaged

in investigating private citizens for potential crimes. “Multiple provisions of the

statute underscore that Congress intended 'Government authority' to mean

an executive branch agency or department,” the committee's lawyers wrote in

an assertion of power breathtaking in its scope and limitlessness.

All of the other committee's arguments are similarly designed to bestow on

itself absolute and unlimited power in how it investigates private citizens, and

to insist that the judiciary is without power to impose limits on it. The

committee insists, for instance, that it can investigate anyone it wants in

connection with 1/6 even if its motive is not to enact new laws and even if the

documents it seeks (Budowich's financial records) have no relationship to any

proposed new laws. That is because, it says, “Congressional committees are

not required to identify a specific piece of legislation in advance of conducting

an investigation of the pertinent facts. It is sufficient that a committee’s

investigation concerns a subject on which legislation 'could be had.'"

Such a principle, if accepted, would destroy any limits on Congress’s ability to

investigate citizens (clearly, it was possible for the McCarthy-era

Congressional investigations to lead to new laws even though, as the

Supreme Court twice ruled when striking them down, that was clearly not its

primary purpose). But Judge Boasberg nonetheless accepted the

committee's argument on the ground that an appellate court had already

ruled that the 1/6 Committee had a valid legislative purpose and he was

therefore bound by that decision.

The committee's other arguments are even more extreme: namely, that “the

Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause provides absolute immunity to

Members and committees when performing legislative acts" and that

“sovereign immunity prohibits litigation against Congress to which it has not

consented, and no such consent has been.” That would mean that the 1/6

Committee could literally do whatever it wanted to citizens, and no court

would have the right even to review the legality or constitutionality of what it is

doing let alone put a stop to it.

What happened during the first War on Terror — and so many other events

that were perceived as traumatic — is instructive here. So many Americans

were so horrified by the carnage of that day that, for years, many did not care

or want to hear about legal niceties, constitutional limits or civil liberties

regarding the government's actions. Anything the government did in the

name of responding to or retaliating for 9/11 became inherently justified, and

anyone who objected — no matter the principles cited — was deemed to be

on the side of the terrorists.

The same dynamic is prevailing here. There are serious constitutional limits

on the ability of Congress to investigate private citizens. It is blatantly abusive

to scheme with JPMorgan and its counsel Loretta Lynch to ensure that a

citizen has no time to seek judicial relief regarding the committee's attempt to

obtain mounds of his personal and financial records. And, in general, the

committee has been on a rampage targeting not only Trump officials or

people who engaged in criminal behavior at the Capitol on January 6 but a

wide group of citizens whose only crime appears to be their political beliefs

and associations — exactly what the Supreme Court cited when striking

down the excesses of Congress’s McCarthy-era probes of citizens.

But with the media overwhelmingly cheering anything done in the name of

stopping the Trump movement and those who supported 1/6 in any way, all of

these civil liberties concerns and constitutional protections are run roughshod

over in the name of safety. The latest arguments from the Congressional 1/6

Committee amount to little more than an assertion of unfettered power for

Adam Schiff, Liz Cheney and the rest of the committee members to dig into

the lives of anyone they want without limits.

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