The surreal struggle for government permission to petition By Dr. Lester Jackson The First Amendment declares that “Congress shall make no law … abridging … the right of the people … to petition the government for a redress of grievances.” This also applies to the states. Despite that clear command by the United States Constitution, a recent article demonstrates that “[m]ore and more of what we do is dependent on permission from the government.” I personally experienced the harsh truth of that statement, as I have struggled for many months – without help or success – to transform Equal Justice for Victims from a Facebook group into the tax-exempt non-profit corporation envisioned in my recent eponymous book. The purposes are (1) to educate the public about how and why judges, lawyers and prosecutors give royal treatment to murderers, while providing little justice for their victims and torturing the survivors of victims of intentional murder; and (2) to propose solutions to the vast imbalance. As I discuss at length in my book (pp. 156-158), 130 years ago and 90 years ago, a tiny handful of supporters and opponents of Prohibition merely had to get together, recruit members and proceed to pursue their goals. By contrast, our increasingly dictatorial government has made the basic Constitutional Right of Petition so difficult that lawyers charge up to $20,000 just to incorporate a tax-exempt non-profit and up to $1,325 per hour to help “comply” with government requirements after a non-profit is incorporated. The latter keeps an organization in “good standing” with government bureaucrats. One prominent conservative – and expensive – lawyer wrote to me: “It is complicated and you may not think it costs that much in terms of my time but it does.” Having done my own thorough research and in light of the documentation provided in this article, I do agree that it is complicated, although I don’t agree that it should cost as much as the highest fees quoted. Government Lilliputians have tied potential petitioners in such knots that a whole industry has been spawned to deal with costly, complex, and time-consuming requirements that were non-existent when the First Amendment was adopted. To circumvent high-priced lawyers, so-called incorporation and “compliance” services have been created. One is aptly named Labyrinth, Inc. Non-lawyer services charge about $3,000 to incorporate with tax-exempt status, with additional charges to maintain “compliance” with massive government laws and regulations. In exchange for the supposedly reduced costs, these services disavow all legal responsibility for their work and maintain a “right” to discontinue such work for “any reason” or “no reason at all”; and require anyone who hires them to be legally bound by complex, nearly indecipherable “terms and conditions” ranging from 4,500 words to nearly 10,000. Not to put too fine a point on it, those who hire “incorporation services” to avoid the cost of a lawyer may end up paying a lawyer much more – to deal with the ostensibly less costly substitutes they hired. Whether done by a lawyer or an “incorporation service,” states and the IRS charge fees adding up to about $700 depending on the state. Think I’m making this up? Well, here is a partial – partial! -- list of government requirements, none of which existed 100 years ago:
Exclusive of multitudinous requirements at the state and local level, the following federal requirements are contained in just one IRS publication :
Conclusion President Trump’s efforts at deregulation, while laudatory, have only scratched the surface when one cannot do what is Constitutionally protected without running a federal and state gauntlet. As in so many other areas of American life, government at all levels has made the ability to engage in even the simplest activities extremely complex, costly and sometimes impossible. One difference, however, is that, when people have to risk getting into legal trouble and jump through complicated hoops in order to exercise a fundamental Constitutional Right, the time may have come for the United States Supreme Court to have a say in the matter. Lester Jackson is author of numerous articles about capital punishment, the Supreme Court, and American politics. His recent book is Equal Justice for Victims: A Blueprint for the Rightful Restoration of Capital Punishment. Reviews are here, here, here. Copyright © 2018 by Lester Jackson, Ph.D. Originally in American Thinker; slightly modified.
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