Neal Knox, RIP
"Only two things are certain in this world: death... and chocolate." -- Bill St. Clair
# Tom Gresham at The High Road - Neal Knox -- Condition Not Good - a tireless fighter for our gun rights, Neal Knox died on Sunday, 17 January. Mr. Gresham wrote this before he died. There's an obituary on Mr. Knox' web site, NealKnox.com. [highroad]
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the Firearms Coalition Neal Knox Memorial Fund, Box 3313, Manassas, VA 20108. Tax-deductible donations may be made to Academics for the Second Amendment Neal Knox Memorial Fund. Contributions may also be made in his name to the Rainbow Children's Home in Gainesville, Virginia.
# Harry Browne - Should the U.S. Military Be Allowed to Use Torture? - of course not, because the Bill of Rights applies to everyone not just U.S. citizens, so every person on the planet deserves to be considered innocent until proven guilty, by a jury of his/her peers. And it is precisely the U.S. government and military whose behavior is supposed to be restricted by the U.S. Constitition and Bill of Rights.
P.S. To those who say that the Bill of Rights doesn't apply to non-Americans, I say: read the Bill of Rights. Nowhere does it refer to the citizenship of the people affected. The 1st amendment refers to "Congress," the 2nd to "people," the third to "soldiers," the 4th to "people," the 5th to "person," the 6th to "accused," the 9th to "people," the 10th to the "States" and to the "people," while the 7th and 8th don't refer to any specific entities. The word "American" or "citizen" appears nowhere in the Bill of Rights.
If the government is allowed to suspend the Bill of Rights for anyone, the security of all of us is diminished.