That's what it boils down to. Right here in Indiana, almost a week ago, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that we don't have the right to resist the police when they come into our homes, even if they don't have warrants. The 4th Amendment to our national Constitution states otherwise, but that didn't seem to matter to the three justices who ruled in favor of infringing our rights as so stated.
Looking at what has also happened in Arizona and the city of Philadelphia, it's alarming to see that line being crossed, but it's particularly shocking to see this being given a carte blanche here in Indiana, of all places, and by the highest court in the state. I guess when it comes to my state, I didn't expect such a blatant infringement of my rights as an American.
Too bad those three idiots on the bench didn't follow the example of their colleagues at the Supreme Court.
2 comments:
So, after 2012, if police detect a bright light coming from your house and the conclude you are using a banned incandescent bulb, they can crash in.
Sometimes, liberal idiots, a slippery slope really is a slippery slope.
Great post!
Thanks. As a Hoosier, this is one of those things about Indiana I don't intend on bragging about.
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