Sunday, May 14, 2023

The new mother's day

SB 5599 allows runaway children to choose to change gender without notifying parents. Its called "gender affirmation."   (Really)



Friday, May 12, 2023

WALeg Special Session

Governor Jay Inslee called a Special Session of the Washington State Legislature, beginning May 16th, to address our state’s expiring drug possession law. 

In accordance with the State Constitution, the Washington State Legislature meets annually every January in regular sessions. The Legislature alternates between longer sessions of 105 days and shorter sessions of 60 days depending on the development of the two-year budgets. The Constitution allows the governor to call special sessions of the Legislature at any time. Each special session can last no more than 30 days.

In 2021, the State Supreme Court’s Blake Decision struck down Washington’s felony drug possession statute as unconstitutional. This court case involved a woman who had been arrested for possession of illegal drugs in her pant pockets, which she said she did not knowingly possess because the pants were borrowed from a friend. In rapid response to this decision and to provide some statewide clarity related to drug possession, legislators approved a temporary measure within weeks to classify drug possession as a misdemeanor while working toward a more comprehensive solution. The temporary law approved in 2021 expires this July. A major focus of the 2023 Legislative Session was to update and replace the temporary law. 

During this year’s session, the Washington State Senate approved Senate Bill 5536, sponsored by  Sen. June Robinson (D-Everett). It represented the first major step to address and clarify our state’s drug possession law since the temporary law was enacted. Senate Bill 5536 was approved by a Senate vote of 28 to 21 and included a classification of drug possession offenses, steps offenders can take toward pretrial diversion and prosecution, and a collection of state investments toward facilitating treatment and local resources.

Senate Bill 5536 was developed throughout the session, approved by Senate committees, and actively negotiated and debated. The Senate vote was bipartisan but also somewhat unusual because a collection of Republicans and Democrats voted for the bill while others joined together to vote against the measure. Generally speaking, very conservative Republicans favored stiffer penalties for drug offenders while very progressive Democrats argued for no punishments. 

In the end, the compromise included tiered classifications of drug possession offenses, steps offenders can take toward pretrial diversion, and penalty options for prosecutors. The bill also included substantial new state investments to support treatment. 

While the bipartisan Senate bill appear to balance treatment options with accountability measures and to be the blueprint for full Legislative passage, the House of Representatives later adjusted the bill. That version received only a party-line vote by Democrats on April 11th. House and Senate negotiators attempted to develop a Conference Committee solution between the two versions, but that vote failed in the House on April 23rd on the final day of session by a vote of 43 'yes' to 55 'no.'

A small number of progressive House Democrats had refused to support the Senate’s bipartisan compromise, eventually leaving the legislature with nothing at the end of session. Having no statewide framework related to drug possession would be terrible for cities and counties across Washington who would then need to implement a patchwork of their own local drug possession regulations.

So we have a special session. 

Source: State Sen. Brad Hawkins

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Governor signs anti-racism real-estate law

Governor Inslee signed HB1474 into law today.  The media trumpeted the new law as removing racist covenants from real estate titles.  By mandating removal of those covenants, some people who previously suffered discrimination can now buy real estate... but the whole effort is about 75 years late.  You see, other than the $100 increase in fees for recording a deed, nothing has really changed.  The autocratic media and WA government are fibbing to us.

Since the United States Supreme Court’s 1948 decision in the case Shelley v. Kraemer, restrictive covenants based on race have been unenforceable [Cornell Law].  Inslee, the Democrats and their media lapdogs are fantasizing.

The Democrats enacted a plan to fix something that had been fixed 75 years ago.  That assures them of success.  After their 1474 has no effect, they can claim that they must make more draconian intrusions into life in order to fix social problems of racism.  This may be their ultimate goal: Unlimited control of a formerly free people.

~~~~~~~~

You might still find racist covenants on your title deed, but they have no effect.  You can remove the covenants from your title deed, if you have money to spend.  They appear now as sort of a historical remnant of another age --  a lesson of where we came from, but not where we are now.  And we need to remember that history is a record of our past foolishness.  That way we can learn.



What other people read on this blog

Effing the ineffable - Washington State elections sometimes have been rigged.

“It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything.”
-- Joseph Stalin

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