Keeping -- or making -- Portland free would be even better. |
Until April of this year, Christopher
Penner was an entrepreneur. Now, despite the fact that he has never
committed a crime against persons or property, he is an indentured servant.
For several years, Penner owned an embattled but marginally
successful nightclub in Portland, Oregon. Today, according to his attorney, Jonathan
Rademacher, Penner has a job managing a bar owned by somebody else – and
twenty-five percent of each paycheck is garnished to pay off a $400,000 civil
judgment imposed by Brad Avakian, the Commissar of Oregon’s Bureau of Labor
and Industry (BOLI) as punishment for trying to save his business.
Between his ordinary tax burden and the BOLI-inflicted
garnishment, Penner probably devotes more than half of each workday to state-imposed
involuntary servitude. He suffers the added indignity of being constantly
exposed to the smug face of his slavemaster.
Business owners who have the misfortune of living in Oregon
are required by the BOLI to post a “notice of rights” in their work area. The
most recent version of that document, Rademacher told me in a telephone
interview, contains a color photograph of Avakian. No previous BOLI commissar
has been given the “Dear Leader” treatment, but none of the functionaries who
have filled that role have entertained Avakian’s ambitions or been similarly
suffused with sociopathic self-regard.
Last
August, Avakian announced his candidacy to become Oregon’s secretary of state.
In Oregon, that position combines the duties of Lt. Governor,
public auditor, and chief election officer. The Secretary of State also
holds a position on the state land board, which supervises forest lands and navigable
waterways, and the “Sustainability
Board,” an eco-soviet growing out of a grandiose agenda
for “global governance.”
In principle, a sufficiently ambitious Secretary of State
could find an excuse to insinuate himself into every land use, property rights,
or business activity occurring anywhere in the Beaver State. Avakian has never
neglected an opportunity to aggrandize his powers, and if he becomes Secretary
of State that office would fill the measure of its creation.
The insular political clique that
rules Oregon out of the northwestern quadrant of that lovely but miserable state
is astoundingly casual it its corruption. In 2012, when Avakian was poised to lose
the May run-off election for the “non-partisan” position as BOLI Commissioner,
fellow Democrat Kate Brown, who at the time was Secretary of State (and has
since become Governor), simply
rescheduled the election for November, when the heavier turnout would favor the
Democratic candidate.
Der Kommissar: Avakian. |
If elected to be Secretary of State, Avakian would be in a position
to protect other ailing Democrats. He would also enjoy expanded opportunities
to shake down potential victims.
During the 2012 campaign, Avakian – who had been BOLI
Commissioner since 2008 -- admitted
to receiving campaign donations from interests that were subject to his
administrative whims. When this
provoked a much-too-modest controversy, Avakian dispatched a press aide to
assure the public that this arrangement was entirely appropriate, given the
Commissar, like Robespierre of old, was incorruptible, or something to that
effect.
In announcing his bid to become Secretary of State, Avakian
said that if elected he would use his new office to continue his pursuit of “corporate
accountability in the workplace” and “combating climate change.” In substance,
he is promising to continue
his onslaught against property rights in general and small businesses in
particular. His campaign literature boasts that he has “directed more than
$22 million into the pockets of Oregonians who’ve been treated unfairly.”
In practice, most of that supposed mistreatment consists of
exposure, on the part of a person identified as part of a “specially protected
class,” to words or gestures that offend them. Avakian has been using the
expansive and ill-defined powers of the BOLI to build a loyal constituency by
redistributing money from the productive class into the pockets of privileged “victims.”
Sticks and stones may break one’s bones, but “hurtful” words are lucrative.
Penner’s case, which has
previously been discussed here, involved two polite but urgent voice mails
to the “administrator” of a group calling itself the “Rose City T-Girls.” That
club’s membership chiefly consists of biological males who “identify” as female
in a variety of ways, most of which are related to couture. The T-Girls were
familiar and welcome customers at Penner’s club, which routinely hosted “pride”
events and otherwise offered ritual homage to Portland’s officially approved
version of “diversity.”
However, when the T-Girls essentially took over Friday
nights, the business – which was trying to recover from a previous run-in with
the BOLI – faced a potentially fatal downturn in weekly receipts. College-age
males weren’t interested in socializing with the T-Girls; college-age females
didn’t relish the prospect of sharing lavatory facilities with them; and the
T-Girls weren’t spending enough to make Fridays profitable.
Penner left a message for the “administrator” of the group politely asking them not to monopolize the club on Fridays, and pleading for an opportunity to discuss other ways of accommodating them. He did not ban them from his club, which – as a property owner – would be within his rights, whether or not this is recognized by the Marxist retreads ruling the People’s Republic of Oregon.
As somebody whose business was failing, Penner had no
interest in driving away customers. As creatures of the coercive sector who
have never been gainfully employed, Avakian and his comrades would find this
incomprehensible. The entities that employ people of that ilk cannot go out of
business, and thus don’t have to worry about earning and retaining customer
loyalty. From their perspective, businesses exist to generate tax revenue, and enact
policies ordained by visionary social engineers.
The morally appropriate way to deal with irrational
discrimination is to use the invisible hand of the market, rather than the
mailed fist of the state – but that approach doesn’t empower the state and
enrich its pet constituencies. Like those who stand to profit from the agency’s
rulings, the BOLI has no incentive to seek resolutions that do not involve
ruinous financial penalties. As Rademacher points out, there were many ways
that the dispute involving the T-Girls could have been handled without imposing
a grotesque punitive award. However, this wouldn’t have served Avakian’s chief
interest, which is “using this process to seek a higher elected office.”
The same perverted priorities were displayed in a
$2.4 million settlement reached with Daimler Trucks North America last January. Six
former employees filed a civil rights complaint alleging that they had been
subjected to discrimination on the basis of “race, color, and national origin,”
including “racial epithets,” harassment, threats, and workplace sabotage.
None of those charges – one of which involved an allegation
of a very serious crime – was ever corroborated. Once Avakian’s agency became
involved, furthermore, no corroboration was necessary. In keeping with standard
procedure, Avakian
filed a “commissioner’s complaint” that was referred to a prosecutor
employed by him, and examined in a legal “forum” presided over by an administrative
law judge whose rulings Avakian could set aside.
Given that arrangement, it’s not surprising that Daimler
decided to pay the Dane-geld. As Kipling warned,
this means that Oregon’s small business owners, who operate on much tighter
margins than Daimler, “will never get rid of the Dane.”
Assuming that the expression “rule of law” encompasses
official compliance with existing statutes, court precedents, and
constitutional limitations, Avakian is a serial offender, the agency over which
he presides is a criminal enterprise, and the Oregon Court of Appeals is an
accomplice.
A perfunctory
ruling handed down by the Court of Appeals in late September upheld the
agency’s unprecedented $400,000 “discrimination” award in the T-Girls case. In his
motion to reconsider, Penner’s attorney Jonathan Rademacher pointed out
that the BOLI’s Deputy Commissioner Christie Hammond violated the law by
overruling the judge’s factual finding regarding Penner’s credibility.
The administrative law judge’s ruling in favor of Penner was
“a factual issue uniquely decided by the person hearing the testimony,”
Rademacher observed. Because Hammond was not the finder of fact, she had no
legal authority to rule on that question, and her finding in favor of Avakian –
the official who signs her paycheck --- “strips all sense of fairness from the
process, and should not be condoned by this Court.”
Unfortunately, Rademacher’s motion asks the Appeals Court to
reverse its own ruling, a development about as likely as a BOLI ruling that
runs contrary to Avakian’s preferences.
Avakian sees himself an enforcer plenipotentiary on behalf
of the “progressive” movement – even on matters that fall well outside the BOLI’s
legislative mandate. During the 2012 campaign, Avakian earned a rebuke from the
editorial board of the thoroughly leftist Oregonian newspaper for trying to
inject abortion into the race by accusing his Republican opponent of being a
pro-life “extremist.”
“In addition to
forgetting, apparently, that he is not the commissioner of in-labor, as
[his opponent] quips, Avakian has forgotten that he's involved in a supposedly
nonpartisan race,” complained the Oregonian. Besides, "what the heck does an easily ridiculed plank in the GOP platform have to do with the Bureau of Labor and Industries? Labor commissioners enforce laws. They don't make
them."
That's not strictly true of the BOLI, given that Avakian's agency considers itself empowered to carry out legislative functions as well. It also wants to make feticide racket the only industry free from invasive regulation -- or even critical public scrutiny.
That's not strictly true of the BOLI, given that Avakian's agency considers itself empowered to carry out legislative functions as well. It also wants to make feticide racket the only industry free from invasive regulation -- or even critical public scrutiny.
In 2013, Avakian announced that BOLI would conduct an “anti-discrimination” investigation of a pro-life group that staged protests outside the Lovejoy Surgicenter abortion clinic in Portland. The supposed authority for that investigation was the same statute the agency had employed to destroy Christopher Penner’s business.
That “investigation” wasn’t opened as the result of a
citizen complaint. It began when one of the apparatchiks employed by Avakian
happened to see a protest on her way to work and, in a fashion worthy of an
East German spitzel,
reported this impermissible act of dissent to her agency’s “civil rights”
division.
On August 26 of that year, Avakian reportedly
sent an official letter to Pastor Charles O’Neal, who led the peaceful
demonstrations, announcing the investigation and threatening “one year in
prison and fines of $6, 250” for each “civil rights violation” his agency might
find.
Avakian is a singularly resourceful sophist, but even he
couldn’t contrive a rationale for claiming that people protesting against a business were somehow
discriminating against people employed by it, or customers who sought to employ
its (in this case, lethal) services.
In any case, the Commissar lost interest in the abortion
clinic matter after BOLI received a discrimination complaint against Sweetcakes
by Melissa. This presented to him a perfect opportunity to extort a huge sum
from Christian entrepreneurs who had done no injury to a living soul.
That case, which involves a $140,000 “damage” award imposed
on the bakers for declining to make a wedding cake for a same-sex ceremony not
legally recognized in Oregon at the time, will most likely be grinding its way
through the courts for the next three years. By its end, Avakian will most
likely be ensconced as Secretary of State, busily carrying out new initiatives
to reduce independent business owners to the status currently enjoyed by
Christopher Penner.
Oregon’s coastal nomenklatura, of whom Brad Avakian is
repellently typical, is expansively contemptuous of the values and priorities
of the state’s productive population, and is determined to reduce it to
outright peonage. Not surprisingly, residents
of rural Oregon are becoming terminally disenchanted with the state’s existing
political arrangements.
Since it appears to be impossible to uproot the parasite
class embodied by Avakian and his comrades, a
quixotic – but growing – secession movement has sprouted in eastern Oregon.
It’s impossible to believe that the parasites would allow their long-suffering
host to escape without a fight.
If the state’s political class continues to
harass and destroy small businesses, and prosecute harmless people for heresies against
“progressive” dogmas, they’re likely to provoke a fight that won’t be contained
within political channels.
If the legislature wants to foreclose that possibility, they
must, at the very least, take action to lance the festering boil that BOLI has
become. If all efforts to end Avakian’s collectivist jihad against property
rights prove unavailing, somebody might want to take the Commissar aside and quietly
ask him if the name “Ceausescu" means anything to him.
This week's Freedom Zealot Podcast examines demonization as a prelude to selective disarmament, which leads to subjugation -- or worse:
If you can help out, please donate to keep Pro Libertate on-line. Thank you so much!
This week's Freedom Zealot Podcast examines demonization as a prelude to selective disarmament, which leads to subjugation -- or worse:
If you can help out, please donate to keep Pro Libertate on-line. Thank you so much!
Dum spiro, pugno!
5 comments:
When it finally reaches critical mass, whenever or whatever that is or looks like, methinks that people whose livelihoods have been destroyed, their families crushed with fines and government-imposed poverty, will begin to create a new type of bucket list.
It's truly time to turn the Social Justice Warriors on their heads, and pursue the same type of tactics against them.
Research the businesses and government entities who support SJW crushing of normal folks, don a dress and a dildo and go in a demand a job. If they aren't "nice" to you when they tell you to piss off, call out the dogs. Fight fire with fire. Take a break from being normal, dress in drag, and go en masse to the source.
If you've nothing left to lose, who cares? Dress like a girl, demand access, and sue EVERYONE involved in suppressing your rights.
Claim you are gender neutral - sue them for calling you mister, or mizz.
Record everything. If they can do it, we can do it. Or, just be a victim. Righteousness will not prevail, as G-- has turned his back on us. Rub the same feces in the faces of the people who perpetrate these crimes. Then ask for help from the perverted powers that be. Out pervert the perverts, or lose.
it is oregon, so nothing...absolutely nothing...surprises.
Donna from North Dakota:
It isn't Oregon! - it's Portland (& the western side of the state) having been 'californicated'. I grew up in Oregon - north Portland (St. Johns), actually. In the early 1960's, The Twilight Room was a cocktail bar on Lombard St where my favorite high school English teacher, Miss Lieberman, could sometimes be found of a Friday evening sedately sipping her fancy drink. We made a point of crossing Lombard from the small public library on the corner opposite The Twilight Room so we could wave to her through the door. So grateful I knew Portland, and Oregon then.
Ugh. As a transgender woman, I find nothing more disgusting than watching the State brutalize innocent people in my name. It's happening way too often these days -- and if it keeps up, it's innocent transgender people who are going to get hurt worst when the lid finally blows off.
Note to the Rose City T-Girls: As a member of a tiny and poorly-understood minority, it is not in our best interests to deal with people by directing the State to employ coercion and fear on our behalf. This will only serve to convert us into a tiny, poorly-understood, and hated minority, and we'll have no one to blame but ourselves.
Note to everyone else: we're not all like this. Really.
Thanks as always, Mr Grigg, for all that you do.
-- Holly
Holly, thank you for your kind note, and for your principled defense of individual liberty and dignity.
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