Cardi B Delivers Perceptive, Profanity-Laced Analysis of High Home Prices, Rents


Cardi B

Grasping a truth that’s evaded many a Berkeley housing activist and even the administration of Flordia Gov. Ron DeSantis, rapper Cardi B laid the blame for high housing costs and rents on the lack of “motherfucking inventory.”

“The way that the prices soar up, because I’m guessing there’s no motherfucking inventory for the homes they’re selling right now. No one is gonna try to sell their fucking home,” said B in a profanity-laced, sneakily perceptive Instagram rant over the weekend.

The downward pressure that higher interest rates are putting on home prices will offer little relief to homebuyers, the rapper argued, given the dearth of available homes.

“Everyone is like yo when the interest rate is good, is high, that’s great because people have to sell their home for less,” said B. “Bitch, it doesn’t matter if the interest rate is motherfucking high as fuck because there isn’t even inventory.”

B is right about the relationship between inventory and home prices—although the situation at the moment is a little less dire than it has been in the recent past. Inventory is growing, albeit only at the high-end and from a very depressed baseline.

The latest data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) shows 1.3 million homes on the market as of July—or about 3.3 months of inventory. That’s a marked improvement from January, when the number of homes for sale dropped to 850,000—or 1.6 months of inventory. However, it’s below the 1.4 million home inventory in December 2019, on the eve of the pandemic.

Home prices shot up dramatically during 2020 and 2021 when inventory was at its lowest. The average sale price increased from $271,000 in 2019 to $296,000 in 2020, and $350,700 in 2021.

Most of the recent inventory growth has mostly been in the higher end of the market, notes NAR economist Lawrence Yun, saying in a press release that “limited supply at lower price points is hindering transaction activity.” He seconded B’s analysis that higher mortgage rates contributed to suppressed home sale activity.

Home sales fell by 5.6 percent in July, according to the latest data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Sales have declined 20.2 percent this year to date.

In her remarks, B also called out soaring rents—which she said were increasing in lower-income neighborhoods.

“The way that the rent has been rising, I just really be wonder how is people fucking keeping up?” she said. “Even in the hoods, even in mice-, rats-, possums-fucking-infested fucking apartments.”

The latest CPI numbers show shelter costs have increased 6.3 percent this year.

B’s connecting rising rents and higher home prices, particularly in traditionally low-income neighborhoods, tracks with analysis from Mercatus Center Affiliated Scholar Kevin Erdmann.

In a recent paper, Erdmann argues that higher home prices are a product of higher rents—both of which are downstream of restrictions on mortgage financing following the Great Recession. Many would-be homebuyers, says Erdmann, could not get a mortgage and therefore continued to occupy rental housing. Other homebuyers compensated for the restricted credit and suppressed housing supply by buying homes in lower-income, gentrifying neighborhoods.

“That price pressure gets pushed down to the bottom end of the market,” Erdmann told Reason last month. “The lower you get in the market, the more you’re left with only one option, to pay the higher rent.”

This dynamic is worsened by pandemic-spawned supply-chain issues preventing builders from getting their hands on needed materials and pre-existing restrictive zoning regulations in America’s most in-demand cities. Both suppress new construction and increase housing costs.

In short, B isn’t the only one who should be wondering “how are people surviving?”

The post Cardi B Delivers Perceptive, Profanity-Laced Analysis of High Home Prices, Rents appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/93yjoIF
via IFTTT

‘I Have My Own Life’: The Case for Legalizing Sex Work


John Stossel prostitute

Football players make money with their bodies. Some are injured. But football is legal.

So why is sex work illegal?

My video this week focuses on that.

Sex worker “Aella” has made hundreds of thousands of dollars, mostly by “camming,” showing her body to men online and talking intimately with them. Her customers are happy to pay for that.

This offends people.

It’s “exploitation…under the banner of a career choice!” complains feminist Heather Brunskell-Evans.

Aella laughs at that, saying, “Where was she when I was working at a factory? Lots of people work terrible jobs. [But] a lot of sex workers make more money.”

Aella left home to escape strict parents when she was 17. That’s when she got that factory job.

Eventually, someone suggested she try camming, which Aella says turned out to be much better than factory work. “I could decide what kind of things I wanted to do, what my limits were.”

Also, she made $200 an hour.

After camming, Aella tried “escort” work. That’s really just another word for prostitution.

“I remember going into my first appointment feeling really nervous. Then it was actually a lovely experience….And I left with a bunch of money in my pocket. I was like, ‘This was awesome.'”

To protect themselves, Aella and her friends have a screening process. When a new man calls, they demand references from previous escorts.

She doesn’t understand why prostitution is illegal, why people like her need to be “protected” from prostitution. On Twitter, Aella labels herself “whorelord.”

“When I was working at the factory, that was a thousand times worse,” she says. “But nobody cared about that.”

Prostitution is legal in parts of Nevada, in Germany, Switzerland, Greece, Netherlands, Hungary, Turkey, Indonesia, Australia, and New Zealand.

Legalizing sex work doesn’t solve its problems, but it makes it safer and easier to regulate.

Of course, some women are forced into prostitution. Some are tricked into coming to America, where traffickers confiscate identity papers, withhold pay, and tell the woman they owe them for bringing them to the U.S.

That’s obviously evil and should be prosecuted. But that would be easier to do if sex work were legal.

“It really would be a lot safer if it were decriminalized,” says Aella. “I’ve been assaulted during sex work. It wasn’t an option in my mind to go get the authorities’ help.”

Also, the vast majority of sex work is voluntary—a business transaction between consenting adults.

You might not realize that most is voluntary because police and media routinely call voluntary sex work slavery.

In 2019, New England Patriots owners Robert Kraft patronized a massage parlor that offered “happy endings.” Police arrested him as part of what they called a “sex trafficking” sting.

But there was no “trafficking.” Later prosecutors conceded that.

“Ninety-nine percent of the headlines are not true,” says Reason reporter Elizabeth Nolan Brown. “They say ‘we rescued these women,’ but by ‘rescue,’ they put them in jail and give them a criminal record. The victims are the sex workers themselves.”

Today, Aella has mostly retired from sex work. She got funded to work as a data scientist.

She uses her hundreds of thousands of followers on Twitter, Reddit, FetLife, and TikTok to run polls that ask provocative questions like, “Do women have systemic privilege due to their gender?”

“I’m really curious about the ways that our moral intuitions don’t line up,” Aella says. “I poke at things that make people feel confused about what they believe.”

Sex work is one of those things.

Polls show a slight majority of Americans think sex work should be decriminalized.  Support for legalization has been increasing.

“It should be legal,” says Aella. “Discovering sex work was one of the best things that’s happened to me. I have my own life. I make good money. I have a ton of spare time to do what I want. People are concerned about my ‘exploitation’? That’s wrong.”

COPYRIGHT 2022 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.

The post 'I Have My Own Life': The Case for Legalizing Sex Work appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/gVfiClc
via IFTTT

Incarcerated Children in Texas Left Without Bathroom Access for 22 Hours


Silhouette of a child behind a chain link fence

This past May, June, and July, children detained in several Texas juvenile prisons were denied regular access to toilets, forced to urinate into empty water bottles and defecate on pieces of paper on the floor. According to The Texas Tribune, unable to keep the required child-to-staff ratio, staff at two Texas juvenile lockups kept children in their cells without access to bathrooms from 4:30 pm to 8:00 am on weekdays and up to 22 hours a day on weekends.

According to the Tribune, at Giddings State School “the children had no choice but to use water bottles, milk cartons, lunch trays or pieces of paper as makeshift toilets,” during the longest periods of isolation. 

“During the July visit, the Ombudsman asked youth in all dorms whether this problem had improved. All youth stated the issue was the same or worse,” state inspectors wrote. “Many said they still urinated in their water bottles or milk cartons, and three said they defecated inside their room, one in a lunch tray, one in a plastic bag, and one on a piece of paper. Multiple youth said they had submitted grievances … but nothing had changed.”

Inspectors for the Texas Juvenile Justice System documented the accounts of incarcerated kids: “One said he would ‘never forget’ having to defecate in his room. Another said, ‘Even animals are let out’ to use the bathroom. A third said, ‘This is inhumane.'”

A similar situation appears to have occurred at another youth prison in North Texas, called the Gainesville State School, where juveniles reported that facility staff had given them cups to use as toilets, per the Tribune‘s reporting.

The children imprisoned at Giddings State School and Gainesville State School often have severe mental health problems. Hourslong lockdowns, during which children are denied access to basic hygiene, only exacerbate this.

Staffing shortages make monitoring severely mentally ill children difficult. According to the Tribune, nearly half of the youth in the state’s prison system have been placed on suicide watch this year. One mother of a kid currently incarcerated at Giddings State School told the Tribune that her son “was able to cut himself because he wasn’t being properly monitored, but the investigation was closed with no further action taken.”

“[Kids] are self-harming because the mobile teams may take an hour to get there and they have to go to the bathroom. They are self-harming because they get to go to the clinic and the infirmary to have contact,” Shandra Carter, the Texas Juvenile Justice Department’s interim executive director, said during a June board meeting. Understaffing “could cause a significantly impaired ability to intervene in the increasing suicidal behaviors already occurring by youth struggling with the isolative impact of operational room confinement.”

If a parent denies their child access to bathrooms for 22 hours a day, such actions are rightfully considered child abuse, and perhaps even grounds for the state to protect the child by removing them from their parent’s care. When those children are imprisoned, apparently, state actors are free to deny young people in their custody even the most basic hygiene, with little recourse. 

The post Incarcerated Children in Texas Left Without Bathroom Access for 22 Hours appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/tAuzS6J
via IFTTT

Saving Nezam From the Taliban


8188050

“There was a point when I stood in my closet holding a .45 caliber,” recalls Scott Mann, a Green Beret who suffered severe trauma after his six tours in Afghanistan. He resolved never to have anything to do with the country ever again.

“I didn’t wanna go back to that,” he says.

Following the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in August of 2021, Mann got a call from an Afghan special operator named Nezam whose life was in danger. He was one of hundreds of Afghans who had worked with the Americans being targeted by the Taliban.

“It was very obvious that he was in severe duress,” Mann tells Reason. “This guy was the quintessential special operator and truly a brother…how do I leave this guy?”

Mann decided he had to help save his friend’s life. “I ended up calling a couple of buddies who were still in active duty [and] who had fought with Nazam [and] who loved him.” Working their contacts, the group managed to get Nazam out of harm’s way in a harrowing sequence of events.

“That’s how Task Force Pineapple was born,” he recalls. 

Mann received the 2022 Savas Award for privatization, awarded annually by the Reason Foundation, which is the nonprofit that publishes Reason TV, Reason magazine, and Reason.com. The prize recognized his extraordinary effort in creating Operation Pineapple Express, a volunteer network that has helped hundreds of Afghan nationals escape the country.

Produced by Noor Greene; edited by Danielle Thompson; illustrations by Joel Connell; camera and motion graphics by Isaac Reese; narrated by Nick Gillespie; sound editing by Ian Keyser.

Photos: Saifurahman Safi / Xinhua News Agency/Newscom; DPST/Newscom; DPST/Newscom; EyePress/Newscom;  Isaías Ibáñez/Dreamstime.com

Music: “Back Home” by Max H. via Artlist; “Until Then” by Michael Ellery via Artlist; “Discovery” by Roman P via Artlist; “Heart” by Roman P via Artlist; “On the Edge” by Max H. via Artlist 

The post Saving Nezam From the Taliban appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/7zFRH62
via IFTTT

As Inflation Soars, Biden Hosts Cringey Concert Celebrating the Inflation Reduction Act


James Taylor White House inflation reduction act inflation report consumer price index Dow Jones stock market prices

There was a party at the White House on Tuesday.

Folk singer James Taylor was on hand to entertain a crowd of hundreds gathered on the South Lawn. The crowd included union leaders like Randi Weingarten, executive branch officials, and prominent Democratic elected officials that, according to Deadline, the White House had invited from “far and wide”—at least as far away as K Street.

“This achievement is a testament to our unity, our optimism, our persistence, along with the tireless efforts of a devoted staff,” said Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D–Calif.) during her turn at the podium. “Mr. President, thank you for unifying and inspiring a vision of a stronger, fairer, safer future for all,” she added. “Your extraordinary leadership has made this glorious day possible.”

“That’s an applause line,” Pelosi paused awkwardly to remind the assembled crowd, which dutifully complied.

Meanwhile, in the real world, no one was applauding. Tuesday afternoon looked anything but glorious.

An ugly consumer price index report released earlier in the day by the Department of Labor showed that inflation was still untamed, and it sent the markets into a spiral. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 1,200 points, or nearly 4 percent. The S&P 500 tumbled by 4.3 percent, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite took the worst beating of all, falling by 5.2 percent. Overall, it was the worst day for the stock market since June 2020, a painful reminder that Americans are stealing dealing with the twin scourges of rising prices and falling investment returns. We are paying more and getting less.

But at least the politicians had a nice party!

The White House probably couldn’t have picked a worse day to celebrate the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act. Despite its name, the bill is mostly a package of Democratic domestic tax and spending agenda items. The biggest portion involves a series of subsidies for green energy. Whatever merits that might have, it’s not going to reduce inflation.

The only part of the bill that does address the country’s high and rising prices was a provision to use some new tax revenue to pay down about $300 billion of the federal government’s staggering budget deficit. But that’s already been wiped out, as President Joe Biden’s decision to forgive student loans for an estimated 43 million people will end up adding even more to the deficit.

The hard truth is that there isn’t much that politicians can do to bring inflation under control because it is a phenomenon of monetary policy. Reckless fiscal policy that demands heavy borrowing and printing can—and has—set off inflation, but once the tiger is out of the cage there is little to be done except wait for higher interest rates to cool the economy. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, who is largely responsible for actually combating inflation, has indicated that the fight won’t be won quickly or easily. (The Fed is expected to raise interest rates again next week.)

All we can ask of politicians is that they stop making the situation worse by spending even more money, and that they stop celebrating the mess they’ve made while average Americans struggle to pay for groceries.

On Tuesday, Democrats failed on both counts. The only purpose the South Lawn party served—besides calling to mind George W. Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” speech and that time John Kerry trotted out Taylor to sing “You’ve Got a Friend” to the victims of a terrorist attack—was confirming how hopelessly out of touch these elected leaders and their friends are.

Credit CNN’s Alisyn Camerota for having the best reaction to what was unfolding. As she pivoted the network’s coverage from the White House party to the bad news coming from Wall Street, Camerota said what we all were thinking: “Feels like it’s hard to be celebratory.”

But that’s only true if you live in reality.

The post As Inflation Soars, Biden Hosts Cringey Concert Celebrating the Inflation Reduction Act appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/igXhyue
via IFTTT

The Dormant Commerce Clause, Internet Platforms, and Status Discrimination Bans

[Jack Goldsmith and I will have an article out about the Dormant Commerce Clause, geolocation, and state regulations of Internet transactions in the Texas Law Review early next year, and I’m serializing it here. There is still plenty of time for editing, so we’d love to hear any recommendations you folks might have; in the meantime, you can read the entire PDF of the latest draft (though with some formatting glitches stemming from the editing process) here.]

Let’s now consider how these principles might apply to state regulations of social media platforms, and in particular to statutes (whether framed as public accommodations statutes or quasi-common-carrier statutes) that ban discrimination based on various attributes of a user or of the user’s speech. We’ll begin with two relatively simple and narrow hypotheticals, and then turn in a later post to the more controversial and ambitious statutes aimed at forbidding certain kinds of political discrimination, such as the ones recently enacted in Florida and Texas.

Antidiscrimination Statutes: Status

Federal public accommodations law likely doesn’t cover social media platforms, because it’s limited to only a few kinds of establishments.[1] It also only bans discrimination based on race, religion, and national origin.[2] But many states ban public accommodation discrimination in many establishments, based on many criteria.

Of course, today’s major social media platforms likely wouldn’t expressly exclude members based on, say, race or sex or sexual orientation. But consider a peculiar form of antidiscrimination law: bans on discrimination in places of public accommodation based on arrest or conviction history. Ann Arbor categorically bans such discrimination based on arrest record.[3] Madison, Urbana, and Champaign do the same as to arrest record or conviction record.[4] Connecticut bans discrimination based on expunged criminal records.[5] New Jersey bans discrimination based on criminal history involving possession, distribution, or manufacturing of marijuana and hashish.[6] Illinois, Hawaii, New York, and Wisconsin also ban such discrimination in employment,[7] so it’s easy to imagine one of those states extending the ban to public accommodations.

Indeed, say Wisconsin is, rightly or wrongly, persuaded to do that (especially given Madison’s step in that direction). But say some social network—call it SafeBook—decides to ban people with a history of criminal offenses from portions of its site that children can visit. (Maybe sex offenses, but maybe also drug offenses; many parents might not want their children to fall in with the wrong crowd online and be exposed to bad influences.)

And say that Wisconsin courts conclude that the Wisconsin law applies to social media networks. This isn’t implausible: Some courts have already held that bans on disability discrimination in places of public accommodation apply to websites.[8] The Wisconsin law also provides that the term “public place[s] of accommodation or amusement” “shall be interpreted broadly to include, but not be limited to, places of business or recreation,” “and any place where . . . amusement, goods, or services are available either free or for a consideration.”[9] Finally, say that courts conclude that this nondiscrimination rule doesn’t violate the social media networks’ First Amendment rights,[10] and isn’t preempted by § 230.[11]

The Dormant Commerce Clause shouldn’t invalidate this law, at least if certain assumptions about geolocation (more on them shortly) are satisfied. This is especially clear if the law only protects the right of users in Wisconsin to interact with other users in Wisconsin (let’s call this Option 1). Just as a theme park in Wisconsin can’t exclude visitors with a criminal record, so SafeBook can’t keep a Wisconsinite from logging on and having online conversations with other Wisconsinites who have criminal records.[12]

To be sure, Wisconsin’s law would have extraterritorial effects: If SafeBook is headquartered in, for instance, Kansas, presumably SafeBook will have to do many things in Kansas to comply. But of course any corporation that deals with customers all over the country through bricks-and-mortar stores would have to comply with the laws of those places where it operates. Likewise, any corporation that mails material to customers, or deals with them through phone calls, would have to comply with the laws of those places (for instance, in deciding what it must do to legally record phone calls with customers[13]).

This analysis assumes what is increasingly commonplace: that SafeBook has access to geographical identification tools at a reasonable cost that can determine whether a user and the users with whom he is corresponding are in Wisconsin. So long as Wisconsin only requires SafeBook to use reasonable best efforts with geolocation tools—rather than, say, imposing strict liability for any criminal history discrimination against users who happen to be in Wisconsin, even if they appear to be coming from Iowa—then SafeBook can still maintain its criminal-offender-free experience for users in other states. It could just hide any Wisconsin criminal-offender users so users in other states can’t correspond with them, but show them to their fellow Wisconsinites.[14]

This sort of geography-based variation in experience is similar to what the Ninth Circuit ruled that CNN could provide to accommodate disabled users in California. Safebook would have to go beyond CNN in at least one respect: It would have to take note of the place from which the item was posted, and not just, as in CNN’s case, the place from which the item was accessed. But that move might be technically easy, to the extent that Safebook can geolocate the poster when the post is put up,[15] and then store that location information together with the other fields in the post, such as the post date, time, author, and text.[16] Armed with that information, the SafeBook software can make sure that Wisconsinites will see posts from other Wisconsinites, even if it wants to continue to block posts by criminal offenders from or to other states.

To be sure, the challenge for SafeBook could become more complicated as more states impose such regulations. Some jurisdictions ban arrest and conviction record discrimination and some don’t. Some might ban such discrimination more or less broadly (again, recall New Jersey law, which currently bans only discrimination based on a history of having possessed, sold, or manufactured marijuana or hashish). Some ban sexual orientation discrimination and gender identity discrimination and some don’t. Some ban marital status discrimination and some don’t. Most ban religious discrimination but a few don’t. A few ban discrimination based on veteran status or military status but most don’t.[17] SafeBook might need to survey the state laws and have different rules for different states, especially if it wants to institute other forms of discrimination, but even if it limits itself to discrimination based on criminal history.

But welcome to the American federal system, where companies that do business with people who are in multiple states must comply with the laws of those multiple states. Mail-order retailers, for instance, have to comply with the often byzantine tax rules of many states, even though “[s]tate taxes differ, not only in the rate imposed but also in the categories of goods that are taxed and, sometimes, the relevant date of purchase.”[18] But that by itself doesn’t immunize the retailers from complying with state laws via readily available geolocation and other software tools.

Likewise for large social media platforms, at least to the extent that they can use geo-identification tools to achieve a reasonable level of compliance with multiple state laws as described above. These are firms, after all, whose businesses are all about writing software to cope with business opportunities and challenges, including software that for business-enhancement reasons treats users differently based on geography.

As we noted before, such compliance can be burdensome, and perhaps unduly burdensome, for small companies, whether small retailers or small platforms. The Dormant Commerce Clause balancing test (the Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc. test), under which a regulation may be struck down if “the burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits,”[19] might limit such state laws in some measures, as applied to small retailers.[20] In the tax context, Wayfair recognized that the “burdens [of having to collect state sales tax] may pose legitimate concerns in some instances, particularly for small businesses that make a small volume of sales to customers in many States,” and that it may be significant that a state “affords small merchants a reasonable degree of protection,” for instance if they do very little business in the state.[21]

Yet even when discussing small businesses facing multijurisdictional legal burdens, the Court noted that, “[e]ventually, software that is available at a reasonable cost may make it easier for small businesses to cope with these problems.”[22] The Court appeared to be referring to multistate tax compliance software that is a cousin of the geolocation software we have highlighted.[23] And any concern about undue burdens on interstate commerce should be further significantly reduced for large businesses, with users and advertisers all over the country, that deploy geo-identification software to serve business interests.

Now of course a harder question would arise if Wisconsin law insisted that SafeBook, as a condition of doing any business in Wisconsin, let any user from Wisconsin sign on (regardless of criminal history) and have conversations with all users on the platform (including, by implication, those from other state­s such as, say, Iowa). Let’s call this Option 2; it would go beyond regulating the experience of Wisconsin users of SafeBook and influence the experience of users in Iowa, who would end up interacting with some people with criminal histories (not fellow Iowans, who still wouldn’t be protected by Option 2, but Wisconsinites), simply because Wisconsin law so mandates.

Option 2 is harder because one can conceptualize the Wisconsin regulation as doing more than raising SafeBook’s costs of doing business in Iowa; the Wisconsin law can also be viewed as requiring Safebook to provide a certain form of online experience in Iowa that SafeBook wouldn’t otherwise provide. Option 2 for this reason moves in the direction of the Supreme Court’s price affirmation cases, which struck down state price affirmation laws basically because they mandated certain behavior in other states.[24]

But, as noted above, the continuing validity of these cases is in question; and the argument that Option 2 is consistent with the Dormant Commerce Clause is powerful. Wisconsin has an interest in making sure that Wisconsinites are treated equally by places of public accommodation without regard to arrest or conviction records. That suggests that someone using Safebook in Madison should be entitled to have the same online experience—including the same conversations with out-of-staters—regardless of whether he has, say, a marijuana conviction on his record. Wisconsin would be regulating the experience that SafeBook is providing for people who are visiting SafeBook from Wisconsin, even though in the process it would incidentally also affect the experience of SafeBook visitors from outside Wisconsin.

An analogy might be a physical delivery service in Wisconsin that refused to accept packages—including for interstate shipment—from people who had sex crime convictions (perhaps because the owner just didn’t want to do business with people who had committed such heinous acts).[25] The Wisconsin Legislature might well conclude that this is improper discrimination against Wisconsin residents and enact an Option-2-like public accommodation statute to forbid such discrimination, even though such a statute would also affect the delivery service’s actions in delivering packages from Wisconsin to other states.

Let us then add one more twist: Say that, while Wisconsin bans discrimination based on criminal history, North Carolina requires social media platforms to exclude people with certain kinds of criminal history from portions of social media platforms that are targeted to children.[26] This would indeed put SafeBook in a difficult position: If it keeps a Wisconsin user with a particular history from interacting with North Carolina users who are accessing a particular portion of the platform, then it would be violating Wisconsin law (at least in Option 2). If it allows the Wisconsin user to interact with the North Carolina users, then it would be violating North Carolina law.

This sort of actual inconsistency might justify keeping one or the other law from applying in those situations under Pike balancing. We doubt, though, that the mere hypothetical possibility of such inconsistency should categorically foreclose antidiscrimination laws from applying to social media platforms.

[1]. 42 U.‌S.‌C. § 2000a; Lewis v. Google LLC, No. 20-16073, 2021 WL 1423118 (9th Cir. Apr. 15, 2021).‌

[2]. 42 U.S.C § 2000a.

[3]. Ann Arbor (Mich.‌) Code of Ordinances § 9:151.‌

[4]. Madison (Wisc.‌) Code of Ordinances § 39.‌03(5); Urbana (Ill.‌) Code of Ordinances § 12-39, -63; Champaign (Ill.‌) Code of Ordinances § 17-3, -56.

[5]. 2021 Conn. Legis. Serv. P.‌A. 21-32, sec. 23 (S.‌B. 1019) (starting Jan. 1, 2023).‌

[6]. N.‌J. Stat. Ann. § 10:5-50.‌

[7]. Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. §§ 5/‌2-103 to -103.‌1; Haw. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 378-2; N.‌Y. Exec. L. §§ 296.‌15–.‌16; Wisc. Stats. Ann. § 111.‌335.‌

[8]. See Winegard v. Crain Commc’ns, Inc.‌, No. 20-CV-01509 (AJN), 2021 WL 1198960 (S.‌D.‌N.‌Y. Mar. 30, 2021); Sullivan v. BDG Media, Inc.‌, 71 Misc. 3d 863 (N.‌Y. Sup. Ct. 2021); Nat’l Fed’n of the Blind v. Scribd Inc.‌, 97 F. Supp. 3d 565 (D. Vt. 2015); Nat’l Ass’n of the Deaf v. Netflix, Inc.‌, 869 F. Supp. 2d 196 (D. Mass. 2012); see also Sullivan v. Study.‌com LLC, No. 18-CV-1939 (JPO), 2019 WL 1299966 (S.‌D.‌N.‌Y. Mar. 21, 2019) (likewise, but noting that the defendant did not contest being treated as a public accommodation). For more on whether web sites that are ancillary to the sale of other goods and services are places of public accommodations for purposes of federal disability discrimination law, see Gil v. Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc.‌, 993 F.‌3d 1266, 1277 (11th Cir. 2021) (saying no); Robles v. Domino’s Pizza, LLC, 913 F.‌3d 898, 905–06 (9th Cir. 2019) (saying yes); Blake E. Reid, Internet Architecture and Disability, 95 Ind. L.‌J. 591, 597–99 (2020) (summarizing the dispute); Johanna Smith & John Inazu, Virtual Access: A New Framework for Disability and Human Flourishing in an Online World, 2021 Wisc. L. Rev. 719, 759­–65 (2021).‌

[9]. Wisc. Stat. § 106.‌52(1)(e)1.‌ Though the law excludes private clubs, that exclusion is limited to “bona fide private, nonprofit organization[s]” that aren’t open to the public generally. Wisc. Stat. § 106.‌52(1)(e)2.‌

[10]. See Eugene Volokh, Treating Social Media Platforms Like Common Carriers?, 1 J. Free Speech L. 377 (2021).‌

[11]. See Adam Candeub & Eugene Volokh, Interpreting 47 U.‌S.‌C. § 230(c)(2), 1 J. Free Speech L. 175 (2021). Note also that § 230(c)(2) preempts liability for “any action voluntarily taken in good faith to restrict access to or availability of material that the provider or user considers to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable, whether or not such material is constitutionally protected”—it doesn’t discuss action to block access based on a person’s identity, rather than based on the content of material.‌

[12]. We use “Wisconsinite” here as shorthand for people who are in Wisconsin, or more precisely people who appear to be in Wisconsin based on geolocation tools. We’re not focusing here on place of residence or citizenship, which would be impractical to determine—just as, for instance, the Ninth Circuit in the CNN case was focusing on the user’s location and not the user’s residence or citizenship.‌

[13]. Kearney v. Salomon Smith Barney, Inc., 137 P.‌3d 914 (Cal. 2006)

[14]. To be sure, that means that SafeBook couldn’t just delete posts by people with criminal histories, but would have to keep them on file and show them to Wisconsinites while concealing them from others. But that would be a very easy algorithm to write; and any extra disk space that would be required to keep the material that would otherwise be deleted would be quite inexpensive given today’s technology.‌

[15]. Alternatively, if state law dictates that the authors’ location be determined based on where the authors are located when they subscribe to the service—rather than based on where they are when they post each item—then Safebook could just store the location in the author’s user record, rather than once for each post.

[16]. If it’s technically too difficult, then a court could presumably conclude that the Wisconsin requirement is unconstitutional under the Pike balancing test, see infra text accompanying note 146; but there’s no reason to assume a priori that this would be too difficult.

[17]. See generally Nat’l Conf. of State Legs., State Public Accommodation Laws, https://ift.tt/CzFKSOi [https://ift.tt/Qef1csA].

[18]. South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc.‌, 138 S. Ct. 2080, 2098 (2018).‌

[19]. 397 U.‌S. 137, 142 (1970); see Greater L.‌A. Agency on Deafness, 742 F.‌3d at 433 (applying the Pike test); Goldsmith & Sykes, supra note 11, at 806 (discussing a possible Pike-based analysis in extraterritoriality cases).‌

[20]. See Kearney v. Salomon Smith Barney, Inc., 45 Cal. Rptr. 730, 739 (Cal. 2006) (“On its face, application of the California law here at issue would affect only a business’s undisclosed recording of telephone conversations with clients or consumers in California and would not compel any action or conduct of the business with regard to conversations with non-California clients or consumers. Although SSB may attempt to demonstrate, at a later stage in the litigation, that application of the California statute would pose an undue and excessive burden on interstate commerce by establishing that it would be impossible or infeasible for SSB to comply with the California statute without altering its conduct with regard to its non-California clients and that the burden that would be imposed upon it ‘is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits’ (Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc.), SSB clearly cannot prevail on such a theory at the demurrer stage of the proceeding.”) (citation trimmed).

[21]. 138 S. Ct. at 2098.‌

[22]. Id.

[23]. See Brief of South Dakota, https://ift.tt/7nOUvxM [https://ift.tt/TJ9VwXt], at 14-15; Oral Argument Transcript, https://ift.tt/sVKT4IW [https://ift.tt/lQ9T6Xo].

[24] See, e.g., Healy v. Beer Institute, Inc., 491 U.‌S. 324, 336–38 (1989).

[25]. Assume the delivery service isn’t governed by federal common carrier laws, which would presumably independently ban the service from imposing such conditions.

[26]. Assume also that the North Carolina law is upheld against a First Amendment challenge because it’s narrower than the overbroad ban struck down in Packingham v. North Carolina, 137 S. Ct. 1730 (2017). See id. at 1743 (Alito, J.‌, concurring in the judgment) (suggesting that narrower restrictions on “an adult previously convicted of molesting children from visiting a dating site for teenagers” or “a site where minors communicate with each other about personal problems” might be constitutional).‌

The post The Dormant Commerce Clause, Internet Platforms, and Status Discrimination Bans appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/idSxQAD
via IFTTT

Closing a Bureaucratic Loophole that Harms Ukrainian Refugees


Uniting for Ukraine

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has, among other things, created the biggest refugee crisis in Europe, since World War II. Since the Russian attack began in February, Western governments, including the US, have done much to open doors to Ukrainian refugees fleeing the conflict and associated Russian repression. Most notably, the Biden Administration has established the Uniting for Ukraine program, under which Americans can sponsor Ukrainian refugees to enter the country on an expedited basis.The president has granted Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to Ukrainians who arrived in the US by April 11 (after initially cutting it off at March 1). TPS status gives Ukrainians the right to live and work in the US for up to 18 months (though the president can cut short – or extend – this period at will).

Unfortunately, however, a loophole in this combination of policies has exposed some Ukrainians to potential removal from the US, and prevented others from working legally. Ukrainians are only eligible for TPS if they arrived by April 11. The Uniting for Ukraine program only came into effect on April 25.

This leaves out in the cold people who arrived between April 11 and April 25, and in some cases even later because it took time for UforU to get underway, even after April 25. Based on my discussions with organizations assisting migrants, it appears there are hundreds or perhaps even thousands of people in this position, though I admittedly do not have reliable estimates. Some have even been subject to removal proceedings, according to reports I have heard. Others remain in limbo.

Most of these people entered the United States on B2 tourist/visitor visas (the only kind they could apply for at the time) or were granted humanitarian parole to cross the US-Mexican border. Either way, they may be able  to stay in the US for only a short time (generally no more than six months), and often are not eligible to work legally. The latter both makes it hard for the Ukrainians to support themselves, and  prevents them from benefiting the US economy through their labor.

There is an easy fix for these problems! Simply extend TPS to Ukrainians who arrived at least as late as April 25, but preferably at least by June 1. Better still, it should be extended to all who arrive at any time so long as the war continues. Under current law and judicial precedent, the president can do these things with the stroke of a pen.

The rationale for these steps is obvious: the Russian invasion of Ukraine and accompanying repression of people in occupied territories (including even mass deportations of civilians) is the sort of situation TPS is obviously intended to address. Despite recent Ukrainian successes on the battlefield, Russia still occupies large parts of the country, and the war seems likely to continue for some time to come. Letting Ukrainians stay is both the right thing to do on moral grounds, and likely to benefit our economy.

Ukrainians who arrived after April 11 are no less worthy of refuge than those who arrived before. There is no rationale for distinguishing between the two groups. There is still less justification for the April 11-25 loophole. Most likely, its creation was a bureaucratic oversight, rather than a deliberate policy.

There is also, as far as I can see, essentially zero political risk to fixing this problem for the White House, and perhaps even a modest benefit (refugee advocacy organizations and the Ukrainian immigrant community would be grateful). Hopefully, they will address it once made aware of it, though government bureaucracies have all too often allowed worse problems to persist through inertia.

Fixing this discrete issue is not a substitute for addressing broader flaws in our immigration and refugee policies generally, and those related to the Ukraine war specifically. Among other things, we need a larger-scale permanent private refugee sponsorship program, and Ukrainians fleeing the war should be given permanent rights to live and work in the US, not just a temporary status, revocable by the White House at any time. Moral, economic, and strategic considerations also support opening US doors to Russians fleeing Vladimir Putin’s increasingly repressive regime.

In earlier posts (e.g. here and here), I have addressed claims that accepting Russian and Ukrainian refugees is unfair so long as the US and its allies are less open to those fleeing violence and tyranny elsewhere. These iniquities should be addressed by “leveling up,” not “leveling down.”

But even if the US government cannot or will not resolve these broader issues in the near future, it can at least close the ridiculous April 11-25 gap. The best should not be the enemy of the good. We have here a simple problem, with a simple and easy solution.

The post Closing a Bureaucratic Loophole that Harms Ukrainian Refugees appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/8Q9Vqzs
via IFTTT

Cops Fail To Protect Own Informant From Rape, Then Charge Her With a Drug Crime


Rapides Parish Sheriffs Office badge

A woman in Alexandria, Louisiana, was allegedly raped while serving as a confidential informant for local police officers, who sat oblivious nearby during the attack. Officers with the Rapides Parish Sheriff’s Office (RPSO) had sent the woman into a house to make a meth buy without monitoring her in real time.

The ranking officer in the sting operation was Lt. Mark Parker. He told the Associated Press that the RPSO had never monitored in real time as confidential informants did stings, though it has started doing so now.

“We’ve always done it this way,” Parker told the A.P. “She was an addict and we just used her as an informant like we’ve done a million times before.”

The woman was serving as a confidential informant after being arrested around a month earlier. Confidential informants are often people who’ve been arrested for minor crimes and get offered leniency in exchange for helping bust someone else.

Aside from showcasing yet another tragedy of America’s pointless and destructive war on drugs, the situation raises questions about the handling of confidential informants. These are people that police send into potentially dangerous situations and should have a duty to protect.

In this case, the woman sent to buy drugs from a suspected dealer was wearing a hidden microphone and camera. But the equipment did not transmit to sheriff’s deputies in real time. Instead, they left her on her own, waiting for her to come out while the dealer, Antonio D. Jones, allegedly forced her to perform oral sex on him, twice.

“Authorities … never considered such an attack might happen and the devices the woman carried didn’t have the ability to transmit the operation to law enforcement in real time,” the A.P. reported.

“It was recording but not to where my guys were monitoring it,” said Rapides Parish Sheriff Mark Wood, blaming the January 2021 incident on his inexperience from only being in the top job six months at that time. “There are always things you learn that you can do better.”

The case in this central Louisiana city of 47,000 underscores the perils confidential informants face seeking to “work off” criminal charges in loosely regulated and often secretive arrangements with law enforcement. Police rely on informants in a wide range of cases, compensating them with money or leniency in their own cases yet often providing little or no training. …

David Redemann, a longtime Seattle police officer who now leads training on such stings, said the case highlights the vast disparities in law enforcement’s undercover playbook, with many agencies lacking the resources to properly train officers or monitor informant drug buys.

“We do this 10,000 times a day around the country, and not everybody has transmitting equipment,” Redemann said. “Is this tragic as hell? Absolutely. We need to learn from what happened here.”

Law enforcement’s use of confidential informants is akin to a black market in which “deals are made under the table and often undocumented,” said Alexandra Natapoff, a Harvard law professor and leading expert on informants.

Not only are informants treated as disposable pawns, she said, but qualified immunity has made it very difficult to sue the police when things go off the rails.

After the assault, the woman left the house and told police what happened. Jones was subsequently charged with second-degree rape and false imprisonment in addition to distribution of meth. Last month, the rape charge was reduced to third-degree rape.

Three weeks later, the woman who served as a confidential informant was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia. “She’s been pulled over and booked on possession charges at least twice since then,” notes the Associated Press. She “pleaded guilty to possessing drug paraphernalia last year and was placed in behavioral health court in lieu of jail time.”


FREE MINDS

The authoritarian convergence. “The problem with American politics isn’t polarization—it’s rising illiberalism,” writes Stephanie Slade in her excellent Reason cover story, now online.

Something is broken in our politics. Just about everyone knows it, but it can be hard to put your finger on what it is.

As the media attempt to grapple with this felt reality, they reach over and over for the same word: polarization. That, we’re told, is the shorthand for what has gone wrong. Where once the country had its share of conservative Democrats, liberal Republicans, and mushy moderates, today the two parties are more internally consolidated—and further apart from each other—than ever.

But what if that explanation is missing something? What if there’s a sense in which left and right are actually converging, and the nature of that convergence is the real source of the perception that something isn’t right?

Read the whole thing here.


FREE MARKETS

Inflation is up, stocks are down. The latest report on inflation shows that prices continued to rise in August, climbing 0.1 percent overall. “Prices have climbed by 8.3 percent over the past 12 months,” notes Reason‘s Eric Boehm. More:

That’s down from the 8.5 percent mark in July, but the uptick in August’s monthly figure seemingly puts an end to hopes that prices were finally cooling after a year of increases, the likes of which hadn’t been seen since the 1970s.

But, wait, how can inflation be rising and yet be down from the tallies announced in both June and July? That’s because the annualized rate—the 8.3 percent number—is the sum of the past 12 monthly figures. Prices rose by 0.1 percent in August, but this month’s annualized rate drops from last August’s monthly rate of 0.3 percent. So the annual figure declined even though inflation rose last month.

In response to the report, stock prices tumbled, giving us the worst Dow Jones Industrial Average slide since June 2020.


FOLLOWUP

A woman whose DNA was taken as part of a rape investigation and later used to convict her of an unrelated property crime is now suing the city of San Francisco. More here.

“Federal law already prohibits the inclusion of victims’ DNA in the national Combined DNA Index System,” notes ABC News. But “there is no corresponding law in California to prohibit local law enforcement databases from retaining victims’ profiles and searching them years later for entirely different purposes.”

“This is government overreach of the highest order, using the most unique and personal thing we have—our genetic code—without our knowledge to try and connect us to crime,” Adante Pointer, the woman’s lawyer, said in a statement.


QUICK HITS

• “Christian Glass called 911 for help after crashing his car into an embankment in Silver Plume—he needed someone to unstick his car,” reports the Denver Post. Within a few hours, he would be shot to death by police.

• A timely review of Legacy of Violence: A History of the British Empire.

• New U.K. prime minister Liz Truss considers scaling back the nanny state.

• Reminder: The world really is getting better.

• Biden’s sneaky censors.

• Bipartisanship is just another word for literally the worst ideas:

The post Cops Fail To Protect Own Informant From Rape, Then Charge Her With a Drug Crime appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/iqzWlI7
via IFTTT

18-Year-Old Faces Possible 70 Years in Federal Prison for Snapchat Sexting Crime


Teens using Snapchat

Let’s say you’re a 17-year-old boy asking two 16-year-old girls to sext you on Snapchat—well, that’s pretty normal these days, right? Let’s agree that it is.

Now, let’s say that you possibly paid the girls for their sexts, and then allegedly threatened to expose them unless they sent more of them. That’s not normal. It’s obviously immoral, probably illegal, and quite simply wrong.

But are you knowingly creating child pornography and transmitting it across state lines?

That’s what Eric Beyer Jr., of Hutchinson, Kansas, is accused of. He faces up to 70 years in federal prison.

“I’m not saying that I don’t think my son should be punished for that,” says Jessica Meloney, Beyer’s mother. “Absolutely, he should know what he did was wrong and should get in trouble. I’m not saying my kid should get nothing. Even if you want to give him five years, I’m okay with that, because I know he’ll never do it again. But to take an 18-year-old kid and put him in jail for longer than he’s been alive?”

When Beyer was 17, he made a fake account on Snapchat and started contacting girls about his same age. He was in high school at the time. The FBI became aware of his activity in June of 2021, probably because one of the girl’s parents found out what he was doing and brought her phone to the authorities. But the FBI waited until September, a month after Beyer turned 18, to act.

Then, at about 4:30 a.m., a SWAT team raided the house where Beyer lived with his dad and brother, and handcuffed all three, according to his mother, who is divorced and lives in Pennsylvania. Then they put Beyer in the cruiser for questioning. He was read his Miranda rights and responded, “I understand.”

When questioned, Beyer said that yes, the Snapchat account was his, and no, he wasn’t sharing it with anyone. He asked if his father could be there with him, but the agents said he was old enough to be alone. Then they told him, “We need your password.” Unaware that he could refuse, Beyer gave it to them, whereupon they opened his account and put him under arrest, according to his mother.

Beyer has been in jail awaiting trial ever since. His family could not afford the $5,000 it would take to bail him out, and by the time they got the money together, it was too close to his trial date—which has been moved several times—to release him.

How is it that photos exchanged—or even extorted—by teens who all reside in Kansas can be considered an interstate crime? Simple: Snapchat’s server is in California. The images electronically left Kansas, crossed state lines, and came right back.

Nonetheless, the authorities had a choice: They could have brought district charges against him, or federal ones.

“When there’s a case with overlapping interests, a lot of times the federal and the state prosecutor have a conversation about who is going to do the case,” says Troy Stabenow, a federal assistant defense attorney. Who takes the case could be based on something as simple as who has more time on their schedule, or who thinks they would get the most appropriate punishment.

It’s not clear why Beyer’s case went to the U.S. District Attorney. The prosecutor, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Hart, did not respond to a request for comment.

Kansas City-based criminal defense attorney Chris Angles says the federal statute can result in extremely heavy consequences, regardless of offender age.

“These crimes are unfortunately increasingly common among teens,” says Angles. “State laws, unlike federal ones, are crafted to address age and other mitigating factors. Applying the federal law in this case, with the facts as we understand them, seems overly punitive.”

In fact, the attorney continued, under Kansas law, there aren’t even mandatory minimums.

“A state prosecutor could exercise discretion and the sentence could be tailored to the facts of the case, with a judge having discretion to depart,” says Angles. “His likely starting range under Kansas law would be 4-20 years.” A plea, he indicated, would probably be lower.

Beyer’s federal charges—two counts of knowingly producing and transporting child pornography and one of possessing it—carry far lengthier sentences. Each production charge is punishable by not less than 15 nor more than 30 years. The possession charge is 10 years.

These sentences could be served concurrently, but Melone says her son’s public defender has warned Beyer that they could also be “stacked”; in other words, he might have to serve them one after another. In that case, if convicted of all three charges, he would be facing a minimum of 40 and a maximum of 70 years behind bars. He’d get out at age 58 or age 88.

It’s worth noting that each year of incarceration costs taxpayers roughly $40,000.

Beyer’s public defender had recommended he take a plea deal that would cap his incarceration at 20 years and perhaps get him 12 to 15 years in prison, followed by registration as a sex offender.

Recently, Beyer received some good news. He sent a note to the judge pointing out that he was just a month away from his September 27 trial date and still did not know how his public defender planned to argue the case. This moved the judge to dismiss the public defender and allow a pro bono lawyer to take over. Now his trial has been pushed back indefinitely.

This development gives Melone a ray of hope. It’s possible that Beyer might even be allowed to come home before his trial now.

It does sound like Beyer probably committed a crime—one all too easy to commit in this technological age, but one that warrants punishment, nevertheless. Those 16-year-old girls—indeed, all minors—obviously deserve protection from exploitation, and blackmail is a serious issue.

But it also sounds like the relevant laws, which cover interstate production and transmission of illegal images, were written for the era before the internet, when data didn’t fly through the air. These laws do not map directly onto the dismaying conduct of teens, other teens, and smart phones. A young man who solicits nude photos from young women and then threatens to expose them has done something wrong; he needs to make amends and be taught better behavior. But does he really need to spend the rest of his life in prison?

“I have a three-year-old,” says Melone. “If my three-year-old takes a magic marker and draws all over my walls and I beat him half to death, the punishment doesn’t fit the crime.”

The post 18-Year-Old Faces Possible 70 Years in Federal Prison for Snapchat Sexting Crime appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/kvUTNdc
via IFTTT

New Gun Store Tracking Code Deputizes Private Firms To Do Government’s Bidding


Man surveys options at gun store

Government officials continue deputizing private businesses to implement restrictive policies that can’t win traction through the political process or are forbidden by the Constitution. The latest target is gun rights.

The newest development comes in the form of a specific merchant category code for retailers of firearms and ammunition, breaking them out from the broader category of specialty retailers in which they were previously included. The code makes credit card purchases from such businesses much easier to track and potentially exposes buyers and sellers to harassment.

The new code is touted as an anti-crime measure, but its advocates don’t specify how tagging all transactions by associated vendors will identify suspicious activity.

“Amalgamated Bank announced that its application to the International Standards Organization for a new merchant category code (MCC) for gun and ammunition stores was approved,” the New York-based financial institution announced September 9. “This code is the key to creating new tools that all financial institutions must now use to begin detecting and reporting suspicious activity associated with gun trafficking and mass shootings to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the government agency charged with safeguarding the financial system from illicit use.”

Amalgamated Bank is more of a political operation that happens to process financial transactions than a financial institution with ideological leanings. “When you deposit your money at Amalgamated, it supports sustainable organizations, progressive causes, and social justice,” the bank boasts. So, it’s no surprise that its petition to the Geneva-based International Standards Organization was supported by similar calls from like-minded politicians. That includes Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.), Rep. Madeleine Dean (D–Penn.), Democratic New York City Mayor Eric Adams, and other elected officials, all of whom developed a simultaneous interest in how credit card companies identify vendors.

“Mass shooters have repeatedly financed deadly massacres using credit cards, and Bank CEOs need to step up to save lives,” huffed Warren.

But the new code doesn’t come with subcategories for aspiring mass murderers; it tags all purchases, whether of rifles or beef jerky, and without regard for intent. That has industry insiders worried that politicians are again weaponizing the financial system to target activities they don’t like but haven’t been able to ban through law. That’s a game anybody can play.

“Some executives in private discussions have flagged concerns that it could lead to the creation of more codes that could be used to crack down on controversial businesses such as abortion providers,” The Wall Street Journal reported.

Well, of course it could. It wasn’t that long ago that the banking industry was conscripted by the U.S. Justice Department’s Operation Choke Point crusade against payday lenders, adult entertainment, gun dealers, and other politically disfavored enterprises.

“The general outline is the DOJ and bank regulators are putting the screws to banks and other third-party payment processors to refuse banking services to companies and industries that are deemed to pose a ‘reputation risk’ to the bank,” George Mason University law professor Todd Zywicki wrote in 2014. “Most controversially, the list of dubious industries is populated by enterprises that are entirely, or at least generally, legal.”

Operation Choke Point was officially terminated in 2017. But that wasn’t the end of using nominally private businesses to achieve policy goals. American Banker reported in 2019 on financial institutions pressured to deny services to “politically divisive clients.” More recently, under fire from elected officials, UPS implemented tougher shipping policies for gun-related businesses, and even destroyed some packages in transit. The regulatory state gives politicians enormous leverage.

“The social media companies are at pains to show that they share the government’s goals, which is precisely the problem,” Reason‘s Jacob Sullum noted of cooperation by Facebook and Twitter to suppress messages disliked by the White House. “Given the broad powers that the federal government has to make life difficult for these businesses through public criticism, litigation, regulation, and legislation, the Biden administration’s ‘asks’ for stricter moderation are tantamount to commands.”

Ultimately, whether private firms do the bidding of government by choice or because of intimidation, the fact is that politicians are bypassing the hard work of legislation and the protections of the Constitution to target activities they just don’t like. In the case of the new gun store merchant code, that poses risks to businesses as well as to customers whose transactions are flagged. But the codes specifically apply to credit card payments, creating an incentive for people to look to alternatives.

“Gun buyers trying to fly under the radar now have an incentive to pay with cash (or perhaps cryptocurrency, where it’s accepted),” notes Marc Hochstein of CoinDesk.

The move also could be a boon for payment systems specifically created for the firearms industry, assuming they aren’t subsequently targeted themselves.

“We’ve seen unusually high interest in GunTab since the new MCC was announced,” I was told via email by a representative of GunTab, a payment service specifically intended for firearms-related transactions. “In particular, online forums have been very active with people discussing ways to avoid the de facto gun registry this code implies. GunTab is being suggested because we’re an escrow service, not a gun store. But we’re still concerned about this new MCC because of what it really represents.”

The people at GunTab warn that the new merchant code might be used to choke off services to gun dealers and create a crude registry of owners. But they especially worry it will be used to generate Suspicious Activity Reports by financial institutions to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network that could land law enforcement on people’s doorsteps through “predictive policing” efforts that interpret innocent activity as a threat. Think of it as swatting formalized through financial regulations.

Interestingly, the feds are also targeting “buy now, pay later” programs that are popular with consumers, even for groceries now that inflation is so high. Such plans are also widely used for firearms purchases, which has drawn (you guessed it) the attention of anti-gun politicians.

How will financial institutions implement the new merchant code? Queries to American Express, the International Standards Organization, Mastercard, and Visa went unanswered as of press time. But whatever they do, expect it to be just the latest step in an ongoing effort by politicians to punish people and activities they dislike by conscripting private companies to do what government can’t.

The post New Gun Store Tracking Code Deputizes Private Firms To Do Government's Bidding appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest https://ift.tt/unAP3lS
via IFTTT