Tag Archives: Realtor

Wacky Trayvon Martin Juror

Actually, he was only a potential juror who was tossed out of the jury pool when defense attorneys discovered some prejudicial FaceBook postings.

But this goofball, Jerry Counelis, had apparently posted a comment that said, “Justice for Trayvon” two weeks before George Zimmerman was arrested for Martin’s murder. Then he lied about it during voir dire.

When Counelis was ousted from the jury pool he came back into the courthouse and tried to get into the jury room. He was yelling that his anonymity had been taken away from him. And this is the kind of nut case who could have gotten onto the jury? Dear Lord God!

Counelis was finally arrested and jailed for trespass. His mug shot will ensure that he has no anonymity. Ever.

Zimmerman was an HOA crime watchman for the Retreat at Twin Lakes Homeowners Association in Sanford, Florida. He says he shot and killed Trayvon Martin after the teenager attacked him. Zimmerman was on a cell phone talking to police when the shooting happened.

This Homeowners Association has already paid Martin’s family more than a million dollars to settle a lawsuit against the HOA. But homeowners there haven’t begun to see the real costs of their gated neighborhood zeal. If Zimmerman is found ‘not guilty’ (as is probable), he’ll have a heck of a lawsuit against his own HOA. They put him at risk. They didn’t support him when he got into trouble while serving his official crime watch duties.

I would not want to be a member of that HOA when the special assessments start arriving.

That’s one HOA that could be going down the drain.

http://tinyurl.com/l2rbpaw

original source:

http://www.clickorlando.com/news/deputies-escort-dismissed-george-zimmerman-juror-from-courthouse/-/1637132/20575140/-/oyd2jo/-/index.html

My Book’s Declining Price

LOL! I have no idea how Amazon used book sellers work. But it’s only fair to note that TSC books apparently feels my book isn’t as saleable as it was a few weeks ago. Initially, TSC said a used copy of my book (in perfect condition) was available for 735 dollars.  That made me laugh, of course. Sadly, they’ve downgraded the price of a used copy of Neighbors At War to just 555 dollars.

Funny. For that price I’d still fly to your city, drive to your home, and personally autograph the book!

Ah yes, I’d also personally feed your dog and water your lawn!

Have a great Father’s Day!

HooRay for Florida!!!

Boy, howdee folks, this here Colorado cowboy never thought he’d see this day. But it looks like another fascist HOA state has just dipped its little toe into the waters of a free man’s land.

Governor Rick Scott has just signed HB-7119 into law! This law isn’t terribly radical. It just requires that all Homeowners Associations (or common area maintenance communities) in the state get registered. They have to report their federal tax I.D. numbers, the number of parcels within their subdivison. Most radical of all? They have to report their mailing and physical addresses. Ah yes, and they have to report their annual revenues and expenses for each association.

Sounds suspiciously like Open Government, doesn’t it?

Guess who viciously opposed this bill and demanded that the governor veto it? Two guesses? OK, three guesses. It’s the HOA board members and the industry that manage the HOA scam. Somehow, financial transparency scares the crap out of these people. Somehow, transparency unravels embezzlement, extortion, kickbacks, and pay-to-play schemes.

There are some heroes who stood up to the many bullies in the HOA industry.

Jan Bergemann. God bless you.

Rep. Michael Larosa. God bless you.

Rep. Debbie Mayfield. God bless you

Sen. Alan Hays. God bless you.

And God bless the American people who are slowly waking up to what has to be one of the most massive financial scams in the history of our country.

Sadly, there’s still such a long way to go to bring freedom to all of our people.

Such a long, long journey.

But it begins with a step.

Getting All Snuggly In Bed with the CAI

Nobody crystallize and focuses an argument better than Arizona’s George Staropoli. Around the country property rights advocates a pondering whether to invite the CAI (Community Associations Institute) into the flock. Staropoli nails it:

Guest blog by George Staropoli

Why do people NOT mention that the attorney speaking out is a CAI member? It does help to put his comments in perspective. (Would saying he’s a conservative help clarify his statements, for instance?) Think in terms of “loyal party member” who knows enough to give the appearance, the illusion, of being fair and helping the other side with his column and website, but is a party stalwart.

His column and website are vehicles for the party line and will never deal with the fundamental defects of the HOA legal scheme, like addressing the Study Committee issues that I raised in my Proposed HOA Study Committee issues of substance. Let’s see if CAI will respond. Hell no! They can’t and won’t, and an opportunity to show what CAI really stands for fails again. (Why is CAI silent on these issues,” can be asked, demanding a response in public.)

I would think that the call for a task force would be ideal grounds for making these issues the platform for NC HOA reforms. Going to the Governor with your own agenda is the right thing to do! That might force the Governor to say, Let’s play kumbaya and set up a Task Force. Now, that’s a power play by advocates!

Asking the other side to join in admits to a lack of power, and reform legislation is a game of political power.

Read more at http://www.pvtgov.org

 

They’re Looking, They’re looking, They’re looking at you!

One of the great privileges of being a longtime news reporter is the great people you get to meet. Often, people we meet and do a few interviews or stories with, turn out to be some of the most important people in the entire world.

In the late 80’s and 90’s I had the privilege to have a few phone calls, a few lunches and a few interviews with a Boulder resident named Phil Zimmerman. No, his name, alone, won’t blow you away at first. But my TV news story on Phil described how he had created PGP, an email and telephonic encryption program in which the acronym meant “Pretty Good Privacy”. It was an such a powerful cryptography program that it couldn’t be broken by those spymasters at the NSA and the CIA. Phil was just a typical Boulder local, a nice guy, a good friend, a fellow who readily and honestly answered all questions.

The U.S Goverment decided to file the most horrendous of criminal charges against Zimmerman, charges of espionage, charges of breaking a new law which prohibited the export of ‘weapons’ to other nations. For three years, Phil Zimmerman was suddenly one of the most heinous criminals on the planet. He was told the criminal charges would be dropped if he created a ‘back door’ in PGP, through which government spies could read all encrypted messages. Phil refused.

Phil laughed at the idea that his cryptography protocol was a weapon. It was just a tool to keep Americans from having their privacy invaded by their own government. After all, the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution mandates that the Government cannot invade the privacy of Americans’ possessions and papers without a duly issued Warrant. One day Phil made the fateful decision to suddenly release PGP to the world, free of charge.

Phil Zimmerman has been repeatedly named one of the most important figures in the history of the Internet. Had we all taken his advice 22 years ago, there would be no NSA/CIA/IRS spying scandal today, because government agencies would never been allowed to tap into our most private, confidential conversations. All of our conversations and communications would have been buried in a foam of unintelligible PGP digital gibberish.

Today, Phil Zimmerman is a giant in the world of the Internet. He also happens to be one of the most prescient human beings in history. He predicted how the NSA, the CIA, the FBI and the alphabet soup of other secretive organizations would use technology to snoop on the smallest, most inconsequential affairs of common Americans. From the beer date with your buddies, to the illicit affair with an old girlfriend, your own government now owns you, lock, stock, body and soul and your minor indiscretions will forever live in it its databases and be forever useful against you should a time come when you need to be intimidated into silence. Big Brother is here, and he has no legal constraints and no morals.

We happen to be living through the most massively intrusive and illegal spying program in the history of America. Every act you do, every person with whom you speak, ever word you write on your computer (even if it’s never posted) is under the control and the eye of the Central Government. Your personal privacy is gone, a thing of the past. This data is being passed around to various government agencies, and shockingly it’s being handed right back down to local government, and that means something as small and as seemingly trivial as your own Homeowners Association. Doubt me, and I’ll give you specific examples. This is not paranoia. It’s the expert analysis of an investigative reporter with four decades of experience. Homicides have been solved because details of federal spying have been made available to local law enforcement. When you hear that an arsonist has been caught just minutes or hours after setting fire to a remote field in California, there’s good reason to believe that illegally gathered information has been passed down from the national to the local level.

Rapidly solving crimes is a good thing, right? I would agree. But the parallel sacrifice must be pondered. The Fourth Amendment reads:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

Sounds pretty clear, doesn’t it? When a high government official muses that it might be legal to kill an American on American soil with a drone strike, does that not sound like a government that’s gone too far? When illegally gathered information is passed on to one political party or another, have we not gone too far? When an HOA board member can call up his buddy in local law enforcement and get a copy of a homeowner’s credit record, Social Security records, income tax returns, banking records and juvenile crime records, is that too far?

On November 13th, 1987, I released a one-hour documentary on the NBC affiliate TV station where I worked. It was called “Somebody’s Listening,” and every single word of that documentary is still valid today. In fact, it’s especially valid because it predicted the exact kind of spying scandal that we’re reading about in today’s news.

That was when I first met Phil Zimmerman. He called me shortly after that program aired and asked to meet for lunch. He told me he was a bit of a privacy nut and that “Somebody’s Listening” was good, but didn’t go far enough. Then he told me about PGP, which he hoped would someday protect the world against government eavesdropping. Sadly, it didn’t. It eventually elevated Phil to one of the most exalted positions in the Silicon Valley, but we’re still waiting for the protections he once hoped for. In the meantime, Big Brother is more evil that anything George Orwell envisioned in his epic “1984”.

Are these powers really the ones you want in the hands of your neighbors?