City officials in the Detroit suburb of Oak Park apparently have so little to do that they’re taking the time to prosecute a woman for the dastardly crime of growing vegetables in some well-tended areas of her front yard.
This is a perfect companion to what I wrote Thursday about the need for “legal fences” that keep other people from telling us what to do on our own property. I was thinking more of free cities — and of one group not being able to tell another what to do — but it comes down to the same issues: choice and property rights.
In the Detroit case, Julie Bass faces 93 days in jail for having a small vegetable garden in her yard, because the city says she’s in violation of the city regulation that says front yards must have “suitable” vegetation. Bizarrely, the city has taken the position that this word only means “common,” so Bass is only allowed to have grass, trees and flowers that are common in other yards. (For the record, none of the dictionaries I checked agreed with the city.)
Atlanta police arrest wrong Teresa, but keep her locked up for 53 days
Steve Jobs goes out as iconoclastic visionary many of us long to be
Donald Trump is no conservative; he’s an immoral, narcissistic liar
As nightmares plague my friends, I’m grateful mine have subsided
Financial crisis seems serious when it hits your own neighbors
Ignore the happy face it presents: Coercive state points a gun at you
Obama administration wants to choose skin color of your neighbors
Bernanke’s ‘helicopter drop’ gave $1.2 trillion to Wall Street banks
Bill in Congress would force TSA screeners to quit impersonating cops