The Libertarian Party is the third largest and fastest growing political party in the U.S. The Libertarian party is dedicated to strictly limited government, a pure free market economy, private property rights, civil liberties, personal freedoms with personal responsibilities, and a foreign policy of non-intervention, peace, and free trade. Libertarians of South Central Kansas (LSOCK) are an affiliate of the Libertarian Party of Kansas (http://www.lpks.org/) We meet every Tuesday night (except holidays) from 5:30 to 7:00 pm at Cathy's Westway Cafe located at 1215 W. Pawnee (just west of Seneca Street) in Wichita, Kansas. All who support personal responsibility and individual liberty are invited to attend!
LPKS/LSOCK P.O. Box 2456 Wichita, Kansas 67201
1-800-335-1776

Saturday, April 27, 2013

LPKS Media Coverage From Around The State

Kansas Libertarian Party Elects New Officers


libertarian party logoThe Libertarian Party of Kansas (LPKS) held the state party’s convention, April 20, on the campus of Emporia State University. Party members from around the Sunflower State gathered to discuss business, recent election result trends, legislative initiatives, future strategy, and the accelerating growth of the party, says LPKS chairman Al Terwelp.
Business included electing executive committee officers to two-year terms. The newly elected LPKS officers are: Chairman- Al Terwelp of Overbrook, Vice-Chairman- Rob Hodgkinson, Stilwell;  Treasurer-Michael Ogle, Topeka; Secretary-Mike Kerner, Lenexa; and four Kansas District Coordinators; District 1-Barry Albin, Council Grove; District 2-Robert Garrard, Edgerton; District 3-Jeff Caldwell, Overland Park; and District 4-Steve Rosile, Wichita.
Awards for volunteers were also given. Receiving awards for Most Impactful volunteers (the Seth and Maike Warren Awards) were Earl McIntosh and Sharon DuBois of Topeka.  The Light of Liberty award for most substantial non-member partner in the work of liberty was given to attorney Lucas Thompson also of Topeka.
According to Terwelp, the LPKS   (www.lpks.org) headquartered in Wichita, has experienced seven consecutive years of registered voter growth including approximately 13% growth in the last 18 months.  Additionally, 2012 saw record high Libertarian vote totals, says Terwelp, and many new county groups forming across the state.

from the Hays Post at www.hayspost.com

Friday, April 26, 2013

News From National!

·         CISPA dies in Senate!

CISPA dies in Senate!

The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) died in the Senate yesterday, according to a statement from a representative of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. The bill, which had already passed the House, would have allowed the government to snoop on private emails by granting companies the right to disseminate individuals’ sensitive, private information — like medical records — without their knowledge or consent.
Although CISPA likely won't be passed in its current form, Republicans and Democrats have a bad habit of resurrecting terrible Big Government legislation like this. This is the second year in a row that CISPA has been considered by Congress, and lawmakers have already said they're working on drafting new cybersecurity bills.
The Libertarian Party issued a release condemning CISPA earlier this week, which included this statement from Chairman Geoffrey J. Neale: "The provisions of CISPA are abhorrent and unacceptable in a free society. We must not only trash CISPA; we must repeal the Patriot Act, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), and every other law that violates our Fourth Amendment rights."
Read the rest at LP.org!

Libertarian Party: Move Personal Independence Day from June to January
Every year, federal, state and local governments seize an enormous percentage of the money Americans earn. For several months of every year, taxpayers are effectively working for the government without compensation.
This year, according to the Tax Foundation, Americans must work until April 18, what they call Tax Freedom Day, to pay their taxes before they can finally start working for themselves instead, based on a total federal, state, and local tax burden of $4.22 trillion. If federal borrowing is added in, they point out, Tax Freedom Day would fall on May 9, another 21 days of Americans’ lives devoted to working for the government.
But is it really that soon?
As Nobel laureate economist Milton Friedman famously observed, “It cannot be emphasized too much that the real burden on the economy is what government spends (or mandates others to spend) rather than how much it receives in taxes.” In a 1974 Newsweek article, Friedman suggested giving a name to the day at which we stop working to pay all the expenses of government — total spending, not just current taxation. He dubbed it “Personal Independence Day.”
When total spending by all levels of government is taken into account, according to this estimate, the burden of government will reach $6.16 trillion for 2013.
This means that it won’t be until June 6 before Americans will finally be free to keep their earnings instead of paying for wasteful government spending. Personal Independence Day doesn’t arrive until nearly half the year has passed.
Read the rest at LP.org!

Libertarian Rob Sarvis advocates ending police militarization, drug war in VA gubernatorial campaign
Rob Sarvis
Rob Sarvis,
LP Virginia
Candidate for Governor
The Uncovered Politics blog recently ran a positive profile of Rob Sarvis, nominated by LP Virginia to run in the state's gubernatorial campaign. here's an excerpt:
The Libertarian Party of Virginia nominated Robert C. Sarvis for governor in a special state convention held Sunday afternoon in Waynesboro.
Though not quite a household name, the little-known Libertarian is an impressive candidate by almost any measure.
Raised in Northern Virginia, the 36-year-old Sarvis graduated from nationally-renowned Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, a magnet school in Alexandria. After earning degrees in mathematics from Harvard University and the University of Cambridge, the over-achieving Libertarian candidate worked as a software developer in the Silicon Valley before obtaining a law degree from NYU and a Master’s degree in economics from George Mason University.
While at NYU, Sarvis co-founded the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, a libertarian-leaning law journal.
Sarvis, who lives in Annandale with his wife and two children, is socially liberal and fiscally conservative, favoring same-sex marriage, open borders, and an end to the nation’s War on Drugs. A staunch defender of civil liberties, he opposes the militarization of the nation’s law enforcement agencies and worries about future drone surveillance in the United States and abroad.
An entrepreneur and devoted free-market advocate, he also favors smaller government at all levels — a particularly tough sell in a government-saturated state with more than 322,000 federal employees and retirees, not to mention an additional 515,000 full and part-time state and local government employees.
Read the rest at LP.org!

Libertarian Chris Jenner wins college board election in Illinois, hopes to slash millions in spending
Chris Jenner
Chris Jenner,
McHenry County
College Board
The McHenry County College Board in Illinois has a new Libertarian member who's ready to rein in wasteful spending. Chris Jenner, of Cary, Ill., came in second out of nine candidates, with the top three candidates winning seats on the board. Jenner netted 9,919 votes, or 15 percent, according to the Northwest Herald.
Jenner has been involved with the Illinois LP for more than a decade, and recently concluded his second term on the Cary Grade School Board, where he successfully passed several policies of fiscal restraint that are uncommon in school districts. He hopes to bring that same discipline to the McHenry County College Board.
The college is currently planning a $640 million expansion over several years, including the forthcoming addition of a $42 million health sciences facility and fitness center.
"I guarantee you the community college doesn't need a fitness center," Jenner said. "They don't need any new building. They're not using half of the space that they have now, and they certainly don't need to do any construction."
Read the rest at LP.org!

Kansas Libertarians Ogle and Coen garner impressive vote totals in city elections
On April 2, Libertarian Michael Ogle won an impressive 32 percent of the vote in his race for mayor of Topeka. He based his campaign on performance-based budgeting to eliminate wasteful spending, removal of barriers that make it harder for businesses to be successful, and assurance that property rights would not be infringed upon by eminent domain abuse.
Libertarian Clinton Coen, a 21-year-old student at Wichita State University, won a similarly impressive 46 percent of the vote in his campaign for a place on the Wichita City Council.
Read the rest at LP.org!

Libertarian Party's Facebook page nets more than 300,000 fans
The Libertarian Party's social media efforts reached a new milestone on April 2, when the LP Facebook page netted more than 300,000 total fans for the first time. Since then, the count has increased still further, surpassing 315,000. This is the direct result of the thousands of freedom fighters who volunteered at LP tables, shared the ideas of liberty with their friends and family, ran for office, donated to LP marketing efforts, and dedicated their time, skill, and energy to the cause of liberty.
Read more at the LP Facebook page!


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Libertarian Party Weekly Newsletter


Friends! We heard you!

In the first LPKS Survey you all made it clear that these emails are important to you and that you'd like to see your party have more and better communication.  We heard you and we are putting things in place.

First, we are moving to a more complete email service provider.  With this email provider we can not only have more visually appealing emails, but are empowered with better list management.  With full integration to our website's email signup, our email list will stay current while making it easier for you to invite your friends and family to join the Libertarian Party email list. Please be patient as we test the capabilities of the new email service, and figure out how best to use the new tools at our disposal.

We also have appointed volunteer David Mountain to help assure that our LPKS Page on Facebook remains active with Liberty-related content.  Social media is a great tool to educate Liberty-leaning friends and family, so be sure to "like" our page on Facebook and share the LPKS liberty-related messages that you think might engage your Facebook friends.

We have other things in the works, and as they mature, you'll here about them in upcoming emails.

State Convention News

The Libertarian Party of Kansas State Convention was held on April 20th.  During the meeting, the business of the party is conducted to prepare us for the coming year which we expect to be even busier than past year.

The LPKS has experienced seven consecutive years of registered voter growth including approximately 13% growth in the last 18 months.  Additionally, 2012 saw record high Libertarian vote totals and many new county groups forming across the state.

Business included electing executive committee officers to two-year terms. The newly elected LPKS officers are:
  • Chairman- Al Terwelp of Overbrook
  • Vice-Chairman- Rob Hodgkinson of Stilwell
  • Treasurer-Michael Ogle of Topeka
  • Secretary-Mike Kerner of Lenexa
  • District 1Coordinator - Barry Albin of Council Grove
  • District 2 Coordinator - Robert Garrard of Edgerton
  • District 3 Coordinator - Jeff Caldwell of Overland Park
  • District 4 Coordinator -Steve Rosile of Wichita
Awards for volunteers were also given. Receiving awards for most impactful volunteers (the Seth and Maike Warren Awards) were Earl McIntosh and Sharon DuBois of Topeka and the Light of Liberty award for most substantial non-member partner in the work of liberty was attorney Lucas Thompson also of Topeka.

Members in attendance also voted to amend both the party constitution and by-laws.  Details of those changes are available on the LPKS.org website HERE

Upcoming Events

15
Someday...

7-10pm
Coming Soon
Upcoming Events....

We are working on the best way to share all upcoming LPKS Affiliate Events.   In the coming weeks we'll figure it out.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Webinar: Ludwig von Mises and Austrian Economics, with Prof. Ivan Pongracic
 
Ludwig von Mises was not the founder of the Austrian school of economic thought, but by outlining the school's methodological approach Mises defined the Austrian school and its unique position in mainline economics. In this webinar Professor Ivan Pongracic will discuss Ludwig von Mises' five main contributions to economics.

About the speaker: Ivan Pongracic is Ludwig von Mises Chair in Economics at Hillsdale College and a member of FEE Board of Scholars.  Prior to coming to Hillsdale he taught at Indiana Wesleyan University and George Mason University. He earned his Ph.D. in economics from George Mason University.

Submit your questions to Professor Pongracic in advance at: idearoom@fee.org.
 

When: Wednesday, May 1, 2013 at 2 pm EDT 

WhereYour computer!

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Topeka man fights for open-carry laws

By ANDY MARSO
The Topeka Capital-Journal

from the Sunday issue of the Wichita Eagle
at www.kansas.com
Topeka resident Earl McIntosh believes Kansas residents have the right to carry firearms openly, and he is willing to take on Kansas cities in court to fight for that right.
McIntosh, who served 21 years in the Marine Corps, is the Second Amendment chairman for the Kansas Libertarian Party. He also is party to a lawsuit against Prairie Village, a Johnson County suburb that enacted a local ordinance banning open carry.
To McIntosh, the issue is clear: Open carry should be allowed, and he has the U.S. Constitution, the Kansas Constitution and a recent Kansas Attorney General opinion on his side.
"They openly defy state law," McIntosh said of the open carry bans enacted in Prairie Village, Leawood, Wyandotte County and Lenexa.
McIntosh said the Kansas Libertarians also are involved in litigation with Leawood and Wyandotte County. Lenexa, he said, has expressed a desire to work out differences outside the courts, but the other local governments are too unbending in their opposition, he says.
Prairie Village City Council member Michael Kelly defended the ban in a letter to the Prairie Village Post.
"What would be the purpose of open-carry in Prairie Village?" Kelly wrote. "For sport, perhaps? To keep roving packs of Labradoodles at bay? Unlikely. I presume it would be for personal protection. If personal protection is the motive, then why is open-carry the answer? Especially given that PV has no restriction regarding conceal-carry. If a person is concerned for their safety while they are at the Hen House or strolling along the Tomahawk trail, then conceal-carry allows them to feel a sense of security without needlessly intimidating their neighbors."
McIntosh is certain the law is on his side. Attorney general opinions rendered by Derek Schmidt said that while state law allows municipalities to regulate "the manner" in which residents openly carry loaded firearms on public property, it doesn't allow for total bans on the practice and doesn't allow for any municipal regulation of unloaded firearms.
Attorney general opinions are nonbinding, and attorneys for the League of Kansas Municipalities have disagreed with the interpretation. House Bill 2111, which would have explicitly prohibited local governments from banning open carry, never came up for a vote after clearing committee this year.
Topeka allows open carry. Though Kelly worries about the intimidation factor of knowing who is carrying guns, Topeka resident Allyn Lockner said he is more concerned about not knowing.
At a forum hosted by the Shawnee County delegation Monday, Lockner asked why the state licenses residents to carry concealed weapons.
"Why concealed carry? Why not revealed carry, so I can know who has guns when I go into a room and I can decide whether or not I want to stay?" said Lockner, who was in a motorized wheelchair. "My ability and eligibility for carrying a gun is impossible."
Rep. Ken Corbet, R-Topeka, said the main benefit of concealed carry is that would-be criminals are deterred because they don't know who might be armed and ready to stop them.
Corbet said those with evil intentions find places that ban guns enticing.
"If you noticed, where do most of your problems happen?" Corbet asked the crowd gathered at the Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library. "Soft targets. We're sitting in one now."
Corbet, a gun-rights advocate who owns a hunting preserve, said he isn't against open carry, adding that those who intend to do others harm aren't likely to be open carriers or licensed concealed carriers who have passed a background check.
"I wouldn't be concerned about concealed carry or open carry," Corbet said. "I just wouldn't."
McIntosh voiced similar views, saying that though open carry might cause some to become "alarmed," he has never heard of Kansans carrying a gun on their hip to deliberately intimidate other law-abiding citizens, or of the combination of open carry and emotional discussions becoming combustible in a public place.
"We have no examples of people getting into an argument and shooting someone," McIntosh said.
So McIntosh says he will fight on in the courts.
Motions have been made that question his standing to sue, because he doesn't live in the municipalities in question. But McIntosh said if he is removed from the lawsuits, others will take his place.
"Even if they throw us out, it's not over," McIntosh said. "It's not even close to over."
Information from: The Topeka (Kan.) Capital-Journal,
http://www.cjonline.com
© 2013 Wichita Eagle and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.kansas.com
Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/2013/04/20/v-print/2770186/topeka-man-fights-for-open-carry.html#storylink=cpy

Friday, April 19, 2013

On The Second Amendment, Kansas Points The Way
Posted By Mike Maharrey from www.dailycaller.com

Opponents of federal gun control won a victory in the Senate Wednesday. But without a doubt, Congress will pass some sort of gun-control legislation. And that act will certainly violate the Constitution.
Our founding document does not delegate firearm-regulating power to Congress or the president. No clause in the Constitution empowers the federal government to ban any type of gun or magazine, create a gun registry or implement a national system of background checks, and the Second Amendment actively restricts federal power in this area. It prevents the federal government from infringing on the right of people to keep and bear arms — even in the course of exercising otherwise legitimate federal powers. So although the feds have the power to regulate interstate commerce, they do not have the power to infringe on our Second Amendment rights in the process.
But the federal government long ago abandoned any pretext of constitutional restraint.
That elevates what happened in Kansas this week to the highest level of importance.
On Tuesday, Governor Sam Brownback signed the Second Amendment Protection Act, nullifying a wide range of federal attacks on the right to keep and bear arms in Kansas. Here’s the law’s text:
“Any act, law, treaty, order, rule or regulation of the government of the United States which violates the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States is null, void and unenforceable in the state of Kansas.”
In other words, the law prohibits state and local agents in Kansas from participating in any federal gun-control measures restricting the individual right to keep and bear arms as understood when Kansas became a state in 1861.
The new law also makes it illegal for any federal agent to enforce any law, treaty, order, rule or regulation regarding firearms manufactured, owned and remaining within Kansas’ borders. Violators could face felony charges. State prosecutors will serve federal agents violating the law with a complaint and summons.
In essence, Sam Brownback just told Barack Obama and his federal minions, “Bring it on!”
As Judge Andrew Napolitano recently pointed out, widespread noncompliance can make federal gun-control laws “nearly impossible to enforce.” Mass noncompliance with an unconstitutional federal act stands as both constitutionally sound and effective. In fact, the Northern states’ noncompliance with the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was so effective, South Carolina listed nullification of the act in its Declaration of Causes of Secession.
The new Kansas law stands as the strongest and most sweeping defense of the right to keep and bear arms in the entire country so far.
Note that this bold defense of the Second Amendment did not come from Washington, D.C. — indeed, no bold defense of the Second Amendment ever will.
James Madison envisioned state action as a check on unconstitutional power before the Constitution was even ratified. He laid out the blueprint in Federalist No. 46.
“Should an unwarrantable measure of the federal government be unpopular in particular States, which would seldom fail to be the case, or even a warrantable measure be so, which may sometimes be the case, the means of opposition to it are powerful and at hand. The disquietude of the people; their repugnance and, perhaps refusal to cooperate with officers of the Union, the frowns of the executive magistracy of the State; the embarrassment created by legislative devices, which would often be added on such occasions, would oppose, in any State, very serious impediments; and were the sentiments of several adjoining States happen to be in Union, would present obstructions which the federal government would hardly be willing to encounter.” (Emphasis added)
Madison makes an important point: One state can create issues for the feds. If multiple states refuse to comply with unconstitutional federal actions, they can stop D.C. in its tracks.
Other states need to follow the Sunflower State’s lead.

Mike Maharrey serves as the national communications director for the Tenth Amendment Center. He is also the author of Our Last Hope: Rediscovering the Lost Path to Liberty. You may contact Mike at: michael.maharrey@tenthamendmentcenter.com.

Article printed from The Daily Caller: http://dailycaller.com
URL to article: http://dailycaller.com/2013/04/18/on-the-second-amendment-kansas-points-the-way/

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Libertarian Party: Move Personal Independence Day from June to January

Every year, federal, state and local governments seize an enormous percentage of the money Americans earn. For several months of every year, taxpayers are effectively working for the government without compensation.
This year, according to the Tax Foundation, Americans must work until April 18, what they call Tax Freedom Day, to pay their taxes before they can finally start working for themselves instead, based on a total federal, state, and local tax burden of $4.22 trillion. If federal borrowing is added in, they point out, Tax Freedom Day would fall on May 9, another 21 days of Americans’ lives devoted to working for the government.
But is it really that soon?
As Nobel laureate economist Milton Friedman famously observed, “It cannot be emphasized too much that the real burden on the economy is what government spends (or mandates others to spend) rather than how much it receives in taxes.” In a 1974 Newsweek article, Friedman suggested giving a name to the day at which we stop working to pay all the expenses of government — total spending, not just current taxation. He dubbed it “Personal Independence Day.”
When total spending by all levels of government is taken into account, according to this estimate, the burden of government will reach $6.16 trillion for 2013.
This means that it won’t be until June 6 before Americans’ will finally be free to keep their earnings instead of paying for wasteful government spending. Personal Independence Day doesn’t arrive until nearly half the year has passed.
This enormous government burden is all attributable to Republicans and Democrats, who keep voting to increase the percentage of wealth confiscated year after year — forcing Americans to spend more and more of their lives as indentured servants to Big Government.
The Libertarian Party is the only political party that calls for an immediate end to high taxes, calling in its platform "for the repeal of the income tax, the abolishment of the Internal Revenue Service and all federal programs and services not required under the U.S. Constitution."
“As long as voters continue to cast ballots for Republicans and Democrats, they will continue to expand the number of days before workers can keep their earnings to support their families” said Carla Howell, Libertarian Party executive director. “The Libertarian Party calls for immediately slashing both taxes and government spending — permanently — and returning that money to the workers and taxpayers who earned it.”
“Vote Libertarian and move Personal Independence Day to January,” she said.


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Friday, April 12, 2013

  • Survey Results
  • 2nd Amendment Progress Report
  • Convention Reminder
Nearly 200 people across Kansas weighed in on our first survey. We thank everyone who took time to express their opinion. We closed the survey last week and have started the process of trying to determine what our supporters are telling us. But, more on that in a minute.

Long time readers of these missives may recall that Kansas State Law permits open carry of fire arms anywhere in the state without a special license. State law specifically prohibits any political jurisdiction within Kansas from enacting an outright ban on open carry although they may more regulate the manner of openly carrying a loaded firearm.
In spite of this clear statute on the books, a number of jurisdictions, including Prairie Village and Leawood, have passed ordinances prohibiting open carry. Several months ago, we (the Libertarian Party of Kansas) filed suit against Prairie Village and Leawood to overturn their ordinances.
As filed, the suit had three plaintiffs: LPKS; Libertarian Party Chair, Al Terwelp, who lives in Osage County; and 2nd Amendment chair, Earl McIntosh, who lives in Shawnee County. A few days ago, the judge in the case dismissed LPKS as a plaintiff reasoning that LPKS, as a political party, can’t carry a weapon therefore is not harmed by the ordinance and thus does not have ‘standing’ to file the case.
For now, he has not ruled on the ‘standing’ of the other two plaintiffs.
This is not a set-back in our case and is a normal part of the legal wrangling we must endure. Even if he were to rule Terwelp and McIntosh lack ‘standing’ because they live outside Johnson County, we have an alternate Plan “B”.
Our State Convention is only one week off. It will be April 20 on the campus of Emporia State University. There is no cost to attend. However, if you want a box lunch on Saturday, you must reserve it SOON. With all that is going on in the state, this should be an active meeting with much information available on how to grow our party across Kansas.
We have started the arduous task of evaluating responses to our survey. Over the next several weeks, we will discuss the results. We also hope to have some fairly concrete information available next weekend in Emporia. If you have questions, please ask. Just hit ‘reply’ and let us know what you think. We will respond to as many as we are able.
Of course, one of our major areas of concern is how successfully we are getting our message out. We use these weekly emails. In addition, we send our quarterly publication Free Kansan. We have also started organizing Libertarian groups in many counties across the state.
We were pleased to learn that 87% of respondents receive our weekly emails. Of those who were directed to the survey from our web page, 43% receive these missives. Significantly, nearly everyone who doesn’t, asked to be added to the email list. [Welcome, newcomers to this effort.]
Readership is equally impressive. Less than 6% said they ‘seldom’ or ‘never’ read our publications. Over 75% said they “appreciate that [our e-pubs] keep [them] informed about activity across the state.” That goes up to a whopping 88% of respondents coming from our web page.
One respondent implored us to “Improve the quality of writing. It comes across as amateurish and unprofessional.” Ouch! Are you volunteering?
Not everyone was so critical. “I think the publications are a great tool. However, I don’t think enough people actually see it.” wrote one. “Libertarianism is one of those best kept secrets that needs to gain a wide audience.” added another. “Our current publications are aimed at the believer and do not talk about local libertarian issues.” observed a third.
This was a common thread in the responses to this question. The purpose of our e-publications is to keep Libertarians across the state ‘in the loop’ so we can present a better coordinated story. Outreach, we hope, will be accomplished by our network of groups in counties across the state.
Most respondents know of this effort and a third said they know of a group nearby. Of the others, nearly 40% would like to find a group nearby. In the comments, several made good suggestions on how our county groups can be improved or asked to be directed to a local group. As time permits, we will follow up on all of these requests.
That’s it for now. We look forward to visiting more with all our supporters at the convention next weekend. Don’t forget to reserve your lunch.
Incidentally, our legal challenge in support of the 2nd Amendment is expensive. Even though our attorney is serving Pro Bono (free), there are still filing fees and other expenses. They are adding up.

Please consider supporting this effort financially.