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Welcome to Hotel Souter? (semi-update)
The Eagle Tribune ^ | Monday, July 25, 2005 | By Beverley Wang

Posted on 07/25/2005 4:59:36 PM PDT by IYAAYAS

Welcome to Hotel Souter? Eminent domain ruling triggers backlash

By Beverley Wang Associated Press

Near the foot of an unmarked, dead-end dirt road sits a humble, mud-colored farmhouse. A sign on a mailbox jutting from a tilted post spells "SOUTER."

Through the years, U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter has stuck to his family's home in the central New Hampshire town of Weare, population 8,500. A bachelor, the 65-year-old Souter has lived for decades on the 8-acre property, undisturbed among neighbors whose yards are strewn with rusting farm equipment and old pickup trucks.

The house, more than 200 years old, is one of the few remnants of the original East Weare village, which was seized 45 years ago to make way for a dam.

Today, a California man angered by Souter's support of a recent court decision favoring government power to seize private property by eminent domain wants to seize Souter's farmhouse to build a luxury hotel in this rural area about 15 miles from Concord.

"We would act just as these cities have been acting in seizing properties. We would give Souter the same sort of deal that the cities have been giving them," said Logan Darrow Clements, of Los Angeles.

Last month, Souter was one of five justices who sided with the city of New London, Conn., in a dispute with homeowners who protested the city's seizure of property for a private hotel and convention center, office space and condominiums next to Pfizer Inc.'s new research headquarters.

The city argued tax revenues and new jobs would benefit the public. The Pfizer complex was built, but seven homeowners challenged the rest of the development in court.

The Supreme Court's February ruling against them prompted many states to examine their eminent domain laws. Some considered legislation to limit or block local governments' power to seize private property for commercial development.

Next month, New Hampshire senators will convene a task force to scrutinize eminent domain laws. A recent University of New Hampshire poll reported 93 percent of state residents oppose the taking of private land through eminent domain for private development.

Clements, 36, has never been to Weare but is a member of the Free State Project, the libertarian movement that chose "Live Free or Die" New Hampshire as its promised land and wants to move 20,000 followers here.

He knows his hotel plan is hard to take seriously.

"That's sort of the story of my life: Nobody takes me seriously until I do something," the 1992 University of Rochester business school graduate said. "We will be taken seriously when we make a formal presentation to the powers that be in Weare," he said, adding that he is talking to several development consultants.

He said his mission, like his long-shot bid for governor of California in 2003, is rooted in his passion for objectivism, a philosophy of free-will capitalism embodied in Ayn Rand's 1957 novel, "Atlas Shrugged."

"The reason I ran was to express the ideas of objectivist political philosophy, which is we should have a voluntary society where people interact with each other through trade, not through the initiation of force," Clements said. He got 274 votes.

After college, Clements ran an online, venture capital marketplace and started a magazine on the subject. Alongside updates about his "Lost Liberty Hotel" proposal, Clements' Web site features pitches for "The Lexington League," a reality TV show that would expose "virtually untold stories of government abuse around the world."

Souter has declined to comment on the matter. Clements said he's heard from thousands of people nationwide interested in investing or staying at the hotel. Town Clerk Evelyn Connor has had to return checks from people wishing to donate to a hotel construction fund. Clements' announcement also inspired a copycat proposal from townspeople who want to turn Souter's land into a park commemorating the U.S. Constitution.

Connor said it's all a little much for a town where the biggest excitement of the year usually is the Weare Patriotic Celebration, which this year featured an American Legion chicken barbecue, carnival rides and a men-versus-women softball game.

"We just got a Dunkin' Donuts," she said.

Other town officials agree.

"It was the general consensus that we were not interested in taking anyone's property," said Laura Buono, head of Weare's Board of Selectmen. She said board members are willing to review any formal proposal Clements submits.

But in a state where people fiercely protect their right to local control over land and government, many said the nuisance is Souter's just deserts.

"People around here don't even have retirement funds. It's their land," said Charles Meany, Weare's code enforcement officer. "It's something you really don't want to screw with around here."

He thinks the hotel idea is "ludicrous" and doubts whether Clements will be able to satisfy requirements to prove the economic necessity of building a hotel on Souter's land.

But Clements has his share of local supporters, including David Archambault, who runs a go-cart track near Souter's home.

"What this is doing I think is wonderful, because he's getting a point across to all these people that they're getting too much power," Archambault said.

Robin Ilsley, who makes syrup on a family farm about two miles from Souter's place, thought the justice brought the controversy on himself.

"It was a pretty stupid ruling," she said.

Even her mother, who watched Souter grow up, is unsympathetic.

"I like David very much, but I don't like his ideas," said Winnie Ilsley, 77, who runs a doll museum at her farm. "I just don't think it's fair," she said of the New London decision.

And the hotel?

"Let'em build — but I don't think it's going to happen," she said.

Souter has defenders, like Betty Straw, his sixth-grade teacher.

"I think it's absolutely ridiculous," she said of the hotel. "They're just doing it for spite."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; US: New Hampshire
KEYWORDS: closethomosouter; confirmedbachelor; eminentdomain; kelo; lostlibertyhotel; souter

1 posted on 07/25/2005 4:59:36 PM PDT by IYAAYAS
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To: IYAAYAS
"It was a pretty stupid ruling," she said.

amen

2 posted on 07/25/2005 5:01:43 PM PDT by MinorityRepublican
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To: IYAAYAS

Souter has defenders, like Betty Straw, his sixth-grade teacher.

"I think it's absolutely ridiculous," she said of the hotel. "They're just doing it for spite."


So why did souter do it? Greed and power.


3 posted on 07/25/2005 5:09:23 PM PDT by pipecorp (Let's have a CRUSADE! , the muslim half has already started. ps. I need more cowbell!)
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To: IYAAYAS

Souter has defenders, like Betty Straw, his sixth-grade teacher.
"I think it's absolutely ridiculous," she said of the hotel. "They're just doing it for spite."

A leftist teacher supporting her Marxist pupil. How surprising.


4 posted on 07/25/2005 5:17:22 PM PDT by sergeantdave (Marxism has not only failed to promote human freedom, it has failed to produce food)
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To: IYAAYAS
Souter was probably a strange child and now he's a weird man.
God, please save this nation from the David Souters!
5 posted on 07/25/2005 5:22:37 PM PDT by RightWinger
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To: IYAAYAS
"A recent University of New Hampshire poll reported 93 percent of state residents oppose the taking of private land through eminent domain for private development"

...but, on the other hand, they might make one little exception.

"he's getting a point across to all these people that they're getting too much power"

Yes, and of even greater importance: Government officials must live by the same laws that they impose upon the rest of us.

This could be a hard lesson. A very hard lesson. A very, very, very hard lesson.

6 posted on 07/25/2005 5:22:46 PM PDT by Savage Beast (Love is the ultimate aphrodesiac!)
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To: IYAAYAS
And a big

SURPRISE!

7 posted on 07/25/2005 5:24:12 PM PDT by Savage Beast (Love is the ultimate aphrodesiac!)
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To: IYAAYAS

Once again the media either simply gets it wrong or is miserably late in reporting the news. The Weare Selectmen met June 28, 2005 to address the request. It was turned down 5-0. They also issued a statement indicating the eminent domain would not be utilized to make a political point. To that, they stated the issue would not be revisited.


8 posted on 07/25/2005 6:15:21 PM PDT by politicalwit (Due to the shortage of virgins, all suicide bombings have been cancelled.)
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To: IYAAYAS

Rulings like the emminent domain ruling are exactly why the founders established RKBA.

I'm not calling for armed insurrection, but that is the sort of action it was intended to address. Government oppression that completely ignores the constitution and the bill of rights.


9 posted on 07/25/2005 7:16:33 PM PDT by festus (The constitution may be flawed but its a whole lot better than what we have now.)
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To: pipecorp

"I think it's absolutely ridiculous," she said of the hotel. "They're just doing it for spite."

Yeah. Souter is no mere citizen. Those spiteful peons need to learn their place.


10 posted on 07/26/2005 2:34:34 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (The High Priest of Baby Killers. People don't call Schumer 'Upchuck' for nothing.)
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To: MinorityRepublican

A Hotel is an interesting idea but I think it will have a tough time getting approved. However maybe an executive conference center would be easier to justify. Construction (and investment)would be more limited. The isolated pastoral nature of Weare NH would be preserved. Tax base would increase. Souter's house could be turned into the kitchen and dining hall where all kinds of good things could be cooked up. Maybe call it the Souter Yourself Executive Conference Center.


11 posted on 07/29/2005 9:48:31 AM PDT by Les_Miserables
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To: politicalwit

The citizens of Weare are orgainizing to replace the 5 selectmen.


12 posted on 07/29/2005 9:55:42 AM PDT by griswold3 (Ken Blackwell, Ohio Governor in 2006)
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