Editorial: Legislature targets Commie investments in land?
There are many good reasons for Americans to be leery of the
But we're not afraid. After all, the
The commies are certainly quaking at the enthusiasm of lawmakers in little
We've seen foolishness like these bills before. At one time, it was Japanese companies which Americans foolishly feared were stealthily seeking to buy our assets and somehow, in future — however long, no one could tell — turning their land deeds into a threat to the Land of the Free.
Or a lot less free, since private ownership of land is perfectly legal in this country.
The only one of the new bills that seems to make any sense at all is a restriction on foreign ownership of land near military bases and installations. However, the idea that land ownership — which is, after all, a public record — would allow a sneak attack on a
Lawmakers at the State Capitol should leave national security concerns to the experts.
This is another example of legislators as social media trolls, finding some hysterical agitation on the internet that they can exploit with legislation in an election year.
A ban on foreign ownership of land is not in the interests of
Somehow, when it comes to Asians, we see some kind of latter-day Yellow Peril? What idiocy that is.
We doubt that this sort of thing will be found constitutional if ever taken to court. After all, free enterprise means exactly that, unless there is a clear and present danger to the public.
All these kinds of measures do is reinforce in the minds of business owners that
About those bans on Japanese investments, too. How did that work out decades ago? Well, it was not stealth purchases, as things like the Waldorf in
And what happens in the case of a Chinese company buying — as one has recently — a major American producer of pork? In times of international stress, will the Chinese order their American underlings to kill the pigs?



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