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    Home » Blog » The 175,000 Pages of Federal Regulations Make a Mockery of the Term ‘Rule of Law’

    The 175,000 Pages of Federal Regulations Make a Mockery of the Term ‘Rule of Law’

    May 15, 2025Updated:May 15, 2025 US News No Comments
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    Americans almost utter the word “rule of rules” as a prayer. What specifically does” the rule of law” think when we claim to live by it?

    The” Code of Federal Regulations” has a total of 48 000 parts that span 175, 000 sites. Each and every one of those laws has complete legal support. Because no one wants to spend their life figuring out 300, 000 federal laws, there are estimated legal penalties for breaking them.

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    The violation of the law is not a defence. We are frequently told about ridiculous police activities, like the cyclist who rode up and down Grand Teton and was later found guilty of a criminal for using a closed road despite being denied that it was off limits by the National Park Service.

    Donald Trump is the first leader to make an effort to stop this nonsense. Last year, he issued an executive order to try to stop this overregulation.

    Trump decried the skill of governmental agencies to create acts.

    Trump notes that “many of these regulatory crimes are’strict duty ‘ offenses, which means that people need not have a criminal emotional state to be found guilty of a crime.” This status quo is ironic and unfair, they say. It permits the professional tree to compose the law in addition to carrying out its execution.

    The curse of modern life is the” strict responsibility” offense. The old men’s crime normal, or” state of mind,” is broken when the state charges you with a violence even though you weren’t aware it was outlawed. Nearly all crimes used to require proof that you had intentions to commit the crime or that you knew the circumstances that led to it. In addition, tens of thousands of governmental violations have assumed that standard, each with legal sanctions.

    Reason.com:

    Trump argued that prosecutors should normally avoid filing legal charges for governmental breaches based on strict duty and concentrate on those cases where the evidence suggests the defendant knowingly violated the law. Trump also gave governmental agencies the instruction to “explicitly describe” conduct that could lead to criminal penalties under new laws and create lists of regulatory violations that are already subject to criminal penalties.

    That next need is a tall order given the enormous size and breadth of governmental regulations. What hope does the typical American have if the organizations that make those restrictions are unable to list all of the offenses that could result in legal penalties?

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    Michael Chase regularly posts about government nonsense on his” Crime-a-Day” X bill, which has 144, 000 fans.

    21 USC §§331, 333, 343 ( g ) &amp, 21 CFR §133.195 ( a ) ( 1 ) make it a federal crime to sell” swiss cheese” without holes in it. https ://t.co/NDhGjygsch— A Crime a Day (@CrimeADay ) December 21, 2024

    Currently at UConn:

    The ingredients in a ham and cheese sandwich are governed by the Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture ( USDA ). Ham is covered by FDA laws, while food falls under USDA rules. Yet, another slice of bread brings an open-faced hamburger under FDA regulations, while another slice of bread does so.

    Trump attempts to obliterate the” tight duty” standard of many federal laws in a section of Trump’s Executive Order that reads” Legal enforcement of legal regulatory acts is disfavored.”

    The most appropriate person to prosecute legal governmental offenses is those who are aware of what is prohibited or required by the regulation but who willingly choose not to comply, causing or putting serious public health at risk.  Prosecutions of judicial regulation offenses should concentrate on those cases in which a putative accused is alleged to have known that his conduct was against the law.

    The approving statutes, the mens rea normal, and the conduct that may be subject to criminal enforcement should be explicitly stated in the regulations that are promulgated by organizations that may be subject to criminal enforcement.

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    The authors of” Over Ruled: The Human Toll of Too Much Law” by Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch and co-author Janie Nitze make a convincing argument that too much laws impedes independence and has unintended effects on us.

    There is no disputing that there isn’t enough law in place.

    As we continue to herald in the Golden Era of America, support PJ Media keep telling the truth about the achievements of the Trump administration. Use the discount code Duel to save 60 % on your membership when you become a PJ Media VIP.

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