Give Me All Your Loving: 15 BDSM Authors You Should Be Reading

BDSM (bondage, discipline, domination, submission, sadism and masochism) elements are often a component of erotic romance novels. Sometimes the themes are used sparingly, or conversely, embraced fully with characters who are immersed in the lifestyle. Either way, BDSM as an erotic subgenre has plenty of followers. Many fans adore solely reading about the lifestyle as a purely literary fantasy, while others like to see their real life sexual predilections reflected on the page. Thankfully there are enough BDSM authors and books on the market to cater to every reader’s diverse needs. Maybe you’re a seasoned veteran who’s read them all, or maybe you’re a newcomer just dipping in your toes. Regardless of whether you read to live it or live to read it, here are 15 BDSM authors we think you should sink your teeth into.

Tymber Dalton has written close to a hundred erotic romance and BDSM novels under multiple pen names. The Reluctant Dom stands out as a fan favorite, but with her extensive catalogue, Tymber has something for everyone.

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Sierra Cartwright is the USA Today best-selling and award winning author of the Bonds Series and the Donovan Dynasty Series. She has written over thirty erotic romance novels.

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Joey Hill is the award winning author of over forty erotic romances. She is known for writing compelling characters that appeal to readers outside the BDSM genre.

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Annabel Joseph is NYT and USA Today best-selling author of dozens of romantic BDSM novels that explore the world of dominance and submission.

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Kallypso Masters is the USA Today best-selling author of emotional, erotic romances that feature HEA’s and always include both kink and BDSM.

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Tabitha McGowan is the author of The Tied Man, a gothic BDSM novel. Her forthcoming work, Unbound is a highly anticipated sequel.

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Kele Moon is the author of multiple erotic romances featuring mafiosos and MMA fighters. Her well received, Eden Series, is a ménage BDSM tale.

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Tiffany Reisz is the beloved author of the Original Sinners Series that is comprised of The Red Years and The White Years. Her new series, The Bourbon Thief, releases this month.

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Anne Rice is world renowned for her Vampire Chronicles, yet under the pseudonym A. N. Roquelaure, she penned The Sleeping Beauty Series, an erotic take on the classic fairy tale.

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Cherise Sinclair lives in the Pacific Northwest and is the author of dozens of erotic novels featuring BDSM. She’s known for her devastating Doms and has even won a National Leather Award.

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Julie Sykes is a USA Today best-selling author who blends romance and suspense into her BDSM novels. She is the author of the extensive Impossible Series.

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Kitty Thomas writes dark erotic fiction with a literary flare. She is the author of Comfort Food, a best-selling Stockholm Syndrome BDSM tale.

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Pepper Winters is the prolific, NYT and USA Today best-selling author of the Indebted Series and the Monsters in the Dark Series. Her latest work, the Dollar Series, releases this month.

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Trisha Wolfe is the author of more than a dozen romance and erotica novels, including the BDSM series Broken Bonds: Visions of Red, which features Shibari or rope bondage.

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Anna Zaires is a NYT best-selling author of dark-erotic romance and sci-fi romance. Her Twist Me Series is a dark and thrilling BDSM kidnapping trilogy.

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If you read this genre and we missed one of your favorites, please add them to the comments section to help those authors connect with readers.
Thank you to SubClub Book Club http://thesubclubbooks.com and Totally Booked http://totallybookedblog.com for helping compile the list, and to all the authors who participated. Now go get cracking!

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Pope Urges Youth In Poland To Welcome Refugees With A 'Merciful Heart'

Pope Francis urged young people on Thursday to welcome migrants and refugees, putting himself in direct contrast with the government of Poland on the second day of his visit there.

Francis addressed more than 600,000 young people gathered in the city of Krakow for World Youth Day, a jamboree that actually lasts six days and has been dubbed the “Catholic Woodstock”.

After watching performances from around the world, he urged them in an address to leave their comfort zones and be ready to embrace those in need.

“A merciful heart is able to be a place of refuge for those who are without a home or have lost their home; a merciful heart is able to build a home and a family for those forced to emigrate; it knows the meaning of tenderness and compassion,” he said.

“A merciful heart opens up to welcome refugees and migrants,” he told the youths gathered in a large field near the city center.

Despite being rooted in Christian values, Poland’s conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party government disagrees with Francis on refugees and opposes mandatory European Union quotas for accepting asylum seekers.

Some of the country’s conservative Church leaders have also been hesitant over migrants, particularly those from Islamic countries, fearing that they will dilute Poland’s Christian identity.

On Thursday morning at the shrine city of Czestochowa, Francis prayed before Poland’s holiest icon – the Black Madonna of Jasna Gora – and said outdoor Mass for a congregation of tens of thousands, thanking Poles for holding on to their faith in difficult times.

Francis praised what he called “the contagious power of a genuine faith, passed down from family to family” in Poland, which is about 98 percent Catholic.

He said their faith had stayed strong in many situations throughout history. Poland is renowned for keep its Catholic flame burning during decades of Communist rule.

As the 79-year-old pope was blessing the altar at the start of the Mass, he tripped on a step but was helped up by aides and did not appear to be hurt. He continued the Mass and read his homily normally. 

Francis suffers from sciatica, a medical condition in which pain sometimes shoots down the leg from the lower back.

The shrine is home to the Black Madonna, a Byzantine icon from sometime between the sixth and ninth centuries and brought to Poland some 600 years ago. The icon is painted on wood and covered with silver and jewels.

The shrine has been a focal point in difficult periods of Polish history. Poles flocked there to pray when martial law was declared by the communist government in the early 1980s.

The late Pope John Paul II, who reigned for nearly three decades until his death in 2005, visited the shrine often during his trips to his homeland and donated the blood-stained white sash he was wearing on May 13, 1981, when he was shot in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican by Turkish gunman Mehmet Ali Agca.

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I'm In A Long-Distance Marriage And It's Probably Better Than Yours

By Victoria Fedden

“It’s never going to work,” everyone said about my long-distance relationship.

Thirteen years ago, I threw myself head first into a committed relationship with a man who lived in San Francisco. I lived in Florida. We were separated by more than three thousand miles, strict work schedules, financial limitations, and expensive, five hour, cross-country flights. But we didn’t let that stop us, regardless of what our friends and family had to say about it.

Neither of us planned to have a long-distance relationship. In fact, until it happened to us, we probably would’ve advised against it. I mean, how can you possibly cultivate an intimate, romantic relationship with someone who isn’t even in your same time zone?

When you love someone, you make it work, and we did for almost three years. That’s when the man of my dreams packed up, moved to Florida, and married me. Suddenly, we weren’t long-distance anymore, and that first year of living in the same city and the same apartment took a lot of getting used to.

We had a few awkward moments and a little frustration but overall, being together every single day felt like a miracle. Because we had been apart so much, we were thrilled to finally be together. But at the same time, I also realized why my husband and I had been so well suited for a long-distance relationship.

Turns out that he and I are both really independent, quirky spirits who prefer a lot of alone time to pursue our creative, spiritual and intellectual goals. The best part of our marriage is that since we are alike in this way, we understand each other’s need for space and are able to give it freely.

Ten years of marriage later, my husband and I often share what could be considered a “long-distance marriage” and I absolutely love the freedom we have. We usually spend several months apart every year, and I realize that for a lot of couples this would seem very strange and unsettling.

For us, that alone time is just what we need and the separation strengthens our bond.

I’ve had possessive boyfriends in the past — guys who called me constantly and placed what I felt were unreasonable demands on my time. I once dated a man who got so mad at me because I wanted to take an overseas vacation with my family that he threatened to break up with me over it.

Another boyfriend huffed and pouted if I spent too much time with my girlfriends. My ex-fiancé even partly blamed his infidelity on the fact that I worked too much (I loved my jobs!) and spent too much time by myself writing and painting instead of partying with him. We were just really different people.

That’s why I knew my husband was so special. He completely accepted who I was, including my need to be by myself. The weekend we met, I was on my way to London and he was on his way to Brazil. We both happened to be traveling alone, which I took as a sign from the Universe that he and I were kindred spirits. I still read the amazing love letters we sent to one another from internet cafés continents apart.

A couple of years into our marriage, I got the opportunity to spend a summer studying at the University of Iowa. It was a dream come true but I’d be away from home for a long time and I’d even have to get an apartment, essentially living in Iowa City for an extended period of time.

My husband couldn’t go with me because he had to work at his job in Florida. I wanted to go more than anything in the whole world but I struggled with the decision because leaving for that long seemed weird and wrong. It made me question our marriage. Was this normal? I wondered. Was it OK? Did it mean that something was wrong with us?

My husband assured me that it was fine, and I was able to go away and spend an entire summer alone writing. I never regretted leaving for a minute, and while I was away he even sent me care packages of homemade cookies.

Our daughter was born in 2010. That was also the same year my husband started working at a fantastic job that required him to work for weeks at a time in New York City. Again, I questioned if this was normal or OK, and again everything turned out just fine. Spending time apart forced us to find creative ways to nurture our relationship. It made us appreciate the time we did spend together so much more.

That baby is now almost six years old and every summer my daughter and I have gone away for extended periods of time. Last summer we were gone from my husband for two and a half months, and while this may be different from the way most typical families operate, we like it.

We want our daughter to travel, see different parts of the world, and interact with diverse groups of people. She can’t have that in the same way if we’re homebodies. Sure, it would be great if my husband’s work allowed for a little more flexibility but when I think about it, I’m not even sure that all three of us being together constantly would be our ideal situation.

The truth is that two moody introverts who really value their independence need a significant amount of alone time to recharge, to feel comfortable in a relationship, and to not feel stifled by the institution of marriage. Marriage isn’t one size fits all, and it shouldn’t be.

The qualities that made my grandparents’ marriage successful aren’t the same as what keeps my best friend together with her husband, or what makes my in-laws’ 40-year relationship stable and secure.

Each couple needs to define their relationship on their own terms, regardless of what is “normal.”

This article originally appeared on YourTango.

More from YourTango:

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Sunday Meal Plan: Get Through The Week With Peach Tea Popsicles And More

As part of HuffPost’s “Reclaim” project, HuffPost Taste will focus the entire month of July on simple ways you can reduce food waste in your own home.

We are entering high summer and that means tomato season is here. It also means lots of basil (think pesto!).

In order to not waste this opportunity to eat our favorite seasonal produce, we’ve filled this week’s meal planning recipes with tomatoes, basil, blueberries and peaches ― because they’re at their peak now, too. It’s time to indulge in summer’s best.

Even if you’re not really a meal planner you’re going to want to participate in this week’s Sunday meal plan. The recipes are that good. Just one note: for the roasted blueberry parfait, prep everything on Sunday, but wait to assemble until you’re ready to eat. Happy cooking, folks!

Take Action Now

Join thousands of Americans calling on Congress to pass Rep. Pingree’s Food Recovery Act.


Sign the petition at Change.org

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Zaki's Review: <i>Jason Bourne</i>

Jason Bourne is back! And, to be honest, I kind of wish he’d stayed away.

Looking back, it’s easy to forget how The Bourne Identity flew under the radar when it first hit theaters in the middle of the summer fourteen years ago. Arriving in June of ’02 after being delayed nearly a year, the Doug Liman-directed adaptation of Robert Ludlum’s bestseller, starring Matt Damon as amnesiac spy Jason Bourne, didn’t have a mountain of hype behind it, but it nonetheless managed to more than triple its budget at the global box office on the strength of good word of mouth.

It was a true, organic hit — one whose audience only grew on home video, and whose impact can be seen in the stylistic path that both the James Bond and Batman franchises followed in its wake. Although Paul Greengrass took over for Liman with 2004’s The Bourne Supremacy, the film did even better than its predecessor, and when the trilogy wrapped in 2007 with The Bourne Ultimatum, not only was it the biggest hit yet for the series, but the storyline involving secret CIA operations and global operatives had come to a reasonable conclusion.

While Damon had previously said he was done with the role, Universal never gave up hope that he’d re-up, going so far as making 2012’s Jeremy Renner starrer The Bourne Legacy, a sideways spin-off that specifically left the door open for the star to return. And so here we are nine years on, and the actor has once more stepped into his signature role for Jason Bourne (lest there be any doubt which character this film is about). However, while his re-teaming with Greengrass should be cause for celebration, it just feels tired and played out in the way so many sequels have this summer.

As this installment begins, Jason Bourne, having learned his true identity and origins at the close of the previous entry — (Ultimatum, that is. As far as this one is concerned, Legacy may as well not exist.) — is living off the grid and making ends meet as a bare-knuckle brawler. Of course, this being a Bourne picture it’s not long before various corrupt corners of the CIA rear their head (this time led by Tommy Lee Jones’ Director Dewey), and Our Man is once again drawn into a global chase that may or may not involve squaring off against another spy of equal skill (spoiler: it does).

With previous writer Gilroy (who wrote all four previous films and directed Legacy) absent, there’s a weird “mad libs” feeling to Jason Bourne, as if screenwriters Greengrass and Christopher Rouse were less concerned with constructing an effective continuation of the storyline as they were with crossing beats off a checklist. As such, it’s hard to feel much of anything for the primary subplot involving the CIA’s collaborating with the designer of a new social media app meant to allow for a greater degree date-mining by the government (shades of last year’s Terminator Genisys).

Even with franchise newbies like Jones (looking more disinterested than usual), Riz Ahmed, and Alicia Vikander adding some variety to the cast, it all still feels like a reheated TV dinner. Meanwhile, Damon comes off like a guest star in his own movie, with little in the way of dialogue, and still playing the same action beats from prior installments. By the way, I’ve long been a defender of Greengrass’ trademark shaky-cam style of capturing action sequences, which rely more on the visceral sensation they provide than any narrative coherency, but Jason Bourne is where I finally get off that train.

There’s an opening chase in Athens that’s reasonably engaging, but by the time we got to the Las Vegas-set climax, I’d mentally checked out. The filming style had transcended “visceral” and landed right smack in “incomprehensible.” This has been a summer of disappointing sequels, but I think Jason Bourne may be more disappointing than most given that after such a long wait for juuuust the right project, this undercooked nothing-burger of a story is what brought Damon in from the cold. In hindsight, it might have been better to maintain The Bourne Retirement. C-

For more movie talk, including our thoughts on Star Trek Beyond, check out the big 100th episode of the MovieFilm Podcast at this link or via the embed below:


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Malawi Girls Take Self Defense Classes To Combat Widespread Sexual Violence

Sexual violence against girls and young women is a common and widely accepted part of life in Malawi. With its self-defense classes for schoolchildren, the charity Ujamaa gives girls the confidence to say no – and the skills to back it up.

DEDZA, Malawi – The girls at Makankhula primary school in Malawi’s Dedza district say they want to be nurses, so that they can take care of people.

But as soon as class starts, fists and fingers start flying towards faces. The girls are learning how to hurt people, so that they can take care of themselves.

“We teach these girls that they don’t have to fight using knives, stones. No, they use the parts of their body that they were born with,” says Alinafe Kambalane, a self-defense teacher working with Kenyan charity Ujamaa. The girls in the class start pumping their knees upwards. “As you can see, the girls are hitting the groins of the assailant, so that they can get away,” says Kambalane.

According to UNICEF, one in five girls in Malawi has experienced some kind of sexual violence. Cultural norms and taboos make it difficult for victims of abuse to report incidents or get the support they need, and even less likely that the perpetrators will face any consequences. With the country’s adults failing to protect its children, Ujamaa wanted to put the power into the children’s hands. In late 2014, the charity started going to schools to teach self-defense and self-awareness classes.

One of the students, Fazani, 14, used to be scared of the older men who followed and called to her on her way to school, but didn’t know what to do. “I told my parents about it, but they would ignore me,” she says.

And Tiamiga, 17, didn’t know that what the boys at school were doing to her was wrong, although it made her feel bad. “A lot of boys used to grope me, but I was afraid of them beating me if I said no,” she says.

Stories like these are common among Malawi’s girls and young women, says Nankali Maksud, head of child protection for UNICEF Malawi. “We know that young girls, as they’re walking to school, are inappropriately touched by men, by the taxi drivers, when they’re in school by teachers” and by their peers, she says.

When it comes to being inappropriately touched, “young girls see that that’s the norm,” and don’t even recognize it as wrong, Maksud says.

In its own survey of 11,460 female pupils, Ujamaa found that, on average, one in five girls reported having been raped. Teachers at Makankhula primary school say that many girls who have been raped stay silent because they usually know the perpetrators and worry about the repercussions of reporting them.

“This is really key because I think a lot of the time, we tend to assume it’s strangers,” says Maksud. “It’s not. It’s uncles, step-fathers, fathers, neighbors,” as well as friends or boyfriends.

The teachers say some students who are abused withdraw into themselves, cutting off close friends and family due to the fear of stigma and a sense of personal shame and blame about the rape. “When girls are abused, they can’t see a future, and can drop out of school or even kill themselves,” says Mary Waya, herself an abuse survivor and now a netball coach for Malawi’s national women’s team and for girls in her charity netball academy.

For many girls, Ujamaa’s self-defense trainers are the only people they feel they can trust with the truth of their abuse. “Most of these shocking stories are how they have been harassed by men, and how they have not talked to anyone about it,” says Kambalane, a former social worker and now one of Ujamaa’s 50 teachers. The youngest girl so far to reveal to Kambalane that she had been raped was 12 years old.

While two-thirds of the children Ujamaa trains are girls, the sessions also help boys combat bullying, violence and pressure from peers and parents to get girlfriends, leave school and marry in their teens.

Many boys, like 17-year-old Godfrey, end up using their Ujamaa skills to protect girls.

“I saw a man trying to rape a woman on the way home from school and I screamed ‘no’ and he ran away,” says Godfrey.

In Kenya, where Ujamaa teaches children in slum areas, a study carried out by Stanford University found that half the boys had seen a man physically threatening or sexually assaulting a girl or woman within six months of the course ending. And around three quarters of those had managed to successfully intervene.

But getting grownups to step in and stop the abuse will take more work, says Ujamaa board member Brendan Ross. “Getting through to [adults] is going to be three times harder,” he says, especially as Malawi’s customs include things like forced child marriage. “I think we know that sexual violence in the Malawian context is a social norm,” says Ross.

Even if the justice system was serious about tackling the problem, “the prevalence of rape and sexual violence is so high that there’s no way that any system could respond to that,” he says.

For now, the children have to challenge abuse on their own. And according to the Stanford University study, some are doing that already. The study showed that half the girls who attended Ujamaa classes reported using their new skills within a year, and in the schools where they were taught, rape rates fell by half.

“These classes are really helpful because, if I come across attackers, I will be able to defend myself,” says Fazani, who now uses the first move taught in the class – saying or shouting “No” – against the men who used to follow her to school. “I now tell people ‘no’ and that I will tell an adult.”

Tiamiga has also used that move to stop the boys who would grope her at school. It took her using another move, the eye poke – twice – to finally get rid of the boys who used to wait for her on the way home from school, often forcing her to skip school altogether.

Now, she never misses school. “[The class] has been really useful and has helped me in my community,” says Tiamiga. “People have really seen the change in me.”

This article originally appeared on Women & Girls Hub. For weekly updates, you can sign up to the Women & Girls Hub email list.

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Seducing the Girls Club

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By Alice Bottaro, Creative Director, DDB Berlin

Women have always been marketing´s prized audience. Today it´s especially the millennial woman – born roughly between 1980 and 2000 – that offers a promising, yet challenging, new land. She has more power, more money and a better education than her predecessors. That’s why, from beer brands to car manufacturers, everyone´s trying to win her over. But while the millennial woman is light-years away from the one-dimensional housewife of the 50s, the way we address her hasn´t evolved at the same pace. Advertisers are not the only ones struggling – just ask Hillary Clinton, who´s still fighting to get her votes.

So how should brands talk to young women in 2016? And what do these women want?

Here are 9 proposals:

  1. Forget the “pink it and shrink it” approach. At its worst, it becomes a source for legal actions (see France´s efforts against the “woman tax”). At its best it offers inspiration for an Ellen DeGeneres sketch. None of this improves your credibility.
  2. Challenge yourself. Even the most progressive agency people might fall into the trap of stereotypes. Usually it´s just out of habit and with no ill intent. We all can be more aware and self-critical, keeping our eyes open.
  3. Celebrate diversity. The millennial woman combines different and sometimes even clashing interests. Brands should embrace this incredibly diverse generation, respecting the fact that these girls don´t look, dream and think all the same – and they don´t want to. So whatever we do, let´s not celebrate a one-sided ideal of perfection. Think about the impact that women like Caitlyn Jenner or the Netflix inmates of OITNB had on the collective imagination. We´re all hungry for more. (Coming back to Hillary: it´s not a coincidence that the two young women speaking at the DNC were Lena Dunham and America Ferrera – both don´t embody traditional beauty standards and are known to voice their own ideas.)
  4. Champion their values. Brands like Nike, Under Armour, Dove and Always are leading the way, with communication strategies based on relevant insights and credible shared values. This is how they manage to create significant campaigns able to influence sales, win heaps of awards and shape society. What´s better than that?
  5. Make them laugh. Millennials aren´t all about bromance: women come with a sense of humour, too. Just have a look at Amy Schumer (and her latest ads for Bud Light).
  6. Go where they are. “Check it before it´s removed” is an online campaign for breast cancer prevention created by DDB Germany on behalf of Pink Ribbon. It generated awareness in a brave and authentic way, by showing women with bare breasts on social media and thus hijacking for a good cause the censorship rules of Instagram and Facebook, who have a traditionally stronger female presence. A clever use of influencers did the rest.
  7. Change perspective. We´re used to great Volkswagen ads, but only few of them are based on female insights. In this campaign from DDB Germany, the ads show handbags turned into labyrinths to promote the Keyless Access. Almost every woman relates to the feeling of hopelessly fishing in her bag for the keys and this made the feature instantly relevant. What´s even more important: it does so in a way that´s sympathetic and not patronizing.
  8. Hire and promote more women. The mentioned campaigns were possible also thanks to the work of talented female creatives. It´s a fact that the imbalance in the world´s creative departments doesn´t help to foster a strong female perspective. If only 11% of creative directors are women, this has an effect on the work that gets presented, approved and produced. The good news is that this is something we can change, if we want to – and we´re starting to see the first results.
  9. Have fun. It´s a great time to be a woman. It should be a great time to advertise to women as well.

 

Amy Schumer for Bud Light

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Yes, Judges Should Invalidate Irrational Legislation: A Reply to Greg Weiner

The American Constitution has been called “the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man.” It was authored by men who had surpassing confidence in the human mind–men who were convinced that people were capable of “establishing good government from reflection and choice,” to the end that self-evident truths about human nature, discernible through reason, would be honored in social life. These same men knew well that the fundamental alternative to a government that is bound by rational principles is “a society under the forms of which the stronger faction can readily unite and oppress the weaker.”

Now comes Professor Greg Weiner, who in a provocative article over at the Library of Law and Liberty argues that the very notion of “rational” legislation is a “myth” and that judges have no business seeking to determine whether assertions of government power over individuals are rationally justified. Weiner contends that “libertarian constitutionalists” who “demand” that the “government be required to justify any restrictions on liberty as reasoned rather than arbitrary” are demanding something that is not only constitutionally unwarranted but actually absurd. He charges that libertarian constitutionalists rely upon “presumptions” that are “rhetorically appealing, intellectually attractive, and politically pernicious.” In Weiner’s view, complaints about, say, occupational licensing regulations that prevent would-be tour guides, florists, hair braiders, and interior designers from earning a living in entirely harmless occupations should be addressed to the same officials who issued those regulations, not to judges.

In what follows, I will explore the three “presumptions” that Weiner finds objectionable, each in their turn. I will then argue that constitutionalists–libertarian and otherwise–should not call for judges to abandon all inquiry into whether legislation is rational rather than arbitrary. Instead, constitutionalists should insist that judges are duty-bound to consistently engage in genuinely impartial, evidence-based rationality review, rather reflexively deferring to the government, as judges routinely at present when applying the so-called “rational-basis test”–the standard of review that is used to evaluate most assertions of government power over Americans’ lives and livelihoods.

“Presumption” 1:

“[A] dual maneuver whereby the buffering mechanism of the political community–whose ‘deliberate sense’ acts through the government rather than the government’s acting, as a foreign agent, on it–vanishes, leaving only the regime and the individual member of the community standing in opposition to one another.”

What Weiner describes as a “maneuver” is an accurate description of the reality confronting any person who is burdened by a governmental enactment that they believe to be unconstitutional and to whose interests the broader “political community” is unresponsive. The history of constitutional law is in substantial part the history of individuals “standing in opposition” to regimes that are indifferent or even hostile to them. Myra Bradwell stood in opposition to the Illinois State Supreme Court when it denied her application for a law license because of her sex. Carrie Buck stood in opposition to the Virginia legislature when the superintendent of the State Colony for Epileptics and Feeble Minded, acting pursuant to the state’s Racial Integrity Act, sought to forcibly sterilize her for eugenics purposes. Susette Kelo stood in opposition to the New London city council when it authorized a private corporation to bulldoze the working-class neighborhood in which she lived for “economic development.” In each case, individual members of the community denied that those had wielded legal power on behalf of the political community had the legal authority to act as they did–and where the will of government officials “stands in opposition to that of the people, declared in the Constitution, the judges ought to be governed by the latter rather than the former.”

There is no contradiction between affirming that members of a political community act through their agents in government, on the one hand, and recognizing that those agents sometimes act in ways that leave individual members of the political community “standing in opposition” to them, on the other. A lone individual may find that the “deliberate sense” of the political community is dead-set against him. Such circumstances are not ideal, and they can be terrifying, even tragic–but they do transpire. In such circumstances, courts offer individuals their last, best hope of legal recourse against unconstitutional government power.

“Presumption” 2:

“[T]he courts are the appropriate forum for the individual and the government to present their claims.”

Weiner states that this presumption is “always contained, in question-begging fashion, in the premise of” arguments that the government be required to justify any restrictions on liberty as reasoned rather than arbitrary. For my part, I have pointed to Article III’s provision for an independent judiciary that is empowered to decide cases “arising under the Constitution.” I have argued that Article III’s reference to “The judicial Power” incorporates a duty of independent judgment–a duty to impartially interpret and give effect to the law of the land without influence from either internal or external will. If indeed the Constitution requires that restrictions on liberty be reasoned rather than arbitrary, it seems obvious that those who are subjected to restrictions that they believe to be arbitrary ought to be able to present their claims in an Article III court.

Does the Constitution require restrictions on liberty to be reasoned rather than arbitrary? Absolutely. The structure of the government established by the Constitution is carefully designed to prevent government officials from exercising power that is not authorized by a prior principle of reason set forth in our written law. Our federal government has no inherent powers, only delegated (and therefore limited) powers–it cannot bind private citizens without pointing to an affirmative power grant in the Constitution. Reasons for action must be given, and not just any reasons will do. Judges are thus bound to evaluate assertions of federal power over individuals to determine whether they are justified by a constitutionally proper reason or rest only on the mere will of officials. As Chief Justice John Marshall put it in McCulloch v. Maryland, judges must determine whether the government’s actions are “really calculated to effect any of the objects intrusted [sic] to the government” (emphasis added).

What of state governments? The Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process of Law Clause, which limits “State” power, indicates that individuals have rights that precede both state and federal power. No one can be “deprived” of “life, liberty, or property” that they do not possess in the first instance. Thus, any time state officials seek to effectuate such deprivations, they seek to take something from people that belongs to them–an unlawful act, unless it is consistent with “due process of law.” The term “due process of law” in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments can be traced to the “law of the land clause” in Magna Carta, which Revolutionary-era lawyers and the authors of the Fourteenth Amendment understood to refer to a normative concept of law. According to this concept, not every government action is binding law–to qualify as law, an act of coercive power has to rest on more than the will of the powerful. It must be justified with reference to the purpose for which legitimate governments are “instituted among men” in the first place, namely, the security of the natural rights of all members of the public. Once again, reasons for action must be given, and not just any reasons will do. Judges are obliged to determine in appropriate cases whether they are dealing with law or “mere act[s] of power”–and to declare the latter void. The alternative would be to allow the politically powerful to put individuals in a condition similar to that absent government–to reestablish (as James Madison put it in Federalist 51) “under another name and a more specious form, force as the measure of right.”

“Presumption” 3:

“Legislation–which in a regime devoted structurally to liberty is the product of a decentralized process of percolating compromises, not a top-down imposition of discrete reason-giving–ought to be, even can be, rational in any sense cognizable by a court.”

Weiner’s description of the legislative process conflates what Friedrich Hayek referred to as a spontaneous order–the paradigmatic example of which is a free market economy–with a constructed order. Government is, as Hayek put it, “a deliberate contrivance,” and deliberate interventions in the spontaneous order of the market are indeed top-down impositions. It is thus correct to speak of legislation as being calculated to achieve particular ends. Statutes and regulations, unlike prices in a free market, do not emerge from uncoordinated human action–they are the product of human design.

Weiner’s claim that judges cannot identify the ends of legislation is demonstrably false. Numerous areas of our constitutional <a href="https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case? jurisprudence rest upon, and make plain the truth of, the proposition that judges, no less than dogs, can tell the difference between being stumbled over and being kicked. So, too, can Weiner, who points to the patently protectionist legislation upheld by the Supreme Court in Williamson v. Lee Optical as an example of “what could rightly be called favoritism” rather than a genuine exercise of the state’s police powers to protect the public from force and fraud. As documents (like contracts) can reflect a single purpose even though those who draft them have a variety of motives, judges can discern the ends of legislation through an objective inquiry into the terms of a statute or regulation, its operation, and its context (including the sequence of events leading to its passage) without reading minds.

What is remarkable–indeed, scandalous–is that effective rationality review often does not take place under the “rational-basis test,” the default standard of review in constitutional cases. Weiner’s discussion is limited to cases involving economic liberty, in which reflexive judicial deference to the government under the rational-basis test is perhaps most pronounced. But consider a case that the Supreme Court recently (and lamentably) declined to review (over a vigorous and persuasive dissent from cert denial by Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Clarence Thomas): Storman’s, Inc. v. Wiesman, involving Washington regulations that require pharmacists and pharmacies to dispense lawfully prescribed emergency contraceptives even if they have a sincerely held religious belief that doing so terminates a human life. The regulations allowed pharmacies not to stock or to deliver drugs and to refer customers to other nearby pharmacies for a host of business, economic, and convenience reasons–but not for reasons of conscience. Brushing aside evidence that the state deliberately singled out religious conduct, a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals panel treated the regulations as “neutral” (concerning religion) and “generally applicable” and thus applied rational-basis review rather than heightened scrutiny. The panel upheld the regulations on the ground that the government had a legitimate interest in “ensuring that its citizens have safe and timely access to their lawful and lawfully prescribed medications” and that the challengers had failed to “negat[e] every conceivable basis which might support [the rules].” This despite the fact that the government stipulated that “facilitated referrals do not pose a threat to timely access to lawfully prescribed medications.”

It is routine for judges applying the rational-basis test to require litigants to negate “every conceivable basis” that might support the government’s actions–that requirement comes from a leading rational-basis decision by the highest court in the nation. It is also profoundly irrational–and unconstitutional. It is irrational because it is logically impossible to negate a potentially infinite set of “conceivable” claims for which there is no evidentiary support. It is unconstitutional, insofar as it sees judges abdicating their duty to exercise independent judgment and denying litigants due process of law (which entails, among other things, a decision-making process that is impartial, grounded in credible evidence, and governed by rational principles of law.)

I applaud Weiner for recognizing that the rational-basis test deployed in Lee Optical and in other cases involving protectionist legislation operates as a means of “forc[ing] the issue of favoritism back into a legislative realm,” rather than as a meaningful test of whether a “rationale for a law is adequate.” But his proposal that judges should withdraw entirely from the field of rationality would have grave consequences for our already desiccated constitutional order. The Constitution does forbid government officials from depriving any individual of what rightfully belongs to them on the basis of mere will. Those deprivations do destroy homes, livelihoods, and even lives. The Constitution does require judges to distinguish between proper and improper governmental ends in cases. And judges are capable of, and duty-bound to, impartially pursue the truth concerning the lawfulness of the government’s true ends and means, without deference to government officials’ beliefs, desires, or unsupported factual assertions. If we are to vindicate the Founders’ confidence in reason and enjoy the blessings of liberty that they sought to secure, such judicial engagement is essential.

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Odor Free Litter Box

odor-free-litter-boxOwning a pet has many advantages, and if you happen to love cats, then you will certainly know that cats waft in and out of the house at their own whim and fancy, without paying any regard to you or your calls for their attention. They are more or less your master, and you, their slave. One advantage that cats have over dogs is they cover up their poop in the litter box, but more often than not there is still some unwanted smell that lingers around. Perhaps any ordinary litter box is not good enough if you want your home to be spic and span, as the $29.95 Odor Free Litter Box gets the job done without being offensive to your nose.

This litter box system gets rid of odors naturally, and it will not mask odors. Rather, this system makes use of a replaceable pad that is filled with zeolite, which is an inert organic mineral in order to absorb moisture, bacteria, and ammonia-infused odors that are associated with litter box waste. The pad will keep a home free of unpleasant aromas for up to 30 days with ordinary litter box use and maintenance. All that you need to do is to adhere the pad to the bottom the box, place it in the included grate over it, and fill it with 3″ of your preferred clay or sand clumping litter, and your kitty is good to go.
[ Odor Free Litter Box copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

PlayStation VR play area requirements detailed, seated play recommended

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 14:  Attendees participate in VR virtual reality demos during E3 Electronic Entertainment Expo 2016 at Los Angeles Convention Center on June 14, 2016 in Los Angeles, California.  (Photo by Daniel Boczarski/WireImage) PlaySTation VR is set to arrive on October 13, but a new official pamphlet being distributed by the company (via Polygon) sheds some light on what players can expect in terms of space requirements and gameplay style. The document shows that the idea space is about 6′ x 10′ big, with the player seated roughly in the middle, facing the PlayStation Camera at the long end. HTC… Read More