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Israel has been patronizing the Druzes in Syria since at least the Syrian Civil War. Not sure this is the revelation that Jpost makes it out be. It has been interesting to see how this relationship has blossomed though. In many respects it is just an extension of Israel's old doctrine of the peripheries where it sought alliances and friendly relations with minorities in the Middle East and with states that surrounded their hostile neighbors if possible. There is a risk of a 1982-esque repetition by Israel in terms of how it misjudges the strength of its allies and the wisdom of direct intervention into a neighbor in the attempt to restructure the national regime to be more friendly. I'd like to think Netanyahu would have that model in mind as he explores this relationship. But who knows.

"Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s demand for a demilitarized southern Syria and a pledge to protect the Druze communities in the area created an upheaval both on and offline.

Activists and bloggers were torn between those who supported the calls for peace and those who propagated fears of a division of Syria and outside interference.

“Listening is advised,” the Israeli premier warned on Sunday during an IDF combat officer graduation ceremony. “We will not allow the forces of HTS [Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham] or the new Syrian Army to enter the area south of Damascus. We demand a full demilitarization of southern Syria, in the provinces of Quneitra, Daraa, and Suwayda. Likewise, we will not tolerate any threat to the Druze community in southern Syria.”

Netanyahu’s remarks were viewed by many as a first-ever Israeli extension of patronage over the Druze communities in southern Syria.

In December, following the fall of the Assad regime, a meeting of Druze dignitaries from the Druze village of Hader, close to the Israeli Golan Heights, demanded in a viral video to join the Israeli Golan, regarding Israel as the “lesser evil” in comparison to the pro-jihadist militias loyal to the new regime. “We are with those who preserve our dignity... I don’t mind if anyone is taking pictures or recording – we ask to be annexed to the Golan... The fate of Hader is the fate of the surrounding villages, we want to ask to join our kin in the Golan, to be free from injustice and oppression,” one speaker stated, while the others shouted, “We agree, we agree.”

There are two areas inhabited by Druze populations in the southern part of Syria. One is a cluster of a handful of villages right next to the Golan; the other is the major Druze population concentration in the Suwayda area, farther inside Syria.

The two areas have also shown different allegiances throughout the years, with the former more loyal to the Assad regime. The latter has seen continuous protests against Assad’s forces over the past decade, for what they deemed the systemic oppression of the Druze population in the area. Comments on Netanyahu’s remarks have been varied, with many non-Druze expressing their disdain at what they deem a move toward a division of Syria – or the establishment of an Israeli-backed autonomy for the Druze in Southern Syria. In Daraa, a predominantly Sunni city in the south of Syria, videos circulated of protests against Netanyahu’s remarks, showing dozens of activists shouting: “Netanyahu, you pig, Syria is not up for division! Syria is free!”

In the same context, wide criticism was aimed at three cities mentioned by Netanyahu, Quneitra, Daraa, and Sweida, by anti-Israel writers and Syrian regime loyalists. Al-Jazeera anchor Faisal Al-Qasim, of Druze origin himself, commented against this criticism, “What is the fault of southern Syria... that these cities and their people have become a target to attack by some on social media because of Netanyahu’s statements? The honorable people of Quneitra, Daraa, and Suwayda are not responsible for Netanyahu’s statements, so they should not be accused... Who told you that the authentic, patriotic Syrian people of Quneitra, Daraa, and Suwayda will acquiesce to Netanyahu’s demands?” Wazir Said Amon, a Druze sheikh and political activist from Yarka in Israel who is in constant contact with his compatriots in Syria, criticized the remarks, which he deemed “hasty” and “potentially leading to intrigues within Syrian society.”

“Things need to be carefully thought through,” he told The Jerusalem Post. “We are talking about a society that has lived for decades under a tyrannical regime, and these kinds of reckless messages can cause damage.”

Amon continued, “If you looked at Suwayda today, there were demonstrations rejecting Netanyahu’s remarks, and criticism against Suwayda.

“Us Druze in Israel stand with our brothers in Lebanon and Syria and we will help them in every way possible, but our prime minister should be more attentive to feelings and not to speak to Arabs like Westerners do,” Amon commented, adding that he is still positive that there are differences between what is heard on TV and “what is in the hearts.”

Other Druze voices were not as critical and conveyed carefully optimistic messages.

A source in the Druze community in Syria told the Post: “We extend a helping hand to anyone who wants the best for Suwayda and the Syrian south in general.

“Suwayda is suffering from accusations of treason from a wide segment of the rest of the Syrian provinces, and those critics do not care that there are hundreds of foreign nationalities present within the ranks of Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, which took control of the government in Damascus.”

In a similar manner, Tareq Al-Shoufi, commander of the newly formed Military Council in Suwayda, was quoted as saying “We thank everyone who supports the position of the Military Council and contributes to protecting the Druze community and the stability of the region.”

Likewise, Ahsan Farhat, a Syrian Druze finance manager from Suwayda currently living in Canada, said that, from what he hears on the ground, the main issues that concern the people of southern Syria are economic ones. “The people of Suwayda, Daraa, and Quneitra have lived through a difficult economic and political situation,” Farhat told the Post.

“The Druze support Netanyahu’s comments because, for them, it means giving more opportunities to live with dignity and without wars or extremists living around them. The majority are merchants and farmers who are not interested in extremism and suffered under the Assad regime,” he added.

Regarding the voices within Syria who oppose Netanyahu’s remarks, Farhat claimed that “Those are not from the ‘hungry.’”

“The hungry,” he said, “only want the best for their children. Ninety-nine percent of my environment thinks that the political situation needs to be resolved to allow the economy to grow.

“Why not make peace and have economic growth? Why not get rid of terrorists? Julani, although he tries to be charismatic and photogenic, came from a sinister background. He is very extremist, and those simple farmers in southern Syria don’t want Damascus to become the next Kabul.”
https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-843596

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Senseless in Seattle: Benshoof Case

Curious your thoughts for those following the case or watched sentencing hearing on city case or anyone else for that matter. All thoughts welcome!

Mr. Barnes brave and passionate defense of his client today in court puts most courtroom drama to shame. He is deeply wise and educated allowing him to think on his feet and adapt to any abnormal circumstances. I am neither shocked nor surprised at the sentencing and results, nor, do I think, is he. This was a master class is not arguing to the judge in front of you, but for the appellate judge in the future. He laid the appropriate groundwork for the future and I cannot envisage any other council getting anything better out of the obviously biased and compromised judge.

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The Barnes Brief: Friday. February 21, 2025

Schedule

Past

  • Live w/ Duran
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Future

  • Friday at 9ish pm eastern:  Betting w/ Barnes: SportsPicks Subscribers Exclusive AMA
  • Saturday Night at 9 pm eastern: Movie TBD
  • Sunday at 9 pm eastern: Viva & Barnes, Law for the People
  • Tuesday-Thursday February 25 to 27, Bourbon w/ Barnes at 9ish eastern

Book Recommendation: Lords of Poverty detailing the fraudulent way many “aid” NGOs work. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/53331.Lords_of_Poverty

Art of the Day: From one of the meme maker maestros, an elegant image of simply luxuries to end a hard day’s labor – a smooth glass with a big piece of ice draped in the inviting bourbon sharing the space with a lit cigar, against the backdrop of a whiskey cast with the name slipped in Viva/Barnes…very well done!

Wisdom of the Day: “I still remember, 40 years ago, when I was shackled and put in prison…Being an American citizen didn’t mean a thing then.” Fred Korematsu.

The Library: Top 5 Curated Articles of the Week

  1. A new disease: post Covid vaccination syndrome
  2. Language police
  3. Populist left protest
  4. Homeless rise
  5. Left uncovers why young people shifted                                                                                        

*Bonus: King of late night

Top 10 Cases TBD Sunday

  1. SCOTUS: Civil Rights
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  5. Senseless in Seattle: Benshoof Case
  6. 1st Amendment Prosecutions
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*Bonus: High Seas power.

 

Closing Argument: Politicized Punishment

From my sentencing brief in the Senseless in Seattle case:

  • How much is enough? Mr. Benshoof has lost his car, lost his home, lost the right to contact his son, and lost his liberty for months in jail. He faces another trial on related charges. The Prosecution suggests an 81-year prison sentence, and formally now seeks an unprecedented, harsh, punitive six-year prison sentence with de facto termination of parental rights in a 5-year no contact order with his own son – for what?  A father texting his teenage son. The son often sought out the contact, and never complained about the contacts. Instead of the facts of this case, the government focuses on everything but this case, while ignoring the punishment that has already been imposed on the defendant. A just sentence conforming to Constitutional principles calls for a time served sentence, not a sentence longer than what some rapists get.  
  • Indeed, the entire case is predicated on a serious Constitutional offense – punishing a defendant for asserting his fundamental right to parent. A court cannot circumvent the Constitutional and statutory processes for terminating parental rights with “no contact” orders. The government’s sentence, if imposed, raises additional Constitutional questions, including terminating parental rights without due process of law and punishing defendants based on the individual interest of prosecutors and courts because the defendant brought legal complaints against them. 
  • Few fundamental rights are more important than the parental right to contact, control and custody of their minor children. Indeed, “[a] parent's right to control and to have the custody of his children is a fundamental civil right which may not be interfered with without the complete protection of due process safeguards.” In re Dependency of K.N.J., 171 Wash. 2d 568, 574, 257 P.3d 522, 526 (2011) (quoting Halsted v. Sallee, 31 Wash. App. 193, 195, 639 P.2d 877 (1982)). Mr. Benshoof, as a “natural parent, has a fundamental liberty interest in his custody and care of” his son. Id. (quoting In re Custody of C.C.M., 149 Wash.App. 184, 203, 202 P.3d 971 (2009)).  “Procedures used to terminate the relationship between parent and child must meet the requisites of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” Id. at 574 (quoting Lassiter v. Dep't of Soc. Servs., 452 U.S. 18, 24–32 (1981)). Indeed, the Court of Appeals has previously noted that relocation and dependency proceedings are distinguishable from termination proceedings because they do not “sever all contact between the nonresidential parent and child.”  In re Marriage of Wehr, 165 Wash. App. 610, 615, 267 P.3d 1045, 1048 (2011). Here, however, the no-contact order at issue in the case, and the no contact order recommended by the prosecution would sever all contact between Mr. Benshoof and his son: without Due Process or the required statutory termination procedures.
  • None of these steps ever occurred: the prior court order stripped the Defendant of his fundamental rights without conforming to Constitutional or statutory process, and punishing him for asserting that right is as problematic as now seeking to create a new no contact order stripping him of those fundamental rights into the future. The Prosecution seeks to skip right over all of the Due Process protections built into a termination procedure and skip directly to the results of the termination: preventing Mr. Benshoof from seeing or contacting his son ever again. The Prosecution is essentially demanding a constructive termination of the parental relationship. Worse still, they demand this against the wishes of Mr. Benshoof’s son – who has the legal right to choose which parent he wishes to retain custody.
  • The government asks this court to commit the very abuses of power that led to standardizing sentencing in the first place: the need to treat similarly situated people similarly. The government’s punitive sentencing request invites yet another legal error: it demands punishment because the defendant has brought legal action against prosecutors and judges. This demand violates the defendant’s right to petition the government for redress of grievances, a Constitutional policy that prevents people seeking extra-legal remedies. While the government objects to the defendant constantly seeking out the courts for remedy, the government ignores his Constitutional right to do so, including the defendant challenging the service of process of the no-contact order at issue in this case, and challenged its constitutionality and jurisdictional authority as well. No one – until now – has sought to imprison someone for petitioning the court for redress of grievances, a First Amendment protected right. Aside from the Constitutional concerns, the government’s complaints about the defendant’s pro se litigation ignores that this case doesn’t concern those matters and that the defendant had already been punished. Mr. Benshoof has already been penalized with denial of the right to sue without advance court permission, dismissal of his petitions, denial of his complaints and appeals, and financial fines. By contrast, a time served sentence conforms to other comparable cases, Constitutional principles, and just sentencing.
  • It is apparent the legal authorities of the Seattle area dislike Benshoof’s pro se litigant and Covid policy protest past, but that is not the basis for imposing the harshest punishment ever imposed on a middle aged defendant with very little criminal history, who has already lost his ability to seek judicial redress without advance judicial permission, lost his car, lost his residence, and lost custody of his son, when that sentence will undermine confidence in the legal system and not be a truly just sentence. How much is enough? 

 

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The Barnes Brief: Friday, February 14, 2025

Schedule

  • Friday at 9ish pm eastern: Betting w/ Barnes: AMA
  • Saturday Night at 9 pm eastern: Movie TBD
  • Monday at 9 pm eastern: Viva & Barnes, Law for the People

Book Recommendation: Essential Federalist & Anti-Federalist Papers.  https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/110335.The_Essential_Federalist_and_Anti_Federalist_Papers

Art of the Day: As a 12-year-old boy, just a bit removed from the death of my father (who died 12 days from my 12th birthday), I looked for role models, and I found two that baffled some of my schoolmates. Inspired by two books I carried around with me everywhere, the texts I turned to for inspiration were Donald Trump’s Art of the Deal and Robert Kennedy’s To Seek a Newer World. Now, I helped bring the two movements together in RFK Jr. and Trump, completing an extraordinary journey. I never forgot Trump’s pearl of proverbial wisdom to expect the best but also plan for the worst, a brilliant balancing act of mindset I find useful to this day. I also never forgot the quote on the screen, that we must not just ask why things are but also why not change them? A simple question with a revolutionary effect for both men – dream big, and believe those dreams, and you might be surprised just how much those very actions can make them come true.

Wisdom of the Day: “Look at what can be, and ask – why not?” Robert Kennedy.

 

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The Barnes Brief: Friday, February 7, 2025

Schedule

Past

  • What are the Odds w/ Baris:
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  • Barnes Brothers Return:
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Future

  • Friday at 9ish pm eastern: Betting w/ Barnes: Super Bowl Preview
  • Saturday Night at 9 pm eastern: Movie TBD
  • Monday at 9 pm eastern: Viva & Barnes, Law For the People

Book Recommendation: Dallas ’63: The First Deep State Revolt Against the White House. Peter Dale Scott, the lefty writer, originated the term Deep State in 1969 with this text from the fun Forbidden Bookshelf series.https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26833392-dallas-63

Art of the Day: The Cigar Study, a future dream project when the time accompanies the aspiration. The deep, rich leather chairs, the scent of a good cigar, the old cognac bottles on the shelf, and the friendly conversation in the old school style. A kind of high end, stylish man cave connected to the lounges and studies of centuries ago. A perfect venue for a Bourbon w/ Barnes, Pappy’s 23 preferred. The integration of the aesthetic exterior to the thoughtful interior.

Wisdom of the Day: “Tobacco is the plant the converts thoughts into dreams.” Victor Hugo.

 

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