No one is held responsible when government agencies make mistakes, but they are quick to go after ordinary Americans who make such errors.
https://archive.is/16QdO
http://www.naturalnews.com/051368_government_hypocrisy_EPA_pollution_selective_enforcement.html
The federal bureaucracy is massive, expensive, all-powerful and completely unaccountable to the very public that funds it. A recent incident involving the Environmental Protection Agency is a classic example: >>9
In recent days, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, who is a life-long government bureaucrat like all top agency heads, told a Senate panel that the agency wasn't responsible for a toxic spill involving millions of gallons of highly tainted water at the Gold Key Mine in Colorado in August. In fact, no one is.
"I'm not saying that the acts of the agency didn't cause the accident," she testified during a series of oversight hearings on the spill, according to the Washington Examiner. "But accidents by their very nature may not have resulted from any negligence whatsoever on the part of anybody."
Do ordinary Americans get a pass like this? Hardly.
Consider these examples involving the EPA:
In May 2014, the agency threatened to fine a Wyoming couple $75,000 a day simply for building a pond on their land that the agency said disrupted a "navigable waterway" – a nearby creek – that had long been diverted for irrigation purposes, and they did this without bothering to listen to their explanation.
"It's very frustrating and these things take an incredible length of time. And every benefit of the doubt goes to the federal government," William Perry Pendley, president of Mountain States Legal Foundation, told Fox News. He was not involved in the case, but he has represented other landowners in similar cases against the EPA.
In January 2012, the EPA began bullying an Idaho couple who had begun building their dream home on a .63-acre tract of land near a lake. The couple neglected to conduct a formal wetlands delineation before they started to move earth and dump gravel.
The result? The EPA threatened to levy more than $38,000 in fines per day if the couple did not return the land to its original state, leaving them with the choice of playing Russian roulette with their savings in federal court trying a case they might not win, or backing down and seeing their dream home – and property – vanish.
In May of this year, the Obama EPA passed a slew of new regulations that critics say have the effect of giving the agency the authority to impose its will against property owners for the smallest "bodies of water" on their land (think mud puddles – literally). Those rules are likely going to be challenged by states, but after Obama and former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid were able to pack the D.C. Circuit - the federal court that hears challenges to regulations – with liberal judges, there is every reason to expect such challenges won't go anywhere.
The cycle (and tyranny) of the EPA's arbitrary punishment will continue, while none of its agents or employees are held accountable for anything they do.
It's no wonder that Americans are flocking to "outsider" candidates for president this cycle.