Host Paula Rhoads' opinions that the Colorado Worker's Compensation Division boards are in violation of the 14th Amendment for disenfranchising the public, based on the Hellebust v. Sam Brownback federal case, 42 F.3rd 1331 10th Circuit (Kan), gain traction today.
But first, the Olsen Family 5 of Idaho performed last July during intermission of the Melodrama in Pitkin, Colorado, and gave permission for us to share some of their wonderful music with you. We can't show the melodrama, but you can go to Pitkin and see it.
Then dinosaurs interrupt an architectural tour in Washington Park for some lazy color today.
And Paula launches into her few cents contribution to the Denver University Gideon debate by identifying the federal question jurisdiction issue which, according to her research in American Jurisprudence 2D, Note 981, of Federal Practice, tells us that the state's 11 Amendment "governmental immunity" can be overcome by 14th Amendment complaints of discrimination against the disabled in public service. So there, Judge Morris Hoffman.
Then the Illegal Puppet Government group reviews a song from "Cannibal, the Musical" by Trey Parker to consider whether this bouncy dance tune could be modified to the plural and reworked for the themesong (without that dreadful cowbell solo). "Hang the Bastard" focused on hanging Alferd Packer, would have to become "Hang the Bastards" to fit the Colorado Worker's Compensation Division. But the important point is that the tune stick in your mind, and you begin humming it to yourself and thinking, dreaming, of the day when the Colorado Worker's Compensation Division is fired for being the incompetent police power state agency that Paula says it is. We'll see about that!
But just know that in Hellebust v. Sam Brownback, the 10th Circuit Court did fire the entire Kansas State Board of Agriculture, Sam Brownback and all employees. And also decided the legislature was not a necessary party!
Onward and upward!