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The Federalism Debate [And 'States Rights']
Cato Institue ^ | 10/28/04 | Rodger Pilon

Posted on 10/28/2004 6:03:10 PM PDT by tpaine

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To: KrisKrinkle
More to the point of this thread:

Can a legislature vote to give the federal government the power to do something that they themselves do have the power to do?
Can the people vote to give the federal government the power to do something that they themselves do have the power to do?

Yes.. -- As long as the powers do not violate the US Constitution.
-- And, we cannot Amend the Constitution in ways that are repugnant to its basic principles. [This is why the income tax is seen as unconstitutional, as was prohibition.]

41 posted on 10/28/2004 9:42:49 PM PDT by tpaine (No man has a natural right to commit aggression on the equal rights of another. - T. Jefferson)
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To: tpaine

bttt


42 posted on 10/28/2004 9:43:12 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: stainlessbanner
Now what does that have to do with the South's rejection of the DOI?

The 3/5 clause was a compromise to accomplish the Constitution with the hope that eventually slavery would die.

That is why it was banned in the NorthWest Ordinence and importation of slaves was also banned.

The South's view changed when cotten came into play, and slavery went from an evil that had to be eventually removed to a positive good.

This was admitted by Stevens himself.

But not to be tedious in enumerating the numerous changes for the better, allow me to allude to one other -- though last, not least. The new constitution has put at rest, forever, all the agitating questions relating to our peculiar institution -- African slavery as it exists amongst us -- the proper status of the negro in our form of civilization. This was the immediate cause of the late rupture and present revolution. Jefferson in his forecast, had anticipated this, as the "rock upon which the old Union would split." He was right. What was conjecture with him, is now a realized fact. But whether he fully comprehended the great truth upon which that rock stood and stands, may be doubted. The prevailing ideas entertained by him and most of the leading statesmen at the time of the formation of the old constitution, were that the enslavement of the African was in violation of the laws of nature; that it was wrong in principle, socially, morally, and politically. It was an evil they knew not well how to deal with, but the general opinion of the men of that day was that, somehow or other in the order of Providence, the institution would be evanescent and pass away. This idea, though not incorporated in the constitution, was the prevailing idea at that time.(emphasis added)

By the way, with that statement, Stephens went against the Dred Scott decision, in which Taney stated that the Founding Father's never intended for slavery to be ended.

43 posted on 10/28/2004 9:50:48 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: Eastbound
I do not agree Roe vs Wade is a State issue if life is involved." Strictly speaking, homicide is a state issue, isn't it?

No, because it is denying someone of their life, hence it takes on a Federal aspect.

The punishments may differ, but the taking of an innocent life must be viewed as a crime.

The States cannot legalize it.

44 posted on 10/28/2004 9:53:23 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: fortheDeclaration
If your claim the South rejected the DOI by virtue of slavery, the same must apply to the Northern states. You can't separate the two.

If you produce some legislation or documentation that the South formally denounced the DOI, I'll stand down. Until then, I consider your claim inadmissible.

45 posted on 10/28/2004 9:57:59 PM PDT by stainlessbanner (For Liberty!)
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To: stainlessbanner
If your claim the South rejected the DOI by virtue of slavery, the same must apply to the Northern states. You can't separate the two. If you produce some legislation or documentation that the South formally denounced the DOI, I'll stand down. Until then, I consider your claim inadmissible.

LOL!

You have the speech given by the Vice President stating exactly that!

What part of the speech did you not understand?

The Pre-Civil War South rejected the principles of the DOI (as noted in Stephens speech)

The DOI was rejected because slavery in the Pre Civil War South was seen as a positive not a negative.

As Stephens himself notes regarding the Declaration generation, they had hoped to see the eventual end of slavery, hence, they made compromises regarding the Constitution.

The Pre Civil War South rejected the notion that all men were created equal and thus were of a different mind then the Southerners of Jefferson's day.

Facts are stubborn things.

46 posted on 10/28/2004 10:26:57 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: fortheDeclaration
fortheDeclaration:

"I do not agree Roe vs Wade is a State issue if life is involved."

______________________________________


Strictly speaking, homicide is a state issue, isn't it?
40 Eastbound

______________________________________


No, because it is denying someone of their life, hence it takes on a Federal aspect.

The punishments may differ, but the taking of an innocent life must be viewed as a crime.
The States cannot legalize it.
44 ftD


______________________________________


Murder is tried in State courts, & guilt is decided by juries, not legislative decrees declaring that abortion is murder.

You say, "IF life is involved". -- Exactly the point. A fertilized human egg is alive. It is not yet a person, a 'life'.
Later in pregnancy the State becomes involved in protecting that soon to be persons life. -- But not at conception.
That is the point of Roe v Wade, as I'm sure you know. It's a State issue.
47 posted on 10/28/2004 10:31:40 PM PDT by tpaine (No man has a natural right to commit aggression on the equal rights of another. - T. Jefferson)
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To: fortheDeclaration
"The States cannot legalize it."

But the fedguv can? Didn't Roe v Wade over-ride state's rights to ban abortion except in some instances? Seems to me that the states were handling it much better than the fedguv is. Doesn't abortion on demand, a decision of the USSC, offer far less protection to life than what the states offered?

Maybe I'm mis-understanding you. I still think Roe was a case where the fedguv over-stepped its enumerated powers.

48 posted on 10/28/2004 10:42:54 PM PDT by Eastbound ("Neither a Scrooge nor a Patsy Be")
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To: fortheDeclaration
The DOI was rejected because slavery in the Pre Civil War South was seen as a positive not a negative.

Doesn't even make sense.

49 posted on 10/28/2004 10:53:12 PM PDT by stainlessbanner (For Liberty!)
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To: stainlessbanner; fortheDeclaration

He got his facts straight. By the 1830's the South was in deep denial of the founding principles.


50 posted on 10/28/2004 10:58:13 PM PDT by capitan_refugio
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To: tpaine

They are not "conservatives" in the modern political sense of the term.


51 posted on 10/28/2004 11:01:58 PM PDT by capitan_refugio
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To: capitan_refugio
--- day in, day out, self described conservatives on this site claim they cannot understand these basic principles about our liberties.
Why is that?

They are not "conservatives" in the modern political sense of the term.
51 capitan_refugio

Bears repeating.

52 posted on 10/28/2004 11:07:03 PM PDT by tpaine (No man has a natural right to commit aggression on the equal rights of another. - T. Jefferson)
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To: stainlessbanner
The DOI was rejected because slavery in the Pre Civil War South was seen as a positive not a negative. Doesn't even make sense.

The Colonial Southerners did not doubt that all men were created equal in the sense of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, that is why they saw slavery as an evil

Remember Jefferson wanted to accuse the King of bringing slavery to the colonies?

Slavery thus, was never seen as contradicting the Declaration.

The Pre-Civil War South did reject the premise of all men were created equal, hence slavery became a positive good to be fought for.

Make sense now?

53 posted on 10/28/2004 11:45:28 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: capitan_refugio
Thank you.

Here is the father of anti-Declaration movement, Calhoun.

http://www.loc.gov/loc/madison/jaffa-paper.html

We have already seen Calhoun, in his speech on the Oregon bill, ridiculing the Declaration of Independence for saying that al l men are created equal. All men are not created. With the exception of Adam and Eve, all human beings come into the world as infants, in a state of entire dependency. Yet Calhoun himself speaks of "man" properly occupying a place "in the scale of beings much above the brute creation." He is then at one with Jefferson in believing that "creation" is represented by a "scale of being." And if "man" as such can occupy that elevated place on that scale, it must be also be the case in principle that "all men" can occupy it. Since the Declaration speaks both of "barbarous ages" and " merciless savages" it is clear that all men do not occupy in fact the place that all occupy in principle. But Calhoun will deny that the equality of man on the scale of creation has the significance assigned to it by Jefferson.

The natural equality proclaimed in the Declaration has as its corollary that legitimate civil society is a voluntary association. The Massachusetts Bill of Rights provides us with this gloss on the doctrine of the Revolution:

The body-politic is formed by a voluntary association of individuals; it is a social compact by which the whole people covenants with each citizen and each citizen with the whole people that all shall be governed by certain laws for the common good.

The reason that the body-politic results from the voluntary agreement of individuals is that

All men are born free and equal, and have certain natural, essential, and unalienable rights; among which may be reckoned the right of enjoying and defending their lives and liberties; that of acquiring, possessing, and protecting property; in fine, that of seeking and obtaining safety and happiness.

Human beings, according to the doctrine of the Revolution, are equally possessed of natural rights. Because of this equality, it is their voluntary agreement that makes them members of a body politic. This voluntary agreement is however an agreement in accordance with reason. Human beings can act voluntarily because they can see--that is, understand--the difference between a body politic within which personal liberty is secure, and property is safe, and a despotic one, in which these conditions are not met, and in which therefore safety and happiness are not possible. Free civil society is in accordance with human nature, despotism is not. Safety and happiness are rational, not random concepts, natural rights are not merely the conditions upon which men enter civil society. They are also the guidelines of constitutionalism--the ever present principles by which the distinction between free and despotic government is preserved. According to Calhoun, however, neither our membership in society, nor society's subjection to government, involves rationality or voluntary action in the slightest degree. In one of the most revealing passages of the Disquisition, he writes that government "is not a matter of choice ... Like breathing, it is not permitted to depend upon our volition .

"Calhoun's denial of natural equality is pro tanto and ipso facto a denial of man's nature as a free and reasonable being. In this, of course, he anticipates the metaphysical determinism of contemporary behavioral science....

When in 1861 eleven southern States attempted to secede from the Union, they did so in obedience to a legal theory that was derived from Calhoun. For the right of secession was nothing more than the sanction for the concurrent majoritarianism they had learned from Calhoun.

That they were exercising this "right" for the sake of a policy of extending chattel slavery--the ultimate denial of minority rights--did not strike them as a paradox, much less as a contradiction. This was because they had been instructed that "the right of a minor party" was never a matter of ratiocination.

For such knowledge there was always a "better guide than reason. But the "better guide than reason" turned out--not surprisingly, given Calhoun's Darwinian presuppositions--to be war.

Calhoun's 1850 prophecy of the coming war in one of his last great Senate speeches is equally remarkable for its clarity of vision and for its blindness. He knew that the south would attempt to withdraw from the Union, if the future of slavery were seriously in jeopardy. And he knew t hat the Union would fight to preserve itself. But he did not see that the Union had an interest in human freedom that was different from its interests in commerce, manufactures, or land. He did not see this because, although a patriot . himself, there was no room in his theory of the human soul for love of country, any more than for love of justice. But then according to his account of the soul in the Disquisition, neither was there room in that same theory for the political science of John C. Calhoun.

54 posted on 10/28/2004 11:52:44 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: tpaine
Murder is tried in State courts, & guilt is decided by juries, not legislative decrees declaring that abortion is murder. You say, "IF life is involved". -- Exactly the point. A fertilized human egg is alive. It is not yet a person, a 'life'. Later in pregnancy the State becomes involved in protecting that soon to be persons life. -- But not at conception. That is the point of Roe v Wade, as I'm sure you know. It's a State issue.

The point I was making was that if it could be proven that life began at conception then the Federal gov't would have an obligation to defend it.

What they did in Roe vs Wade was deal with life on the premise of viability, could it survive by itself.

Hence, the first 3 months unlimited abortions were allowed.

After that, they were to be more restrictive based on other factors (life of the mother)

Never were they to be totally free as the pro-abortion movement would have us believe.

Now, Roe vs Wade may have been as bad a decision as the Dred Scott decision which stated that the slave was a non-person.

The point is that no state can ignore murder as a crime.

If the state of Texas stated that it was ópen season'on people with red hair and if anyone committed a crime against them, the state would not prosecute them, then the federal gov't would be obligated to step in.

While judically the states handle the crimes, the 'right'of life is protected by the Federal gov't insuring every state and local gov't protects it equally.

If the Federal gov't itself rejected this principle then the people would be justified in overthrowing that Federal gov't as being at war with the principles of the Declaration

55 posted on 10/29/2004 12:46:10 AM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: Eastbound
The States cannot legalize it." But the fedguv can? Didn't Roe v Wade over-ride state's rights to ban abortion except in some instances? Seems to me that the states were handling it much better than the fedguv is. Doesn't abortion on demand, a decision of the USSC, offer far less protection to life than what the states offered? Maybe I'm mis-understanding you. I still think Roe was a case where the fedguv over-stepped its enumerated powers.

Yes, but in order to do so, the Federal gov't had to defend abortion by stating that was being aborted was not a person.

Had the Court decided that a fetus was a human being abortion would have to be outlawed in every state, (with the possible exceptions of the mothers life being in danger)

Now, the point is that the Federal gov't acts as a balance to the states, to insure that a local tyranny doesn't develop.

The People through the states keep an eye on the Federal gov't to make sure it is not becoming tryannical.

Federalism is about checks and balances, where different levels of gov't are in place to keep an eye on the other.

By the way, this is why a Constitutinal amendment is going to be needed to define marriage.

Here the Federal gov't will put a check on the states abusing (through their courts) the definition of marriage.

56 posted on 10/29/2004 12:56:34 AM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: farmfriend

BTTT!!!!!!!


57 posted on 10/29/2004 3:02:13 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: tpaine
I always like to ask some of FR's resident defenders of the "general welfare" to enlighten us all.

They don't like to engage the issues on such clearly defined terms.

58 posted on 10/29/2004 4:46:14 AM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Eastbound

bump for later, thanks for the invite.

The Federalist did point out that the BOR ought to be superfluous, but the anti's seem to have stronger arguments after a couple hundred years...

hmmm, "powers reserved" seems to bump up on the idea of state's rights, after a fashion. After all, the people delagated certain of their powers to the states, who delegated certain of their powers to the con con and therefor to the federal gov't. The issue is what powers did the people retain absolutely for themselves, perhaps.

more time for thought later.


59 posted on 10/29/2004 4:54:01 AM PDT by Apogee (vade in pace)
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To: fortheDeclaration; Happy2BMe; TapTheSource
>>This was Calhoun's notion that the State was itself a sovereign entity and had 'rights'to protect when it was, in fact, a part of the Federal system whose function was to protect individual rights.<<

Exactly, this is why States have their own Constitutions. They determine how the States will protect the individual rights of State citizens from the overbearing federal government.

I am not enough of a historian to say when the last battle of a state vs the feds was. Possibly, here in Nevada when we objected to the Feds dumping the nations spent uranium on our grounds. Yes, we lost the case.
60 posted on 10/29/2004 5:24:51 AM PDT by B4Ranch (´´Firearms are second only to the Constitution in importance; They are our teeth for Liberty)
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