Posted on 12/15/2011 12:07:22 PM PST by Bokababe
John Jay, the co-writer of the Federalist Papers and the first chief justice of the United States (1789-95), wrote in a 1786 letter to Thomas Jefferson that he was worried that under our evolving founding document that became the Constitution, Congress would have exorbitant power.
These three great departments of sovereignty, he told Jefferson, should be forever separated and so distributed to serve as checks on each other.
(Excerpt) Read more at cato.org ...
Well according to the Defense Bill, you sure as hell don`t have the right to a speedy trial or Habeas Corpus. Now what I`d like to know, preferably from one of the Republicrat cheerleaders on this forum; Does this give the military the right to use B52s and cluster or carpet bombing against the “domestic American enemies”?
The Bill of Rights went the way of the World Trade Center.
My professor read the following editorial to us in class one day. It ran on BOR day, 2004, in the Washington Times. Quite interesting...
It may be that every American knows the Founding Fathers bequeathed to us a Bill of Rights as a guarantor of various liberties, and this belief may be so deeply ingrained in the national psyche that virtually every famous political actor in the country has attested to the framers wisdom in their crafting of the great bill, but the plain, historical and undeniable fact of the matter is the framers overwhelmingly rejected any notion of a bill of rights. When the proposal was put forth during the Constitutional Convention, only two men of 55 spoke in favor of the measure, and the state delegations rejected the idea unanimously.
And the bill didnt fare much better with the men of the First Congress, who approved the amendments only because of crushing pressure from Anti-Federalist factions. Respected constitutional scholar Robert Goldwin notes the House was almost unanimously opposed to the amendments; and that the bills sponsor was told of these feelings in terms that were caustic, scornful, and even derisive.
The framers were convinced that such a bill would actually rob Americans of their rights, not protect them. And they were correct, for as Alexander Hamilton said: I affirm that bills of rights, in the sense and to the extent in which they are contended for, are not only unnecessary in the proposed Constitution but would even be dangerous.
Unnecessary? Dangerous? How, exactly?
When the framers wrote our Constitution, their strategy for safeguarding liberty against government encroachment was really quite simple they would list, specify and detail the few and defined rights of the federal government. All the uncountable, innumerable scores of rights and powers not found on this small list were off limits to the federal government and were retained by the people. As every good conservative knows, this list the framers referred to is the enumeration, and it is contained in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution.
At this point the framers directed their critics who bemoaned the absence of a bill of rights to the enumeration and noted, quite logically, that since the enumeration contained no provision for the federal government to assail cherished liberties, those rights were already protected. A bill of rights was unnecessary because the rights so loved in our Bill of Rights were already protected, were already completely off limits to federal authority. Nowhere in the enumeration do the people cede to the government the power to regulate the press, thus the federal government has no authority whatsoever to do so, or to suppress free speech, or establish a church, or seize firearms. The logic and simplicity of their reasoning are undeniable.
We now see why the bill was unnecessary. But why, exactly, was it dangerous?
Though Madison and Hamilton penned virtually the same words, James Wilson, Pennsylvania delegate to the convention, said it best:
In a government consisting of enumerated powers, such as is proposed for the United States, a bill of rights would not only be unnecessary, but, in my humble judgment, highly imprudent. In all societies, there are many powers and rights, which cannot be particularly enumerated. A bill of rights annexed to a constitution, is an enumeration of the powers reserved. If we attempt an enumeration, every thing that is not enumerated, is presumed to be given. The consequence is, that an imperfect enumeration would throw all implied power into the scale of the government; and the rights of the people would be rendered incomplete.
This, of course, is the sad situation in which we now live. A huge majority of Americans and our legislators believe that the federal government may legislate on any topic, at any time, for any reason, period so long as the legislation does not offend the Bill of Rights. We used to have all the rights contained in the Bill of Rights, plus untold scores of others. Now, as the framers predicted, we have only those rights contained in the Bill of Rights. This is a disaster, not a blessing.
The world the framers gave us (governments powers limited to a small list) is entirely different from the world given by the Bill of Rights (peoples powers limited to a small list). These two worlds are mutually exclusive. They represent, with mathematical precision, exact and precise diametric opposites. One is the antithesis of the other. The world the framers gave us is not diminished by the Bill of Rights, it is not marginalized; it is utterly and absolutely destroyed. These two visions simply cannot exist side by side. One must die, and indeed, one did.
Others will blame any of a dozen different reasons for our lost rights, but can it really be a coincidence that the only rights we have left are found in the Bill of Rights? Can it?
Bill of Rights?
Wasn’t that a part of the obsolete document called The Constitution?
You know, the one that our Glorious Rulers pay lip service to every four years or so?
On the bright side, I guess if we’re lucky they’ll ship us to the camps on those high-speed rail networks our Illustrious and Most Fearless Leaders are always prattling on about. We can ride to the FEMA camps in style! Woo hoo!!
First ten hits for "Bill of Rights Day" on Google News:
- ask.com
- Washington Post (blog)
- Huffington Post
- Comedy Central
- Wilson County News
- The Carrboro Citizen
- Daily Caller
- Tenth Amendment Center
- Public News Service
- American Civil Liberties Union
Well the 4th Ammendment is gone, the 1st is on shaky ground along with the 10th but our right to a speedy trial has been replaced by our right to a speedy ride to the FEMA camp. Its all good.
The BoR doesn't apply to foreign nationals.
The Tenth was de facto repealed on April 9, 1865 at Appomattox Court House. From that forward the federal government was on the road towards totalitarian control.
Heh.....our right to a speedy ride to the FEMA camp. Good one.
I wonder whether the FEMA camp guards and administrators will have snappy uniforms designed for them by Hugo Boss, like the SS did?
True story.....the SS uniforms (especially the formal uniforms) were designed and produced by Hugo Boss.
Somehow I doubt our new overlords will be such snappy dressers. The Third Reich; best-dressed totalitarians. Ever.
Yeh, we may have to do something about that one of these days.
That is why I am puzzled with his opening error. “John Jay . . . wrote in a 1786 letter . . . that he was worried that under our evolving founding document that became the Constitution, Congress would have exorbitant power.
The Constitutional Convention met in 1787. Any worry about an evolving document would have had to occur post early 1789 when our new government commenced. It appears Hentoff made this up to make a point.
;~)
Interesting. As of today, don't think that we have even that left.
On the other hand, I think that the Bill of Rights was simply intended on being a backstop to the Constitution -- the last line of defense -- and now even that's been breached.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.