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Republicans Endorse Platform Language to Dismantle Most of the Federal Government*
Townhall.com ^ | August 30, 2012 | Daniel J. Mitchell

Posted on 08/31/2012 10:31:57 AM PDT by Kaslin

I wish the Republican Platform was binding.

Why? Because the GOP, for all intents and purposes, has just proposed to eliminate the Department of Education, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of Energy, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Transportation, the Department of Health and Human Services, along with a host of other government programs, agencies, and departments.

More specifically, they endorsed the 10th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which means they put themselves on record in favor of getting rid of all federal spending and intervention that is inconsistent with the Founding Fathers’ vision of a limited central government.

Here’s some of the story, as reported by The Hill,

All federal spending should be reviewed to ensure powers reserved for the states are not given to the federal government, according to the GOP platform approved Tuesday. The platform language is meant to ensure all federal spending meets the requirements of the 10th amendment, which prohibits state powers from being given to the feds. “We support the review and examination of all federal agencies to eliminate wasteful spending, operational inefficiencies, or abuse of power to determine whether they are performing functions that are better performed by the States,” the platform reads. “These functions, as appropriate, should be returned to the States in accordance with the Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.”

For those of you who don’t have your Cato Institute picket Constitutions handy, here’s what the 10th Amendment says.

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

In other words, the 10th Amendment is basically a back-up plan to re-emphasize that the federal government was prohibited from exercising power in any area other than what is specified in the enumerated powers section of Article I, Section VIII.

And if you look at those enumerated powers, that pretty much invalidates much of what happens in Washington.

That’s the good news. The bad news is that the Republican platform will have less impact on a potential Romney presidency than this blog.  In other words, Republicans don’t intend to live up to this promise. Heck, they don’t even know that they have such a position. That’s why I included the asterisk in the title and must draw your attention to this fine print.

*Offer not good when GOP holds power.

But I suppose it’s good that they included this language in the platform, even if it’s merely empty political rhetoric

P.S. If they did abide by the 10th Amendment, it means that Obamacare also would be repealed.

P.P.S. Yes, this implies limits on democracy. Our Founding Fathers, contrary to E.J. Dionne’s superficial analysis, were opposed to untrammeled majoritarianism and wanted to make sure 51 percent of the people couldn’t vote to rape and pillage 49 percent of the people.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 10thamendment; 2012convention; 2012issues; 2012rncplatform; romney2012; statesrights
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To: marron
Yeah... The Migratory Bird Conservation Commission can get the axe too.

As can the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

And the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars...

Literally hundreds that can go.

21 posted on 08/31/2012 11:37:37 AM PDT by Dead Corpse (I will not comply.)
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To: KantianBurke

That chart says our revenues will be the same 40 years from now as they are today. What we don’t plant to grow at all?


22 posted on 08/31/2012 11:47:04 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: Kaslin

There’s no way we could get that lucky.


23 posted on 08/31/2012 11:47:49 AM PDT by SaxxonWoods (....The days are long, but the years are short.....)
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To: Little Ray

excellent point


24 posted on 08/31/2012 11:49:45 AM PDT by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin

Yes! Good start.


25 posted on 08/31/2012 11:50:11 AM PDT by vet7279
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To: MNJohnnie

He’s a left wing lunatic


26 posted on 08/31/2012 11:50:35 AM PDT by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin

Oh those pesky asterisk disclaimers...


27 posted on 08/31/2012 12:00:45 PM PDT by Peter W. Kessler (Dirt is for racing... asphalt is for getting there.)
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To: Kaslin

Call me in, all the way ! Heros of the Republic, arise!!! Restore USC and heed your fore-fathers design.


28 posted on 08/31/2012 12:07:21 PM PDT by veracious
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To: tacticalogic

And while we’re at it overturn Calder, McCullough, Gibbons, Helvering, Kelo, Koramatsu, Butler, Buckley, Penn Central, Home Building and Loan, Bollinger, Roe, Bennis, Raich, American Trucking Association, Gold Clause Cases, Carolene Products, the Obamacare Case, etc.


29 posted on 08/31/2012 12:09:55 PM PDT by Tublecane
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To: Tublecane
Not familiar with all of those.

I'm not sure why you think Gibbons was wrong, but other than that what I do recognize on that list relied on Wickard for precedent, so if it goes, they go.

30 posted on 08/31/2012 12:24:39 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Kaslin

Why is the GSA missing from that list?


31 posted on 08/31/2012 12:28:19 PM PDT by thingumbob (I'm a bitter clinger...I dare you to take my gun)
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To: DannyTN
That chart says our revenues will be the same 40 years from now as they are today.

No, it doesn't. It shows a flat-line extrapolation of the historical 18% average of past tax revenues expressed as a percentage of GDP. You've got to see that it's a PERCENTAGE scale, which means it's 18% of whatever the GDP may grow to be, which figure is extrapolated from past data, as well, to get the 24% of GDP data point for the sum of the entitlements shown.

The only ways out of the dead-end involve repeal WITHOUT REPLACEMENT of "Obamacare," four decades of GDP growth at more than double the historical average, or some combination of both.

I'll leave it as an exercise to figure out which of the two elements we should most rely on to get the job done.

32 posted on 08/31/2012 12:33:56 PM PDT by HKMk23 (GOPe 2012: MITT HAPPENS)
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To: tacticalogic

Gibbons was the first time they expanded the commerce clause, so far as I know. It unilaterally rewrote “commerce” to mean “navigation,” and if that weren’t bad enough for regulatable navigation to be within one state if the body of water it was on overlapped state lines. This decision is still used today to justify, for instance, EPA rules covering “navigable waterways” consisting of a pond in your backyard.


33 posted on 08/31/2012 12:41:55 PM PDT by Tublecane
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To: Kaslin

Take out Homeland Security and throw it away with the BATF.


34 posted on 08/31/2012 12:43:20 PM PDT by bmwcyle (Corollary - Electing the same person over and over and expecting a different outcome is insanity)
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To: Kaslin
I wouldn't worry about any of this coming to pass. The eGOP just looks at the platform as ad captandum vulgus. Even if the GOP wins massively in November and Etch-s-Sketch is installed as president in January, as soon as these guys and gals get to Washington and are installed in committee and subcommittee positions, the old guard will remind them that these agencies and the laws that created them are the key source of power of our rulers. Eliminate the Department of Energy and the members of various House and Senate committees having oversight of our energy affairs (and there are many with overlapping jurisdictions) will suddenly be stripped of much of their ability to extract contributions and nice junkets from the energy industry. The same is true of every other area dealt with by the various federal agencies and departments allegedly on the chopping block.

Reduce the leviathan to those matters clearly authorized in the ennumerated powers, and enforce the ninth and tenth amendments, leaving all other matters to the states? We could go back to a part-time legislature, pay reps $20,000 and senators $30,000, and give each a staff of two people.

It'll never happen, short of another revolution.

35 posted on 08/31/2012 1:06:32 PM PDT by Spartan79 (I view great cities as pestilential to the morals, the health, and the liberties of man.)
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To: DannyTN

Wrong. That chart indicates what will happen if our taxes don’t go up to pay for said entitlements.


36 posted on 08/31/2012 1:22:26 PM PDT by KantianBurke (Where was the Tea Party when Dubya was spending like a drunken sailor?)
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To: Tublecane
I don't think so. Gibbons established that navigable waterways were potentially "channels of interstate commerce", and as such commercial operators on those waterways were subject to the same rules as other interstate carriers (eg railroads).

It explicitly did not recognize any application to intrastate commerce.

The subject to which the power is next applied is to commerce "among the several States." The word "among" means intermingled with. A thing which is among others is intermingled with them. Commerce among the States cannot stop at the external boundary line of each State, but may be introduced into the interior.

It is not intended to say that these words comprehend that commerce which is completely internal, which is carried on between man and man in a State, or between different parts of the same State, and which does not extend to or affect other States. Such a power would be inconvenient, and is certainly unnecessary.

Wickard established the "substantial effects" doctrine that says Congress can regulate anything they "find" to "have a substantial effect on interstate commerce". In Roscoe Filburn's case, he was fined for growing his own wheat, because in doing so he avoided having to buy it, and that would deny someone in another state the opportunity to sell it to him, thus affecting interstate commerce.

Congress explicitly claims this "substantial effect on interstate commerce" in the Clean Air Act, which established the EPA.

37 posted on 08/31/2012 1:42:51 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Kaslin
What a great title! If only it could be so, what an amazing transformation we would experience. So much potential, now stifled and lost, would be turned loose and realized.

We are close and it's been looking more and more like it all the time.

Regardless of who wins in November, my sense is we are seeing the beginning of a sort of changing of the guard, where the old, tired ways, names and brands are simply discarded, the same way we leave things behind when new technologies or better ways of doing things come along and the old ways are abandoned.

This is true for Big Labor and its unions, the media and its many disciples and, with any luck since skill is usually absent, this will be especially true for the symbiotic political parasite that feeds on all of it, the progressive movement worldwide.

That title is music to my ears, like the band's practicing the dirge before the parade. Hallelujah! Let's dance! There's a Renaissance a comin'!

38 posted on 08/31/2012 1:51:52 PM PDT by GBA
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To: tacticalogic
The essence of Wickard was considered and rejected by our Framers in August of 1787.

Short essay Here.

39 posted on 08/31/2012 1:53:06 PM PDT by Jacquerie (Exterminate rats.)
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To: Kaslin; All

Lots of great suggestions to cut these porkulus socialists.

Music to read this thread by...(”what they need’s a damn good whacking”) BUMP!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHei4OrwT2o


40 posted on 08/31/2012 1:59:58 PM PDT by PGalt
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