Posted on 06/26/2015 4:00:53 PM PDT by Isara
...”As a young teenager Cruz’z father made him memorize verbatim the US Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. ....Throughout his teens he joined student debate groups in which he honed the skills he displays today. You can bet he has committed to his inner soul all the arguments and expositions of The Federalist Papers......But for all his study, his knowledge, his practice and brilliance, it would all be fruitless without his deep faith which his father instilled in him.”....
Yes....impressive father as well as son.
LOL!
The answer, of course, is YES! (Not that any of those bigots would answer honestly)
Thanks for the BEEP!
I'm sure you're absolutely right that "the Senate has become institutionally incapable of fulfilling its duty to convict all but the worst dirtbag federal magistrates, judges, appointees, presidents. Neither will it trim the jurisdiction of federal courts."
Yet the Congress must act first: The Senate cannot bring a bill of impeachment; only the House can. Then the Senate can convict or not.
Yet it appears Congress will not impeach; nor will they stipulate "Exceptions" or constraints on the power of the federal courts, let alone the Supreme Court the tools the Constitution explicitly grants them in Sections 1 & 2 of Article III, in order to counter and correct judicial usurpation of the liberties of the people and the just, retained powers of the several States powers that were deliberately reserved to the States and thus to be protected against federal encroachment. The Court this week nationalized, or federalized, what have been universally recognized as State powers for the past 239 years i.e., marriage, and provisions WRT matters concerning healthcare.
What is the point of devising new tools, or novel amendments, when the tools we already have are being ignored? How long before the new tools are themselves ignored?
I think you are absolutely right to worry that "more democracy" would do more harm than good. But this appears to be what Cruz is calling for, with his proposal to make any judge or justice holding lifetime appointment (subject to "good behavior") "directly accountable" to the People in a national referendum taken every eight years.
We are a constitutional Republic, not a direct democracy. Our electoral conventions are democratic; but the Republic is defined by the Constitution, not by the direct will of the people. That will is subjected to, and is constrained by, fundamental constitutional principles, preeminently the separation and balance of powers, and strictly enumerated powers of Congress. As noted above, Congress has the power of Impeachment and of constraining the Supreme Court's natural tendency to devolve into what Thomas Jefferson called "the tyranny of the oligarchy." Which plainly is what we have today.
Two last thoughts before closing: (1) Plato, founder of political philosophy, detested the very idea of "democracy," thinking it the fast route to mob rule. Certainly that notion was particularly well validated by the French Revolution. Arguably, "mob rule," manipulated by ideological activists, increasingly is what disorders American society these days. In consequence, there is no "rule of law"; there is only the "rule of men."
(2) What was truly shocking to me respecting the two SCOTUS decisions this week was what they had in common: Both were usurpations of the powers of the several States recognized under the Tenth Amendment. Both cases were demonstrations of frank judicial tyranny predicated on a contempt for the Constitution, clearly in complete breach of their own Oaths of Office.
In short, no "Good Behavior" there. The constitutional prescription in such a case is Impeachment and/or congressional modification of SCOTUS jurisdiction.
But no one seems to have the stomach for this, these days.... So, I believe you reach the just conclusion that what is needed is to reform, not only the Senate, but Congress as well. That sort of thing is resolved in the electoral process. That takes time; but time is what we seem to be running out of.
But the "demos" (the American people) hasn't got a clue about this pressing need.... They don't notice (or possibly they don't much care) that they are being ineluctably, systematically deprived of their historic constitutional liberties. They are too often willing to "sell their souls for a mess of pottage."
I don't have a clue how to solve that problem which is fundamentally a moral problem. But I feel pretty sure that neither Ted Cruz's, or Mark Levin's "prescriptions" would make much of a difference.
Dear Jacquerie, thank you ever so much for your thoughtful and thought-provoking essay/post.
ping
Nice.... Cruz side steps "some" traps and ignores others.. then fires back salvos of traps of his own...
Brilliant to be sure.. but a dangerous game....
Even if he so-called "wins" most these engagements..
The massive voter fraud "quicksand" awaits...
Not only in the general election but in the primary as well..
to wit; How does a known democrat collaborator, poseur, shill and inventor of Romney-Care win the 2012 republican primary..
you know..... right AFTER the 2010 conservative election upsets..
except by brilliant republican primary voter fraud... -OR-
republicans are really mostly RINOs.. and are basically lite-democrats..
I say; buy your popcorn NOW.. the price will surely escalate..
That seems easy enough, and doesn't require any constitutional changes.
The Constitution does not need to be amended, via an Article V convention or otherwise, in order to solve the Supreme Court problem, since the written Constitution already contains the solution.
Article III, §2: “...In all the other cases before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make.”
Ted Cruz and maybe a few others might want to rein in SCOTUS and/or find away to nullify this decision, but with the rest of congress refusing to go along, nothing will be done.
Of course not. They can't. "Honesty" demands recognition of a universal standard against which speech and actions can be objectively judged for their truth or falsity. Ideological activists must actively deny that such a standard objectively exists, or their utopian pipe dreams can never be realized.
So of course, they must go after Christians.... In this, they are indistinguishable from ISIL, both in their motivations and designs.
Forgive me, dear brother, but I do not think Republicans are very good at the voter fraud game.
What Cruz notices is the GOP Establishment working overtime to divide its conservative base, to pit one "faction" against another, thinking that an electorate so divided will cancel each other out in the final vote tally, in which case it would be highly likely that a moderate Jeb Bush is the poster-boy here would emerge as the successful Republican presidential candidate.
I think he's on to something here....
Thank you for the Ping Jim!
Senator Cruz never surrenders!
He always seeks solutions! In fact, he has remedies within his wealth of Constitutional knowledge.
Pray to God Almighty for his continued good health and presidential success.
Forgive me, dear brother, but I do not think Republicans are very good at the voter fraud game.
Hello; Not all republicans are republicans..
Take John Boehner and Mitch McConnell as examples..
John Roberts is republicanish “sometimes”.. but mostly not..
They are just examples.. a deeper look will crawl yer nape..
***
Okay.
William III of England.
Name for me the time the people or their reps convened to enslave themselves.
You might have a blind spot in your peripheral view and it's not your fault nor anyone else with the same blind spot. Ted Cruz alluded to it, which is the fact that the Article V movement will grow if Congress and SCOTUS don't listen. Well, the fact is the Article V movement is already growing very rapidly at breakneck speed, but we don't hear about it much from the MSM presumably because they are Snobs and don't know yet how to handle a "radical" "fringe" movement by state legislators.
Her's the latest from the COS Project (http://www.conventionofstates.com/the_jefferson_statement )
But the Convention of States movement is achieving massive victories in the fight for liberty.
Just this year , we filed the Convention of States application in 34 state legislatures. Of those 34 states, 19 have passed initial committee votes already, after filing.
Additionally, 3 state Senate chambers and 8 House chambers have moved from Committee to passing the application via their respective floor votes thus far.
All of this progress builds on the valiant efforts of activists in Georgia, Alaska, Florida, and just recently Alabama who have all passed the COS application in both houses!
> "So, I believe you reach the just conclusion that what is needed is to reform, not only the Senate, but Congress as well. That sort of thing is resolved in the electoral process. That takes time; but time is what we seem to be running out of."
Indeed time is short. We need the states to exercise their Article V authority by carrying JUST ONE amendment across the finish line, then others may follow but the first one will be the game changer. The amendment they first get over the finish line must be designed so its administration and enforcement are solely in the hands of the States, not the Federal Government. The first completed Article V amendment should be "new", and both broad and specific, simple yet powerful, and drafted to address state powers that level the playing field between the States and the Federal Government. The amendment should be viewed as benign by the general populace and completely justified in their minds for States to have.
There are 7.398 state legislators. They can be viewed as a backup to the failed representational body that is presently Congress. These 7,398 legislators occupy 99 legislative chambers (Nebraska has only one chamber). Each state legislative chamber appoints one delegate to the Article V Meeting of States. It takes 66 delegates from 34 states to propose an Article V amendment. Only 66 people are needed. No governor, no federal agency or court or federal body of any kind can stop or interfere with the work of the 99 delegates sent to the meeting of the states. This group of state delegates would hold more constitutional power of authority than any other group in government. They remain beholden to their state legislatures and no one else.
Conservatives and republicans control 66 of 99 state chambers. Republicans in state legislatures are generally much closer to the people and are more conservative as a result.
From Article III, Section 2.
... the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make.
The term 'regulations' is a result of laws passed by Congress and signed by the President. I think Obama would veto any such law.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3304160/posts?page=222#222
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3304160/posts?page=223#223
Last week’s Scotus putsch has done more for the Article V movement than any statement from Cruz, Walker . . . etc could ever do. Three radical decisions repealed self-government and constituted a single finger salute from Satan’s servants to God.
We do not disagree with opponents, we stand against blood thirsty enemies.
You did not provide ONE. You provided scurrilous, erroneous and ridiculous examples that do not fit the parameters of the question.
Notwithstanding your subtle insults to my faith, desires and motives which you sir, in your continuous exhibition of slander - have absolutely no comprehension or understanding of. Your assumptions are piss poor and fall into the same tactics Leftists us to silence any position that does not comport with your agenda. In your case; passing more Amendments to a Constitution that has been already rendered irrelevant by this government ruling us.
Tyranny is as much in the eye of the beholder as it is an objective reality.
I think this revelation from you answers everything I suspected.
I see what exists now in this country as a tyranny. You still see us as existing under a Republic that can and will vote 'good government' for itself.
So we have nothing further to discuss.
Knock yourself out pushing Article V. It does me no harm that you people attempt it and if anything may provide a justification for what will be then seen as absolutely necessary.
My problem with it is the same as I have with those who anoint politicians as saviors.
We are soon going to see which of us was correct in regards to whether Article V provides the salvation you promise or whether the tyrants in power are going to follow the blueprint history teaches under the kind of regime we now exist under and the consequences they have already sown for us all.
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