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A To-Do List
Author | 09-05-03 | Robert Wolf

Posted on 09/05/2003 5:50:26 PM PDT by aynfan

A To-Do List

By Robert Wolf

There is much consternation to the effect that politics has become a full body contact sport. Many are dismayed because all that is important is winning. Pubs and Dems will say anything and do anything to win, but the end of world is not at hand, not if we are up to the challenge.

Libertarians think Republicans are Clinton Lite. Conservatives are depressed because congressional spending continues unabated. Conservatives and Libertarians are, both, ready ‘to give up the ghost’, ‘shed that mortal coil’ and ‘head for the hills’, perhaps for good reason; watching the evolution of the new Medicare entitlement alone is frightening. Those who remember Medicare 1 was projected to cost 9 billion dollars by 1990, yet ended up costing 7 times as much, see little hope for small government.

Of course, Progressives are pleased as Punch. They believe Health care is a right; a right conferred by whom or at whose expense is a question never raised or answered. Progressives, if pressed, would answer at the government’s expense, but as the government has no money so that begs the question.

But, railing at fate alone only leads to frustration and defeat. It is like trying to fix a leak by bailing water. Instead of light-headedness in the face of the dizzying array of government or vituperation, let’s re-double our efforts to attack the root causes of the problem.

What are the roots of the problem? The income tax, paper money and ‘far fetched’ interpretations of the Interstate Commerce Clause, Article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution.

In 1913, with malice of forethought, Congress created the Income Tax and the Federal Reserve, ostensibly to tame the business cycle of boom and bust, but with the full realization that it would increase by infinity their ability to tax, or less charitably, buy votes.

Taxes have never been popular in America. The first federal income tax was imposed during the Civil War. It proved so unpopular, however, that it was soon repealed. Congress tried it again in the 1890s, but the Supreme Court came to our rescue, declaring it unconstitutional in 1895. Referring to the explicit prohibition against direct taxation in Article I, the court argued that “an income tax would excessively enhance federal power in relation to state power”. Precognition?

Ever the patriots, Congress would not take no for an answer. They nullified the ruling by an overwhelming majority and proposed a 16th Amendment. Three-fourths of the state legislatures flushed with the thought of empire inspired by Theodore Roosevelt ratified the villainous deed.

Then, in the same prolific year, Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act giving the government the right to print paper money unbacked by gold. FDR realized there simply wasn’t enough gold in Ft. Knox to finance his grand vision of a New Deal and removed the final barrier. Worthless money became a fait d’accompli (at least officially) in the repeal of the Gold Standard in the 30s.

Abusive interpretations of the Interstate Commerce clause began almost before the ink was dry on the Constitution. Most statesmen recognized a need for uniform interstate commerce between the various States. Under the Articles of Confederation, some states had treated others as foreign countries, levying all manner of discriminatory taxes, licensing provisions, port regulations, and the like.

James Madison argued: "We are now obliged to defend against those lawless attempts from the interfering regulations of different States, with little success...New York levies money from New Jersey by her imposts. In New Jersey, instead of cooperating with New York, the Legislature favors violations on her regulations."

To prevent trade wars among the states, the Constitution gives Congress the power "To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes." The word "regulate", at the time, meant to make regular or uniform. The clear intent was to give Congress the power to prevent discriminatory trade practices among the states. Jefferson remarked: "The power given to Congress by the Constitution does not extend to the internal regulation of the commerce of a State (that is to say, of the commerce between citizen and citizen) which remain exclusively with its own legislature, but to its external commerce only; that is to say, its commerce with another State, or with foreign nations, or with the Indian tribes." (Opinion on Bank, 1791

Controversy, even in Colonial times, makes it clear that Politicians have always been scoundrels looking for loopholes in the Constitutional safeguards against the growth of federal power. They happily ignored the ample warnings by the Founders.

Jefferson cautioned that, "Whenever the words of a law will bear two meanings, one of which will give effect to the law, and the other will defeat it, the former must be supposed to have been intended by the Legislature, because they could not intend that meaning, which would defeat their intention, in passing that law; and in a statute, as in a will, the intention of the party is to be sought after." (Thomas Jefferson to Albert Gallatin, 1808)

He felt that, "When an instrument admits two constructions, the one safe, the other dangerous, the one precise, the other indefinite, I prefer that which is safe and precise. I had rather ask an enlargement of power from the nation, where it is found necessary, than to assume it by a construction which would make our powers boundless." (Thomas Jefferson to Wilson Nicholas, 1803), but Congress was not dissuaded. The Supreme Court tried to stem the tide by holding legislation to the limits defined by the enumerated powers. But, pressure from Congress and Presidents gradually overcame the resistance of the courts.

Congress hit the jackpot with the commerce clause. The floodgates opened in 1889 when the Supreme Court ruled that the commerce clause was a positive grant of power to regulate the economy. "The reasons which may have caused the framers of the Constitution to repose the power to regulate commerce in Congress do not...affect or limit the extent of the power itself," they arbitrarily reasoned; and once the intent of the framers of the law was ignored, any interpretation became possible.

From 1889 to 1941, the Court maintained some restraint on Congress, allowing them to only regulate activities that directly involved interstate commerce. The laws they upheld still did not conform to the enumerated powers, but the justices were diligent in looking for some real connection with interstate commerce. In 1941, when our ‘beloved’ FDR threatened to stack the court with Justices who would see things his way, the Supreme Court capitulated.

The precedent involved a farmer named Filburn who was fined by the federal government for growing 461 bushels of wheat in violation of FDR’s Agriculture Adjustment Act which allowed him only 222. Even though Filburn used the surplus for feed on his own farm and for his family, the Court ruled that he affected interstate commerce and came under Congress’ regulatory jurisdiction.

With the capitulation of the courts, government control over the economy and other aspects of American life have grown like a ‘Topsy’. The Justice Department actually cited the Commerce clause in its arguments before the courts in defense of the Patriot Act. Clearly, there is no connection between the Patriot Act and commerce, but precedents set by the FBI during the 40s, which have resisted challenge, make Ashcroft’s tactics possible.

At the start of the Depression, Government consumed 3 percent of the economy’s output; it now consumes about 25 percent, which will swiftly rise to 40 percent after passage of the new Medicare bill. The genie of big government was released from the bottle after 150 years and the stopper not seen in 60 years.

There is no way to throw a switch and take American back to the 19th Century short of a new American Revolution, and that will not occur. If there were a lever to pull, I would be the first to throw it. Instead of fussing about everything under the sun, let’s narrow the focus. The mess was over a 100 years in the making and won’t be solved overnight. We should not lose hope because devolution will not be immediate.

Clearly, a frontal assault on the 16th Amendment can not succeed. The issue does not inspire public support. It frightens too many who realize that the move would end social programs, including Social Security and Medicare. They are not wise or informed enough to realize they would be better off without them. For example, how they would handle Grandma and Grandpa becoming part of family again. This is little confidence that private or religious philanthropical institutions would fill the void.

But the general public would support a national sales tax or a flat tax, and so could Libertarians and Conservatives, as long as the IRS is eliminated. (Nothing can remain to rise like a Phoenix from the ashes.) A sales tax with an income tax or a flat tax with IRS provisos would be the worse of both possible worlds.

Once a sales or flat tax is in place and government no longer ‘clouds the minds of men, Americans will see how much the government spends. With transparency in place, we can begin the process of cutting taxes and swapping federal for local control. Libertarians would need to support the intermediary step and not allow the good to be sacrificed to perfection. Conservatives and Republicans would need to insist that Bush accomplish this in his second term or refuse to vote for him in ’84.

With a more rational tax, we could tackle reverting to the Gold standard. Undoing this evil will require effort and coordination with foreign governments. But foreign nations willingly followed us into this cul de sac in the 20th Century, so they should be willing to follow us out in the 21st.

Court challenges limiting the interpretation of the Commerce Clause couldn’t be more timely with the battle against the Patriot Act.

We should do these three things and stop obsessing over the rest. With these battles won, the rest will take care of itself. For extra credit, make a contribution to reforming politics by organizing for the repeal of the 17th Amendment. Success is highly possible because liberals are not organized against it, and many may even join us.

Here in a nutshell are a few active steps we could take as citizens to start rolling the government back. Working to achieve these goals would take our minds from all the doom and gloom we see on the web pages.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: 16thamendment; 17thamendment; activism; commerceclause; congress; flattax; robertwolf; seventeenthamendment
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1 posted on 09/05/2003 5:50:26 PM PDT by aynfan
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To: aynfan
Excellent!
2 posted on 09/05/2003 6:55:44 PM PDT by Alissa
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To: aynfan
Excellent:
Some of the many facets of concern that need to be addressed.


Sunset provisions must be on all LAWS and on all Regulations.

Government funded education must include knowledge of Civics - with graduation only possible with full mastery of understanding.
Federal involvement to be limited by the EXACT provisions in the Constitution.

All reformist judges must be eliminated.

All threats or modification attempts to the Bill of Rights must be eliminated and those involved should suffer charges of treason.

No withholding of anything by the federal government.

Repeal every single AMENDMENT added after 1912. (Think about this one).Replace the Federal reserve with the Gold Standard.

Elimate all racist programs (diversity et al.)

Limit federal spending to less than 10% of the GDP.

Limit state spending to less than 25% of each state GDP.

Require all congressman and Senators to do their own 1040 income tax forms.

Remove the UN from New York to "Federal City" where it belongs. It does not belong in a individual state as the UN does not deal with individual states. They deal with the Federal Government, so therefore the UN must be located outside of the US soil. That would be on Federal land.

No tenure for US Senators.

No government pensions for anyone who works for the federal government (elected or unelected)for a period longer than 20 years.

Media made to answer and pay for propigana and lies that are printed. The fees to be large and the penalties to affect the CEO's which would include substantial jail time.

Citizenship to be valued and given and permits the citizen to accept the benefits and the liabilities of this nation.

Non-citizens to suffer through no benefits and any liabilities of this nation.

Crime punishment to meet statutory guidelines, and never to be plea barganed.

Specific limitaions that define what is unusual punishment.

Elimitation of the IRS.

ELimitation of all federal government agencies not directly involved in COMMARCE and DEFENSE.

Recognition of political philosphies that run counter to the principles that this country is founded on and then active and positive attempts to discredit these organizations.

3 posted on 09/05/2003 7:34:36 PM PDT by vannrox (The Preamble to the Bill of Rights - without it, our Bill of Rights is meaningless!)
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To: aynfan
Very rational, especially the flat tax. The fed has grown overlarge because it is fed too much $.
4 posted on 09/06/2003 9:36:25 AM PDT by LibKill (Will club baby seals for the heck of it.)
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To: vannrox
All reformist judges must be eliminated.

with "extreme prejudice"....where do I sign up?...lol

5 posted on 09/06/2003 9:40:34 AM PDT by wardaddy (it's a joke folks)
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To: aynfan
Good.

Ever since I read what Ed Guillespe allegedly said in the Manchester, NH papers, I have been advocating a strong conservative caucus that would include conservative-GOP, Constitution Party and Libertarians members. I suspect that such a caucus could represent as much as 40% of those who might vote GOP. Such a caucus would need to let the GOP know that it will "use the nuclear option" if certain candidates were not accepted and key reforms were not made.

The GOP cannot succeed without conservatives.

1. Does such a caucus exist already? If so, how can we make it stronger?

2. If one does not exist, or cannot be made stronger, I suggest that we start one here on the FreeRepublic.
6 posted on 09/06/2003 10:00:38 AM PDT by kidd
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To: aynfan
"There is no way to throw a switch and take American back to the 19th Century short of a new American Revolution, and that will not occur."

A second Civil War is coming; one that will make the first one look like a Sunday-school picnic. The question is not "if" but "when?"

I am not promoting a second Civil War. I hope to be dead and buried before it begins. It will not be nice.

Anyone who cannot see it coming has a severe lack of vision.

--Boris

7 posted on 09/06/2003 10:29:48 AM PDT by boris (Education is always painful; pain is always educational.)
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To: boris
Who will be fighting who?
8 posted on 09/06/2003 10:36:57 AM PDT by Diverdogz
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To: Diverdogz
"Who will be fighting who?"

I'm not sure. Nor am I sure how it will begin.

Some possibilities:

(1) Another "Rodney King" riot breaks out--and spreads, with victims shooting back.
(2) One anti-Second Amendment law too many.
(3) Some part of "Atzlan" attempts secession.
(4) A border war with Mexico (ranchers vs Mexican nationals) acts as a trigger.
(5) A "Crazy Eddie" event, such as a nationwide truckers' strike or vast and continuing black-out, trigger 'civil unrest'.

Just some possibilities that come to mind.

--Boris

9 posted on 09/06/2003 12:20:11 PM PDT by boris (Education is always painful; pain is always educational.)
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To: boris
You have much, much more imagination than "vision".

I don't see a civil war coming down the horizon, but can imagine lots of scenarios where temporary civil unrest breaks out. If we had a massive attack on our power grid - severe enough to have much of the country without power for weeks instead of the few days the northeast was powerless- I for one wouldn't want to be stuck at home without a firearm.
10 posted on 09/06/2003 1:20:46 PM PDT by Diverdogz
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To: boris
I do not lack vision. How's Natasha?
11 posted on 09/06/2003 3:00:59 PM PDT by aynfan
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To: kidd
I'm not good at organizing such things. I prefer to observe and comment, however, if you would like to spearhead such an endeavor, I would he glad to help.
12 posted on 09/07/2003 5:45:13 AM PDT by aynfan
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To: aynfan
Good article
13 posted on 09/07/2003 10:58:26 AM PDT by sauropod ("How do you know Sheila Jackson Lee's a queen?" "Because she doesn't sit with the little people")
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To: boris; Noumenon; harpseal; Jeff Head; hellinahandcart; countrydummy; hosepipe; cowpoke; c-b 1; ...
I agree with you. 'Pod.
14 posted on 09/07/2003 11:00:22 AM PDT by sauropod ("How do you know Sheila Jackson Lee's a queen?" "Because she doesn't sit with the little people")
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To: vannrox
Repeal every single AMENDMENT added after 1912. (Think about this one).Replace the Federal reserve with the Gold Standard.

That would start w/ the 16th correct?

15 posted on 09/07/2003 3:04:04 PM PDT by OXENinFLA
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To: OXENinFLA
Too many after the 16th deal with civil rights issues, hard to eliminate and do no real harm. Women and Blacks should have equality and the right to vote.
16 posted on 09/07/2003 5:05:47 PM PDT by aynfan
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To: aynfan
bttt
17 posted on 09/08/2003 6:58:25 AM PDT by lodwick
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To: aynfan
Giving money and power to Government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys. -- P.J. O'Rourke
18 posted on 09/08/2003 9:27:02 AM PDT by hosepipe
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To: lodwick
What does that mean?
19 posted on 09/08/2003 10:08:41 AM PDT by aynfan
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To: aynfan
Bump for later read!

(Great Screen name.)
20 posted on 09/09/2003 6:45:36 AM PDT by CSM ("We have been assigned to the hall of Freep. No other work is allowed" - Equality 7-2521)
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