Posted on 04/25/2002 9:41:56 AM PDT by Korth
WorldNetDaily book editor Joel Miller recently authored one of the best common-sense constitutional arguments against the governments failed war on drugs that Ive seen (Alan Keyes is Wrong!, April 23). It was a response to neo-conservative Alan Keyes, who had written in support of U.S. Attorney General John Ashcrofts use of the federal Controlled Substances Act to exert federal dominion over drug regulation by the states. Keyes was addressing Oregons euthanasia laws that permit the dispensation of lethal drugs, and Miller agreed with him that killing yourself . . . is not medically legitimate.
The bigger issue, though, is what constitutional right the federal government has to exert such control over drug regulation or any kind of regulation for that matter by the states. As Miller pointed out, Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, which delineates the legitimate appropriations of Congress, does not include regulating drugs (or the vast majority of what the federal government does today, for that matter). The Tenth Amendment, moreover, reserves such powers to the States respectively, or to the people.
Miller interestingly quotes historian David Musto as having observed that until the late nineteenth century, the federal government laid no claim to such regulatory powers; such things were the responsibilities of the states, or the people. Miller is correct to invoke the Tenth Amendment in his argument, but this Amendment was all but destroyed during the War Between the States, after which federal political hegemony was established. As Dean Sprague wrote in Freedom Under Lincoln, States Rights, which prior to 1860 had been as important a part of northern political beliefs as southern, were overturned. This includes, first and foremost, the Tenth Amendment.
Miller also correctly observed that the progressive era federal regulatory agencies were profoundly unconstitutional and un-American and are the elder bedmates of the coercive, expansionist politics of modern-day liberalism. Exactly. This, however, is exactly the position that neo-conservatives like Alan Keyes hold.
There is a method in the neo-con assault on the Constitution: They routinely invoke the part of the Declaration of Independence about all men are created equal, but not the rest of the document, as our national creed, even if the policies they advance in the name of that creed are in deep conflict with the Constitution itself. For example, in Keyess article he bases his argument in support of federal drug regulation on the equality principle of the Declaration. He claims that the Constitution supposedly creates a federal regime of ordered liberty by which democratic mobs supposedly govern themselves in dignity and justice (Im not making this up, honest).
To neo-cons like Keyes, the Constitution supposedly prohibits the interpretation of federal law by anyone but the federal government itself because the people of individual states are supposedly incapable of doing so; only the people of the whole nation are competent to perform this task. But his makes no sense, for there is no such thing as the people as a whole acting on this or any other issue. The fact that a small percentage of us votes every four years or so does not imply that we are acting with competence as a whole people on this or any other issue. A state referendum on a specific issue, on the other hand, is much more meaningful in terms of citizen participation.
Keyes barely ever makes a speech or writes a column anymore where he does not invoke the Declaration and make a not-too-subtle comparison between himself and Abraham Lincoln. Indeed, he frequently states that his main passion, the pro-life movement of today, is the equivalent of the abolition movement of the nineteenth century. (This comparison is not entirely accurate, however, if one acknowledges Pulitzer Prize winning Lincoln biographer David Donalds statement that Lincoln was not an abolitionist).
The link between Lincoln and neo-con ideology is clear: Lincoln falsely claimed that the Union preceded the states, and was therefore not subject to their sovereignty. The neo-cons make the exact same argument in advancing whatever policy cause they happen to be involved in, whether it is drug regulation, abortion, censoring of television, waging war, etc. This is why so many neo-cons, such as the ones associated with Keyes and the Claremont Institute, are such slavish idol worshippers when it comes to Lincoln. They use his martyred sainthood to promote their political agenda through an ever more powerful federal government. Thats why theyre described as neo-cons and are not a part of the Old Right tradition: They are comfortable with Big Government, as long as it fights their wars and enacts their social and regulatory programs. This is one reason why there is such a large Lincoln Cult among conservative (but mostly left/liberal) academics and think tank employees.
But the alleged supremacy of the federal government over the states is a lie. It was established by the most violent means, a war that killed the equivalent of more than 5 million Americans (standardizing for todays population), not logic, argumentation, or even legal precedent. It is a lie because:
Each American colony declared sovereignty from Great Britain on its own; After the Revolution each state was individually recognized as sovereign by the defeated British government; The Articles of Confederation said, each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence; The states then decided to secede from the Articles and dropped the words Perpetual Union from the title; Virginias constitutional ratifying convention stated that the powers granted resumed by them whensoever the same shall be perverted to their injury or oppression. This right was also asserted for all other states; In The Federalist #39 James Madison wrote that ratification of the Constitution would be achieved by the people not as individuals composing one entire nation, but as composing the distinct and independent States to which they respectively belong, flatly contradicting the contrary assertions of Keyes and other neo-cons; The Constitution always speaks of the United States in the plural, signifying that the individual states were united in forming the federal government as their agent while maintaining their sovereignty over it; The Constitution can only be amended with the authority of the states; Until 1914 U.S. Senators were appointed by state legislatures so that the states could retain a degree of sovereignty over federal officials, who now have carte blanche to rule over us as they wish.
Only by endlessly repeating what Emory University philosopher Donald Livingston calls Lincolns spectacular lie that the federal government created the states (and not the other way around), and that the nation was supposedly founded by the whole people and not the people of the states in political conventions can the neo-cons continue to champion the further centralization of governmental power to serve their own political ends, whatever they may be.
Of course, its not only the neo-cons who perpetuate this lie. Liberals and other assorted leftists do so as well. The left-wing journalist Garry Wills, for example, praises Lincolns open air sleight of hand in effectively rewriting the true history of the founding (not unlike so many of the former communist governments rewrote their own histories during the twentieth century) because it enabled us to embrace egalitarianism and the massive welfare state in whose name it has been advanced (Lincoln at Gettysburg).
Columbia University law professor George P. Fletcher echoes the neo-con mantra in Our Secret Constitution, where he celebrates the fact that the centralized state that was imposed on the nation by the Lincoln administration has led directly to the adoption of myriad welfare programs, affirmative action measures, the New Deal, modern workplace regulation, etc. He is quite gleeful in his description of the Gettysburg Address as the preamble of the second American constitution. This is not necessarily a written constitution, however, but one that has been imposed by federal policy.
This transformation of American government from one in which federalism, states rights, and the rights of nullification and secession allowed the citizens of the states to retain sovereignty over the federal government to a consolidated, monolithic Leviathan, means that Americans now live under what historian Clinton Rossiter called a constitutional dictatorship. He used this phrase in a book of the same name which appropriately featured an entire chapter on the Lincoln Dictatorship.
That point has been well refuted, - in the 'squalid' thread for one. The principles of the 14th are being misinterpreted, thus 'used', sure, just as the whole constitution is being used by socialists of both parties.
But the constitution itself, and the 14th, cannot be faulted as 'destroying' anything.
This is hype, by the socialist statists themselves. They wish to discredit the words of the constitution. -- One recently claimed that the 14th is written in some sort of 'code'.
It is written in plain english, and simply says that states cannot write laws that abridge/deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, wihout due process.
The idea that this language somehow 'centralizes power' is looney.
If that were true, then why did it take four years to defeat an army that wasn't there?
Judges use the 14th amendment all the time to go after small towns for puting up Christmas decorations on public property for example.
Grier cited "jure belli", the law of nations as the defense for Lincoln's actions. He punted on the legal issue of secession, stating that "[t]heir right to do so is now being decided by wager of battle. In Texas v White he held that the state of Texas was not a member of the Union.
Are you claiming that Hills Northern Pacific didn't get federally granted right of way?
Wasn't the alternate section grant still in effect?
- 46 posted by tpaine - To 19
IIRC, he did NOT get any fed help, including ROW.
If I Remember Correctly? - How droll.
I can't imagine how Hill built across thousands of miles of unclaimed federal & state lands without right of way grants. Are you guys claiming he paid the government for his right of way?
What force? Lincoln did not initiate armed conflict. The South did. They turned what was a political/legal disagreement into a shooting war, and you can't revise that history.
The idea that this language somehow 'centralizes power' is looney.
That's simply not true and nothing was refuted on that thread.
The 'squalid' thread speaks for itself, regardless of your silly denial.
Judges use the 14th amendment all the time to go after small towns for puting up Christmas decorations on public property for example.
Loony religious fanatics 'go after', in court, other small town loonies who try to dictate public religious displays .
-- What else is new? - This country is full of weirdos, and at times, far to many seem to be posting at FR.
You're so full of sh!t I can smell it up here in Maine.
Were Union soldiers fighting themselves at Chancellorsville?
It is written in plain english, and simply says that states cannot write laws that abridge/deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, wihout due process.
The idea that this language somehow 'centralizes power' is looney.
Gotta agree with you there.
Actually, the states would be allowed to decide these sorts of things if they would Just Say No to federal tax dollars. Fact of the matter is, the states don't give a damn about the 10th Amendment (nor the rest of the Constitution) any more than the feds do. A state that won't say no to federal dollars has no standing to complain about its loss of sovereignty (as if the states are actually complaining...hah).
=Fort Sumter was, unfortunately, the Union's perfect excuse to generate war Between the States. Offers of negotiation from the South were disdained and the fort resupplied by a nation other than that in which the fort resided. Clearly to antagonize the South.
Two things could easily fix this. I feel like I 'm beating a dead horse here but;
1.) Repeal the 17th Amendment and return a political voice to the states as the Founders intended.
Our local talk radio has lately been running (at 5:55 A.M.) the Ted Kennedy/ John McCain dog and pony show. This morning McCainiac was blubbering on about how he was elected "to represent the people of Arizona." I almost befouled my keyboard.
2.)We are not represented in the House, the people's representation.
Anybody who rationally believes that one man can represent the political will of 650,000 constituents is a statist, a useful idiot, or a moron.
Plain and simple, we are not represented today anymore than we were in the government of George III 227 years ago.
REPEAL THE 17TH AMENDMENT!
NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION!
And on the other hand there might have been a second American war, a third American war, a fourth and a fifth. Lenin might have still risen, the cold war might have come about, or worse.
=Fort Sumter was, unfortunately, the Union's perfect excuse to generate war Between the States. Offers of negotiation from the South were disdained and the fort resupplied by a nation other than that in which the fort resided. Clearly to antagonize the South.
Yet Davis still fired. He entered willingly into a war that his own secretary of state warned him was suicidal. Lincoln didn't kill the confederacy, Davis did.
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