Monday, February 23, 2009

States Rebelling, NOT Seceding

This is not a dead horse being beaten, yet. 11 states have now passed 10th Amendment resolutions. A number, including Bobby Jindal in Louisiana, are refusing to take stimulus money, possibly setting up or a Constitutional showdown. Congress has overstepped and overreached. And Americans are ready to drive the spear in the ground and say Thus Far and No Farther.

From Human Events:

Eleven States Declare Sovereignty Over Obama’s Action
by (more by this author)
Posted 02/23/2009 ET

State governors -- looking down the gun barrel of long-term spending forced on them by the Obama “stimulus” plan -- are saying they will refuse to take the money. This is a Constitutional confrontation between the federal government and the states unlike any in our time.

In the first five weeks of his presidency, Barack Obama has acted so rashly that at least 11 states have decided that his brand of “hope” equates to an intolerable expansion of the federal government’s authority over the states. These states -- Washington, New Hampshire, Arizona, Montana, Michigan, Missouri, Oklahoma, California, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas -- have passed resolutions reminding Obama that the 10th Amendment protects the rights of the states, which are the rights of the people, by limiting the power of the federal government. These resolutions call on Obama to “cease and desist” from his reckless government expansion and also indicate that federal laws and regulations implemented in violation of the 10th Amendment can be nullified by the states.

When the Constitution was being ratified during the 1780s, the 10th Amendment was understood to be the linchpin that held the entire Bill of Rights together. The amendment states: “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."

The use of the 10th Amendment in conjunction with nullification garnered much attention in 1828, when the federal government passed a tariff that southerners believed affected them disproportionately. When the 1828 tariff was complemented by another in 1832, Vice President John C. Calhoun resigned the Vice Presidency to lead his home state of South Carolina in pursuit of an “ordinance of nullification,” which was no less a declaration of the sovereignty of each individual state within the union than the declarations now being made.

Calhoun was simply exercising what he recognized to be his state’s right to defend liberty within its borders by rejecting the dictates of an overbearing central government. While his efforts culminated in a tense affair referred to as the “nullification crisis,” which witnessed everything from threats of a federal invasion of South Carolina to an ongoing and near union-rending debate over national power vs. state’s rights, they also succeeded in turning back the tariffs that had been passed in spite of the Constitutional limits on federal power.

This time around, in 2009, appeals to the 10th Amendment are not based on tariffs but on unfettered government expansion in Obama’s “stimulus bill,” federal mandates on abortion that violate state laws, and infringements on the 1st and 2nd Amendments, among other things.

For example, Family Security Matters reports that Missouri’s “House Concurrent Resolution 0004 (2009) reasserts its sovereignty based on Barack Obama’s stated intention to sign into law a federal ‘Freedom of Choice Act’, [because] the federal Freedom of Choice Act would nullify any federal or state law ‘enacted, adopted, or implemented before, on, or after the date of [its] enactment’ and would effectively prevent the State of Missouri from enacting similar protective measures in the future.”

The resolution in Montana grew out of concerns over coming attacks on the 2nd Amendment, thus its preface describes it as, “An Act Exempting From Federal Regulation Under The Commerce Clause Of The Constitution Of The United States A Firearm, A Firearm Accessory, Or Ammunition Manufactured And Retained In Montana.”

New Hampshire’s resolution actually references certain federal actions that would be nullified within that state were they pushed by Obama’s administration, according to americandaily.com. Among these are “Any act regarding religion; further limitations on freedom of political speech; or further limitations on freedom of the press, [and any] further infringements on the right to keep and bear arms including prohibitions of type or quantity of arms or ammunition.

Regardless of the specific reason behind each of the resolutions in the 11 states, all of them direct the federal government to “cease and desist” in its reckless violation of state’s rights. In this way, South Carolina’s resolution is typical of the others issued to date:
“The General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, by this resolution, claims for the State of South Carolina sovereignty under the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States over all powers not otherwise enumerated and granted to the federal government by the United States Constitution…

Be it…resolved that this resolution serves as notice and demand to the federal government, as South Carolina's agent, to cease and desist immediately all mandates…beyond the scope of the federal government's constitutionally delegated powers.”

What these state assemblies and congresses have hit upon here is key to our entire conservative interpretation of the Constitution, for these states understand that the Constitution limits the federal government, not the people. Or to put it another way, it guarantees the freedom of the people by limiting the government.

Every conservative should relish the call for the federal government to “cease and desist all mandates that are beyond the scope of [its] constitutionally delegated powers.” In this way, we honor the Constitution that enumerates a number of our liberties yet also guarantees us other liberties that are neither enumerated nor denied in the document.

Liberals don’t respect the Constitution, and liberals in Congress don’t hesitate to propose legislation that would clearly violate it. The current push to give Washington, D.C. a voting representative in the House of Representatives is a good example; even liberal Prof. Jonathan Turley told a Congressional hearing that this bill is patently unconstitutional. But they press on with it.

Our Constitutional system of checks and balances is always thought of as enabling two of the three branches of the federal government to keep the third within its constitutional bounds. But there is a fourth check, the states, which also have a Constitutional function. It is to them this burden now falls. The states can choose between allowing the federal government to impose untenable conditions on them if they accept the stimulus money, or to reject it.

These eleven states have the right to reject the stimulus plan. And they must.

There is no other option. For this federal expansion will not stop unless we stand in its way with courage in our hearts and the Constitution in our hands.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I agree completely. I love my country but I love my freedom even more. My children and my children's children have the right to be free. Obama and all he stands for is tearing down all that our founding fathers so wisely and carefully crafted. He has no respect for the American people nor does he respect the office which he serves. It is a means to an end. And he means to end the United States as we know it.
As a Southerner, we have never (I believe) wanted to be a part of the United States since the "war of Northern aggression". This war was about State's rights. The slavery issue was Lincoln's secondary issue brought in later. The true issue was about tariffs on southern-grown cotton (white gold) and the fact that we sold it to France and England and the Federal Government wanted more money in taxes for it and the southern farmers refused to pay more.
So now we are prepared to fight again (hopefully peacefully leave) to preserve our states rights and to carve out a way of life that is better than what would be if Obama were left to his own devices.
I don't know if such legislation has been introduced in our legislature in Alabama or not. I hope it will be. We all must take a stand.

Anonymous said...

I will be sure to listen to any and all of the complaints about how the constitution is not being upheld when we go back to the constitution that our founding fathers wrote. I do not know a lot but I do know that if they were here today that the question of "separation" of government and religion would not be a question at all, and when exactly did Congress give over the right to declare war when it was not there right to give? Maybe he is getting ahead of himself but everyone needs to remember that in most instances he is not the only one making the decision, or he at least gets a lot of input, so blaming ALL of these thing on Obama ALONE is out of line. Maybe we should look at voting out those guys that have been making laws and whatnot since the civil war!

circnavman said...

I have been in this country for forty two years and I can assure you that it is not the country to which I came.
American people, by their complacency have created a monster in the form of the government that presently rules and if the same American people do not take the initiative to wipe the slate clean and get rid of the 535 crooked politicians that make up the Washington Cesspool, the future of the US as we know them is bleak at best.

Pastorius said...

MR,
Great post.

Anonymous at 3:30 is correct in his comments. However, if he read this blog consistently, I think he would understand that we don't blame everything on Obama. Obama is a problem though. In fact,

Many Conservatives like the school voucher idea. I oppose it, because I believe it would create a Tower of Babel situation in America. Being in my mid-forties, I was raised at a time when public education was still worth it. I have a good understanding of American values and of our Founding Fathers and Constitution.

We need to get back to that.

We do not need to be giving Muslims, Wiccans, New-Agers, etc. money from the government to educate their children in schools of those kind.

That would be promoting more of the same problem we already have.

I am also opposed to Bush's faith-based inititiatives. For the same reason.

We certainly are not a one-note piano here, Anonymous.