Monday, April 11, 2011

    In my recent posts, I have stuck-like-glue to the comment in made in the very first entry of this blog:

Tea Party language calls for 'smaller government'. Smaller government means nothing, because theoretically it could still include Medicare, Social Security, income taxes, death taxes, and other forms of government power over the individual that was never 'originally intended.'

   As I've been saying, it is the issues that are being ignored, except occasionally by Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), and Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.), sponsors of the Energy Tax Prevention Act. Other instances are in cases of state-rights:
   The following states are challenging the constitutionality of the health care law in federal court: Florida, South Carolina, Nebraska, Texas, Utah, Louisiana, Alabama, Colorado, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Washington, Idaho, South Dakota, Indiana, North Dakota, Mississippi, Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, Alaska, Ohio, Wisconsin, Maine, Iowa, Wyoming, Kansas and Virginia. On January 18, 2011, six additional states–Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Ohio, Wisconsin and Wyoming–petitioned in federal court to join Florida’s law suit.
    That list was copied from the website American Conservative Values, which promotes itself as 'limited government' and 'Constitutional rights', but not specifically laws which strictly adhere to Constitutionality. It could be argued that 'Constitutional rights' are those guaranteed in the first nine Amendments.
    The Tenth applies to the relationship of the States to the Federal government, but just as much as that, in its original meaning was the intention that the Federal government was extremely limited in its contact with the People of the Several States. "The reservation to the States respectively," says the Supreme Court,[1] "can only mean the reservation of the Sovereignty which they respectively possessed before the adoption of the Constitution of the United States and which they had not parted from by that instrument."
    That sovereignty of which they had not parted was the sovereignty of the State government over the citizens; whereas the Federal government, having been created by and for the purpose of the States, was responsible for dealing with the States--but not directly except where expressly provided for in the Constitution--for dealing with the Citizens of the several States. 

[1] My thanks to Barefoot Bob for his invaluable work installing the HTML version on the web (especially the links to the references, as in 'says the Supreme Court', above), of my own favorite reference to the Constitution, about which he said:
"Published before the beginning of the 'Socializing of America' in 1933, it is the best and most edifying rendition of our Foundation Document that I have found to clarify the intent of the Founders and the understanding of 'We the People', the Sovereign Citizens of the United States of America.
I have owned my own copy since the 1980s, and I'm surprised the pages are not falling out of it. BB's link makes my own use of the book more valuable--to all of us.


© Curtis Edward Clark 2011
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