Friday, May 13, 2011

    From the New York Times (but it could have been from any publication, and I heard it from the lips of commentators before I read it):

"For the last three years, federal agencies have backed new mortgages as large as $729,750 in desirable neighborhoods...Without the government covering the risk of default, many lenders would have refused to make the loans.

"Michael S. Barr, a former assistant Treasury secretary, said the federal government’s retrenchment would be painful for many communities. “There’s always going to be a line, and for the person just over it it’s always going to be an arbitrary line. [ ] But there is no entitlement to living in a home that costs $750,000."
    In an economic climate of objective risk taking, the government wouldn't have a hand in it at all. It was the hand of government that created the "arbitrary line" of credit that came from Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae in the first place. There is no entitlement to owning a home, period.

    Well, we both know that isn't a correct statement: there is an entitlement, but there is no Constitutional right, and the entitlement is un-Constitutional.

    A "retrenchment" is precisely what is needed, and it will be painful. If you don't have enough equity to stake against buying a home, any home no matter the size or cost, then you don't objectively deserve to own such a home.

    Maybe in another market on another day the equity you hold would get you what you want. But if that day isn't today, the government can't make it so without trampling on the value of the equity of every other home owner.

    And that does have a "trickle down" effect, except as we've all seen, it's not a trickle, it is a torrent.

© Curtis Edward Clark 2011
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Friday, May 6, 2011

Arab Revolutions and Popular Sovereignty

     As for the point of calling the government the "popular sovereign", Locke is relevant in today's world of Arabic/Islamic revolutions. It is unlikely that in today's world any nation, let alone an Islamic nation, is capable of going the distance as America's Founders did, by making the sovereign the individual.

     Jefferson and the other founders conceived that if the people (individuals taken as a single body politic) had the right to turn over to the government some of their rights, then the individuals were the actual sovereigns, because they cannot turn over what they do not already have. In other words, you can't give away what you don't have.

     "Individual sovereignty was not a peculiar conceit of Thomas Jefferson: It was the common assumption of the day..." http://www.friesian.com/ellis.htm

     This was carried through to the 20th century by Ayn Rand, who used many of the same phrases as the Founders:
"Individualism regards man—every man—as an independent, sovereign entity who possesses an inalienable right to his own life, a right derived from his nature as a rational being. Individualism holds that a civilized society, or any form of association, cooperation or peaceful coexistence among men, can be achieved only on the basis of the recognition of individual rights—and that a group, as such, has no rights other than the individual rights of its members."
http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/indivi…

     However, this kind of thinking was rejected in the 12th century by the Muslims when they rejected the philosopher Ibn Rushd (Averroes) who fled to Spain to save his own life. Ibn Rusd didn't advocate individual sovereignty--it would take Americans to do that, by adapting to what Locke taught them. Locke learned from Aquinas who learned from Ibn Rushd and worked from many of the man's translations of Aristotle.

     And so, in today's world it probably isn't possible to see another America rise from the ashes of any nation whether Western, Eastern, or Middle Eastern because the idea of individual sovereignty cannot return in the U.S. until the States take back their 10th Amendment rights, after which the people can then take back their 9th Amendment rights (notwithstanding the recent controversy that the 9th is also tied directly to States' rights).

     Locke referred to "popular sovereignty". Thus, Madison wrote that "Individual rights and governmental powers were understood to be reciprocal—two sides of the same coin. As Madison wrote in a letter to Washington: 'If a line can be drawn between the powers granted and the rights retained, it would seem to be the same thing, whether the latter be secured[] by declaring that they shall not be abridged, or that the former
shall not be extended.'” http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/se… page 14

     It seems however that they have been abridged, and that "the former" has been extended. Locke's "popular sovereignty" may be composed in any way the individuals of the nation wish to compose it. Turkey has had "popular sovereignty" since the Second world war and Iraq is now trying to follow in Turkey's tracks, both nations operating in the manner of the Arabs, not the way of Europeans; and of the Islamic nations now undergoing revolutions and convulsions, some may turn to Arab popular sovereignty.

     It is unlikely, however, that any of them will turn to natural rights as fully as America did. They don't understand natural rights because that is what Ibn Rushd would have led to--an Islamic Locke (or Hobbes or Rousseau). Muhammad and Allah cannot allow western individualism which "regards man—every man—as an independent, sovereign entity who possesses an inalienable right to his own life."


© Curtis Edward Clark 2011
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Monday, May 2, 2011

Health Care and the Supremacy Clause

    "State governments are pushing back reasserting federalism as the Founders intended them to do," said the Attorney General of Virginia, Ken Cuccinelli."Virginia was the first state to argue in federal court that the new health car law is unconstitutional.....[A] legal expert said our case relied on a 'controversial reading of the Constitution.' Apparently it is controversial to apply the Constitution as it was written." [1] 

    The Constitutional Accountability Center [CAC], which believes in a 'Progressive Constitution', said in its blog that this push-back whereby States' "claims that federal health care reform violates the Constitution’s 10th Amendment and 'states’ rights' rely on an inaccurate view of the federal government as a weak, sharply limited central government."[2]
 
    To view the federal government as anything but a "sharply limited central government" may not stand up against court precedent. But precedent is not what is paramount here, because precedent is nothing but interpretations by judges who may discount original expected application, and who obviously were not there to comprehend from a first-person memory what the application was supposed to be. At the start of the current Congress, Justice Antonin Scalia reminded the House Republicans to read and understand the Federalist Papers.

    Original "meaning" refers in most recent writings to the meaning of the words as they were used when the Constitution was written; but meanings of words change. Where we say "judge", people in the 18th century often said "jurist", but to us in this century a "jurist" is taken to be someone who sits in the jury box. It isn't the meaning of the words as we understand them that is important; but that is what progressive readers of the Constitution use--their own understanding of the words as they wish them to be used today.

    "Evidence of how people used words at a certain point in time is evidence of their original public meaning, but it is not conclusive evidence, because original public use conflates both the content of a concept and its expected application."[3]

    As I wrote on April 29, Tibor Machan, referring to another author, said this is "stating conventional wisdom in the 'post-New Deal era'" of constitutional jurisprudence.  "The way this is made palatable," he wrote, "is to associate the pre-New Deal constitutional jurisprudence--substantive due process and such--with rulings that failed to overturn segregation, etc."[4]

    But there is also more going on here. "[I]n circumstances in which a national approach is necessary or preferable," the CAC continues, "the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause gives the federal government the authority to enforce these lines of authority, preempting state law when necessary to achieve a national goal."

    Who determines when a "national approach" is "preferable" if it is not the States? It is circular thinking to say that, when the federal government was created by the States to serve them, that that servant should then decide when it may preempt the very States' laws they use under the powers of the Constitution as each State sees fit. Who determines a "national goal" if not the nation made of sovereign States who protect sovereign individuals?

    This arrogance in 'preempting state law when necessary' is created by "the 'illusion' [that] the heart of Jeffersonian government is just American individualism!....Individual sovereignty was not a peculiar conceit of Thomas Jefferson: It was the common assumption of the day...."[5]

    Indeed. Much of the Tea Party is founded or supported by libertarians and independents, who were inspired by the ideas of Ayn Rand, who echoed the Founders:

    "Individualism regards man—every man—as an independent, sovereign entity who possesses an inalienable right to his own life, a right derived from his nature as a rational being. Individualism holds that a civilized society, or any form of association, cooperation or peaceful coexistence among men, can be achieved only on the basis of the recognition of individual rights—and that a group, as such, has no rights other than the individual rights of its members."[6]


    The Supremacy Clause says, in part that "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof....shall be the supreme Law of the Land...." But it says nothing about laws made in pursuance of the Constitution being lawful just because a particular group of individuals who have gained supremacy says every law they deign to write is "necessary to achieve a national goal."

    It is only necessary to achieve their goals that they have their sights set on a 'progressive Constitution' that allows for the use of modern definitions of 18th century words, rather than 21st century interpretations of original expected application.

    But it is my opinion that the Tea Party often does little better, or none at all, or perhaps worse at time--when it decides to stand up for a perceived principle that is no principle at all. A perfect example is the call for 'smaller government' through limited budgets, rather than limited budgets through original Constitutional intent. Fiscal conservatism is not necessarily Constitutionalism.

    I have always said that the government must as large as it must be, and only as large as is Constitutional. The Framers didn't want a standing army; but those were there original "meanings"; their expected application was never to allow our nation to be exposed to the kinds of world-wide threats the kinds of which they had no conception.

    Health care, on the other hand, ought to be handled by anyone with the authority to do so, and the Supremacy Clause does not allow for the federal government to do so.

[1] April 21, 2011 lecture sponsored by Hillsdale College's Kirby Center for Constitutional Studies and Citizenship in Washington, D.C. Imprimis; April 2011 Volume 40, Number 4
[2] CAC July 27, 2010 
[3] Jack Balkin; Balkinization
[4] Tibor Machan
[5] Kelly R. Ross
[6] The Ayn Rand Lexicon; The Virtue of Selfishness

© Curtis Edward Clark 2011
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