Another great opportunity for unintended consequences
As much as I am loathe to admit it, I actually support California in taking on the Trump administration in this one. Not because they are right on the policy, but because it is an overreach of Federal Government authority to impose EPA standards on products like automobiles in the first place. I actually want this one to go to the Supreme Court and for the Feds to lose on the basis that they have no authority to set the standards in the first place. It would be a huge step in challenging the alphabet soup that is the Federal Bureaucracy and dismantling them.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
Since making their whole lines more expensive with choice 1 for a limited market could hurt their national market, the companies will be likely to go with limiting the models available to California buyers. No big SUVs, no pickups, no big luxury models other than the Tesla model S. Will California buyers be happy with a state-approved set of autos limited to subcompacts, hybrid compacts, and electric vehicles? In fact, the Obama-era mileage goal of over 54 mpg fleet average may force out anything but hybrids and electrics, and if the Trump administration drops the tax credit for electric vehicles, even those models will become too expensive for middle class buyers. Would that be the final straw that drives a change in California politics?
May help a little with this gorilla in the room~http://www.usdebtclock.org/
Can't imagine any state tolerating dirty air, dirty water in this day and time.
Yeah, that above statement doesn't count in regard to human feces that litter Kalifornia big city streets.
Anyway...no matter how it goes it will upset somebody's apple cart of power.
If secession happened before 1860 that supports my point that states rights existed prior to 1860 and such states rights made the states stronger and the federal government weaker as the founders intended. There has not been any secession or serious threat of secession since 1860. That "states right" was about the only remaining response for states to a federal government that was not complying in 1860 with the spirit of the defining agreement between states, the US Constitution. The federal government had imposed heavy taxation upon some southern states to benefit manufacturers of northern states who had given support to Lincoln and his new whig replacement party, the GOP in the 1860 elections. This high tariff had been tried about 30 years earlier and had nearly caused some states to secede at that time. Lincoln knew what the result of the high tariffs would be and he would not negotiate with southern representatives to avert war. Lincoln wanted a war against the southern states to increase federal power and his own power.
For a well researched discussion on the causes of the war I recommend reading The Real Lincoln by Thomas DiLorenzo.
By the Declaration of Independence each of the existing colonies became independent countries in 1776.
Supposedly, it was they that formed this thing called the united States. So if they formed, why could they not unform?
But it was not secession that was the problem, that happened before 1860. That was not the cause of the war.
All the southern states where required to rewrite their constitutions and have approved by congress before being allowed to have their seats back and elect their own governors.
Or to punish, they let the charter remain and just cut them off from sources of federal tax dollars. Just messing with Medicaid would be devastating to that broke government.
This should be one heck of a circus come November.
Throw into that the opinion by those mystical beings in black robes whereas a farmer was held to be in interstate for growing his own wheat because if he hadn't grow the wheat he would of purchased wheat that could involve interstate commerce.
No doubt you are trying to imply those 9 mystical beings in black robes that any five can control those little sheeple commonly referred to as citizens.
Them and the district courts now have the power to control the president. How do you rectify this in light of Article III, Section 2, Clause 2:
"In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be Party, the supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction. In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make."
The clause John Marshall used in Marbury v Madison to declare the legislature erred as to his power which he redefined by the above clause and as punishment declared the court the supreme arbitrator as to the constitutionality of things. It has been all downhill from there.
Guess you don't "gotme".
Automobiles are produced, sold and utilized among the several states. A rational reading would indicate that California must defer to the US Congress laws, wise or foolish.
We objectivists can only dream of such an outcome as the Federal Government does not have the authority to set EPA mileage standards. They don't, of course, but the idea that they do is so ingrained that it is a pipe dream to hope for a ruling stating that anything limits the Federal Governments powers.
CA can set whatever standards they are allowed by the CA voters. States rights over federal meddling. It may require secession to achieve.
Load more comments...