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.
He thinks that challenging the country's laws by setting the extremes for California makes him a tough boy. All it makes him is a flake who with a little luck will disappear from the scene soon.
Throughout history things have always ended the same way. The Romans, the Greeks and all those other republics have had the same result.
Those traitors that performed a coup knew this very well, in fact so well they wrote it into the preamble of the constitution. "...secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
They knew their prosperity was assured (in more ways than one) and the future could look after itself. As Thomas Jefferson so elegantly stated, "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."
Guess the time has arisen and it will be our blood. The price is estimated in the 100's of millions,
Would there be something like the Articles of Confederation that would insure mutual protection from outside forces?
I would say that has been tried and here we are.
Competition is the mother of invention and is the only real friend of the consumer in areas of the economy. Why would not competition work the same wonders in government?
Here is an older copy of a senate document dealing with rights that is given to new senators. There is a newer version available with a little search effort in the government site.
http://1215.org/lawnotes/lawnotes/pvc...
The state is never the answer but the problem. Only living beings are involved in fair trade. Government by its very nature is violence. For government to give to one, they must first take from another.
Courts fixing bad things that happen happens every day too.
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It is always bad form to use the fallacy of argumentum ad hominem. But there are some cases when it is not really a fallacy, such as when one needs to evaluate the truth of factual statements (as opposed to lines of argument or statements of value) made by interested parties. If someone has an incentive to lie about something, then it would be naive to accept his statements about that subject without question. It is also possible to restate many ad hominem arguments so as to redirect them toward ideas rather than people, such as by replacing "My opponents are fascists" with "My opponents' arguments are fascist."
If this is not what you are referring to then please let me know. Otherwise I will pay closer attention in the wording I use to challenge an argument.
Why are states different from the Federal government?
Most important, states are all fictions so how can they compete?
As I do not know you I only have your words to go by as to your integrity. You say you have read something and as I can not disprove then I must accept you for your word. However, my what you post it is easy to determine your comprehension skills are based on what you want to be true.
I asked if you had ever rectified what was implied by Hamilton, Madison and Jay against reality but you reply back with some emotional triad about my reality.
During the first term, Hamilton convinced that idiot Washington that he could charter a central bank. Rectify that with the Federalist papers and the constitution.
As to the judiciary, let's start with Hamilton again in Federalist 78:
"Whoever attentively considers the different departments of power must perceive, that, in a government in which they are separated from each other, the judiciary, from the nature of its functions, will always be the least dangerous to the political rights of the Constitution; because it will be least in a capacity to annoy or injure them. The Executive not only dispenses the honors, but holds the sword of the community. The legislature not only commands the purse, but prescribes the rules by which the duties and rights of every citizen are to be regulated. The judiciary, on the contrary, has no influence over either the sword or the purse; no direction either of the strength or of the wealth of the society; and can take no active resolution whatever. It may truly be said to have neither force nor will, but merely judgment; and must ultimately depend upon the aid of the executive arm even for the efficacy of its judgments."
And then comes Marshall that usurps the constitution and declares the court the arbitrator of all things constitutional.
And your implication that the crooks that devised the constitution are the founders is plainly absurd, The founders are those that signed the Declaration of Independence freeing this land from the tyranny of a king, not those that stole the country with an action they were not appointed to do.
As to the constitution, the only state that put that jewel to a vote of the people was Rhode Island and it failed miserably. It was only a state convention appointed by government that overrode the population and did it anyway.
The elitist gathered in Philadelphia was after but one thing, power. For the most part they were all well educated and well read and knew exactly what they were doing. Of the delegates, more than half were lawyers so explain why the document reads as it does.
From what I have seen thus far, if the majority here as history scholars, then history does not fare too well.
What does friends or enemies have to do with anything? This is a forum, a venue for debate where facts rule and rhetoric and innuendo are exposed.
As in the infamous words of John Galt, I live my life for no man nor ask any other to live his life for me. I am not looking for solutions, I have resolved what I need.
Respectful, define what you mean by respectful as your use does not comply with it's root meaning, respicere.
https://www.galtsgulchonline.com/faq#...
"(The language of that clause is hideously vague and has been used to destroy liberty and free trade for 150 years.)"
It wasn't so originally, but just like many other Amendments (like the Fourteenth) it has been construed by those with an agenda to undermine and reverse original intent.
Your whole argument is based on what you want to be true not reality.
I take you are a grown individual so who am I to tell you to do or not do something.
Please show me where the Articles of Confederation have been repealed. I suppose by your supposition that the Northwest Ordinance which was part of the Articles of Confederation is not valid either.
What you agree with does not seem to carry much weight as you have shown a propensity to ignore facts casting a cloud on judgement.
Being you do not "believe" in the Articles of Confederation, then let's move on to the Constitution. I take that you have perused it, but have you read it? I mean really read it?
Stop for a minute. Put away your emotional angst and return to rationality. -1
It might really help if you separate in your communications what parts you want others to read as sarcastic, because after re-reading several of your posts, if you were stating things sarcastically, it would change much of the tenor and argument you make. I would also caution against treating people on this forum like those in a common internet chat site: for the most part those here are well-read and well-studied and we value honest debate. But we draw the line at personal attacks and belittlement.
I have read each and every of the documents you have cited thus far. I have studied ancient civilizations and government as well as modern ones and I thought it was well-outlined in the notes on the Constitutional Convention that the Founders had similarly studied and debated the virtues of many civilizations including but not limited to Ancient Rome, Ancient Greece, Carthage, Great Britain, and even Switzerland. I have read and taught the Declaration of Independence and Constitution - as well as its amendments, so while I value others insights into them, I am no stranger to them or their history. The majority of those on this forum are similarly scholars of history.
We're not enemies. We're both looking for solutions. But we can certainly do so in a respectful manner.
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