Basic Concepts of "Government" |
Essay by |
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June 2009 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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[ Notes for this essay are on a separate page.] |
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Think NOT that you must have a law degree to understand the Constitution of the United States; or that the lawyers, law professors and black robed judges are the ones who understand it best. They are the ones who perverted it. To restore constitutional government, We the People must learn the basic concepts of "government"; and we must learn the Constitution, elect representatives who will honor their oaths to support it (Art VI, clause 3), and remove from office those who don't. The Constitution is a short document which anyone — who makes a reasonable effort — can understand quite well. You need only (1) The Declaration of Independence, (2) The Constitution, and (3) The Federalist Papers. The latter is a collection of 85 essays written for the public by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, and published during 1787 and 1788, in order to explain the proposed Constitution to the People and to induce them to ratify it. [1] Also, since word meanings can change drastically throughout time [2], if we are to understand the objective meaning of the Constitution — the original intent — we must understand the words the same way the founders understood them. An American Dictionary of The English Language, Noah Webster (1828), published in facsimile edition, is readily available. 1. The function of a Constitution is to restrict the power of civil government:
2. "Federal" refers to the form of our government: An alliance of States with close cultural and economic ties associated together in a "federation" with a national government to which is delegated supremacy over the States in specifically defined areas. [3] 3. A "republic" is "a state in which the exercise of the sovereign power is lodged in representatives elected by the people ..." (Webster's 1828). A "constitutional republic" is a state in which the representatives (and other officials) are limited and restricted by a constitution. This country was established as a constitutional republic. 4. A "democracy" is two wolves and one sheep voting on what to have for dinner. 5. Decentralization: In a free country, government is decentralized: there exist various kinds of government, each with their own sphere of operation. Webster's (1828) lists three: "self-government" — man's control and restraint over his own temper, passions, and social actions; "family government" — parents' authority over their children and other family matters; and civil government — the form of, and the rules and principles by which a nation or state is governed. There is also government in religious associations (e.g., Mat 18:15-17); charities; professional, trade, and sports associations (in earlier times, these set the standards and handled the discipline for their members); and other voluntary organizations with their own rules and requirements. But in a totalitarian country, the civil government eliminates the other forms of government so that its power is unchallenged in all spheres of life:
6. Decentralization & Local Governments: In a free country, civil government itself is decentralized — we have city governments, county governments, and state governments, as well as the federal government. Each local government has its own constitution that defines its powers & duties. When speaking of the national government, do not confuse its few powers — those enumerated in the U.S. Constitution — with the more extensive powers that may be granted to State and local governments in their constitutions. James Madison wrote in The Federalist Papers, No. 45 (9th paragraph): The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those that are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite. The former will be exercised principally on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce; with which last the power of taxation will, for the most part, be connected. The powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people ... So, do you see? The federal government isn't supposed to have anything to do with our lives, liberties and properties except as follows: Other than those in military service, it has no lawful criminal jurisdiction over us unless we are counterfeiters, pirates or traitors; it has no civil jurisdiction over us unless we file for bankruptcy; if we are inventors or writers, it secures for us the rights to patents & copyrights; it makes rules for naturalizing new citizens, and it delivers our mail! (Art I, Sec 8 & Art III, Sec 3, U.S. Constitution) That's basically it, Folks! So mortgage bailouts, medical care, pensions, family matters, education, housing, food stamps, tattoo removal, Nancy Pelosi's mice, "community redevelopment", light bulbs, and the like, are NONE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S BUSINESS! The local governments, if the People have authorized such in the local constitution, may address such matters. But the only areas in which the federal government may lawfully act are those enumerated in the U.S. Constitution. 7. In a free country, civil government is restrained — it is limited by the Constitution in what it is allowed to do. But in a tyranny, those who hold power do whatever they want — they know no law but their own ideas, whims, self-interest, self-glorification, and lust for power. Webster (1828) defined "govern": To direct and control ... either by established laws or by arbitrary will ... Thus in free states, men are governed by the constitution and laws; in despotic states, men are governed by the edicts or commands of [a tyrant] .... [5] WE the People created the national government when We, as States, ratified the Constitution. WE determined its powers and duties and enumerated those powers and duties in the written Constitution. None of the three branches of the national government: neither the Legislative, nor the Executive, nor the Judiciary, may do ANYTHING unless WE first gave it permission in the Constitution. WE are the Creators; those in the national government, be they Senators, Representatives, federal judges, or the President, are mere creatures. Alexander Hamilton said in The Federalist Papers, No. 33, (6th paragraph): If the federal government should overpass the just bounds of its authority and make a tyrannical use of its powers, the people, whose creature it is, must appeal to the standard they have formed [the Constitution], and take such measures to redress the injury done to the Constitution as the exigency may suggest and prudence justify. [emphasis added] Our Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land (Art VI, cl.2); and anything contrary to our Constitution is lawlessness — no matter who in office or on the bench does it. 8. How should we understand the Constitution? Should we understand it the same way our founders did ("original intent")? Or, does its meaning "evolve" throughout time, so that it "means" whatever the gang in power (at any point in time) says it means?
And just how do we learn what the judges say the Constitution means? Well, you really have to go to law school and learn how to do legal research; how to read judicial writing (which is often intended to conceal the judges' complete lack of intellectual honesty); and how to construe conflicting court decisions. Then, you usually end up going with the court's latest pronouncement (once you have located it) — knowing full well that it may change when a new gang gets on the bench. [8] Obviously, under the second view — we don't have constitutional government. Instead, the judiciary, the Congress, and the Executive Branch impose their unfettered wills on us; and THIS is how we have been transformed from a "free state" where we were governed by the Constitution and laws; into a despotic state, where we are governed by the edicts or commands of judges, congressmen & senators, presidents, and meddlesome federal agencies. 9. What are "Rights" and where do they come from? Are rights unalienable gifts from God? Are rights inherent to our nature as humans? Is the Bill of Rights (the first 10 Amendments to the U.S. Constitution) the source of our rights? Are "rights" entitlements to stuff paid for by other people?
10. The U.S. Constitution is the document that created the national government. [11] When the People through their States ratified the Constitution, the People and the States did not lose their status as independent sovereigns who would be capable of corrective action if the national government were to exceed the powers granted to it. Except for those few powers (primarily relating to national defense & other external objects) that the People and the States specifically delegated to the national government, the People and the States remain independent and sovereign. Furthermore, the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution states: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor Prohibited by it to the States, [12] are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. So when the "creature" usurps powers not granted in the Constitution, the "Creators" are not bound by the usurpations. Those usurpations are, by definition, lawless. When this happens, the States have the Right and the Duty to rein in their creation — for the creature has become Frankenstein. Tenth Amendment Resolutions, nullification by States, Jury nullification, etc., are lawful, consistent with our Constitution, and if properly implemented, can restore our Constitutional Republic with its federal form of government! That, instead of a totalitarian dictatorship with a populace forever crushed with debt, is the Blessing we want to leave our Posterity.
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© 2009 Publius Huldah |
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Publius Huldah is herself a lawyer; |
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