Author Topic: State's Rights  (Read 1428 times)

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Offline Rebel Yell

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State's Rights
« on: July 18, 2008, 02:08:12 PM »
i'm not gonna get on my soapbox, but you know who I blame for this mess.

Quote
State's Rights

Please don't accuse me of trying to give a civics lesson because I'm not qualified, but this much I do know.


There are three branches of our federal government, the executive, which is the President, the legislative, which is Congress, including the House of Representatives and the Senate and the judicial, which is the Supreme Court.

It's Congress' job to craft legislation and pass it on to the President who can sign it or veto it. If he vetoes it, it goes back to Congress where a majority vote can override the President's veto.

The Supreme Court is supposed to come into play when there is a question on how something relates to the Constitution, and only then.

But first and foremost, it is the job of all three branches to reflect the wishes of "We the People" and protect the rights of the individual. That's what the Constitution is all about.

The judicial branch was never meant to be able to legislate, only to interpret the Constitution as it applies to the law of the land. Unless an amendment is passed and signed into law, the Supreme Court is supposed to interpret the Constitution as it is written, not as they wish it was written.

I feel that the will of the people is being usurped by nine people in black robes who are not even subject to the vote of the American electorate, men and women who are appointed for life and cannot be removed by anything less than impeachment.

The farther removed you get from the people the laws affect, the more isolated and elite all three branches of the government gets, until it becomes a power unto itself, neither representing nor particularly caring about the opinions of the people they supposedly represent, but the interests of their accursed political parties.

The federal government is too far removed from everyday contact with the people. They don't know what's going on in the street and have no first hand knowledge of what's happening in America.

We need a strong federal government to protect our country from foreign invaders, to maintain national law enforcement, to build our interstate highways and all the many other things which can only be handled by a central authority.

There definitely needs to be federal law about discrimination, uniformity of business practices, prosecution of interstate crimes and the like.

But the problem with Washington is that it has become a monolithic juggernaut of self-serving, outdated, self-inflated men and women, who lack the morality and the courage to stand against the crowd when the crowd is wrong.

Self-preservation has become the norm in D.C. and political partisanship, right or wrong, has become the coin of the realm.

In my humble opinion, the lion's share of domestic political decisions would be better served if left to the individual states. Issues like gay marriage, abortion on demand, the death penalty and many more issues would more perfectly reflect the opinions of the people than anything the Congress could pass.

Why do I say that? For two reasons.

One, due to the outright refusal of the people in power to deal with term limits, we can only vote for two senators and whatever our allowance of representatives is. We have no control over the others who, through earmarks and secret pork barrel amendments manage to send enough public money back to their states to buy their votes, while being a downright sorry Congressman or Senator when it comes to the rest of the country.

The second is that whoever is in the White House has the authority to name judges to the federal bench and will pick the judicial candidates, with the Senate's approval, who subscribe to their ideology, whether liberal or conservative. Which means if you can't get something through both houses of Congress and the President, you get it made into law by the Supreme Court. This is dangerous and puts the power of the other two branches of government into the hands of nine people

For America to ever have a true representative government, I believe it has to begin on the local level, where we are more acquainted with the candidates and more apt to hold them accountable.

What do you think?

Pray for our troops

God Bless America

Charlie Daniels





July 18, 2008
I feel that once a black fella has referred to white foks as "honky paleface devil white-trash cracker redneck Caspers," he's abdicated the right to get upset about the "N" word. But that's just me. -- Jim Goad

Offline JohnnyReb

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Re: State's Rights
« Reply #1 on: July 18, 2008, 03:21:45 PM »
You know what Sam Ervin said was wrong with Washington D.C., "Air conditioning". Here's why. Before Washington was airconditioned, the reps and senators and even the president got the heck out of Washington during the heat of summer. They used to go home for a few months to see and talk to the people they represented. May sound a little simple but bye george, I think ol' Sam had a point. Now, the only time they leave Washington is to fly around the world on the taxpayers dime.
“The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism. But, under the name of ‘liberalism’, they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program, until one day America will be a socialist nation, without knowing how it happened.” - Norman Thomas, U.S. Socialist Party presidential candidate 1940, 1944 and 1948

"America is like a healthy body and its resistance is threefold: its patriotism, its morality, and its spiritual life. If we can undermine these three areas, America will collapse from within."  Stalin

Offline Rebel Yell

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Re: State's Rights
« Reply #2 on: July 18, 2008, 03:38:46 PM »
You know what Sam Ervin said was wrong with Washington D.C., "Air conditioning". Here's why. Before Washington was airconditioned, the reps and senators and even the president got the heck out of Washington during the heat of summer. They used to go home for a few months to see and talk to the people they represented. May sound a little simple but bye george, I think ol' Sam had a point. Now, the only time they leave Washington is to fly around the world on the taxpayers dime.

What happened is we quit electing men and started electing ****in' snakes.
I feel that once a black fella has referred to white foks as "honky paleface devil white-trash cracker redneck Caspers," he's abdicated the right to get upset about the "N" word. But that's just me. -- Jim Goad

Offline Jim

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Re: State's Rights
« Reply #3 on: July 18, 2008, 09:38:24 PM »
You know what Sam Ervin said was wrong with Washington D.C., "Air conditioning". Here's why. Before Washington was airconditioned, the reps and senators and even the president got the heck out of Washington during the heat of summer. They used to go home for a few months to see and talk to the people they represented. May sound a little simple but bye george, I think ol' Sam had a point. Now, the only time they leave Washington is to fly around the world on the taxpayers dime.



congress critter was never intended to be a full time job. 
My fellow Americans, there is nothing audacious about hope. Hope is what makes people buy lottery tickets instead of paying the bills. Hope is for the old gals feeding the slots in Atlantic City. It destroys the inner-city kid who quits school because he hopes he'll be a world-famous recording artist.

What's the difference between Sarah Palin and Barack Obama?

One is a well turned-out, good-looking, and let's be honest, pretty sexy piece of eye-candy.

The other kills her own food.

Offline Thor

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Re: State's Rights
« Reply #4 on: July 19, 2008, 12:08:43 PM »
Maybe I ought to run for Congress ?? I, too, am tired of the bullshit that they pull. I just want this country to run as intended by it's founders. While I'm no authority on Constitutional law, it sure seems to me that the founders made it fairly simple to understand.

That demonstrates another problem with our country, why do we keep electing lawyers into the Congress and Senate?? Sure, one  needs a grasp of the laws, but seriously, we keep allowing them to make laws that violate the entire concept of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Charlie Daniels is, once again, steel on target.
"The state must declare the child to be the most precious treasure of the people. As long as the government is perceived as working for the benefit of the children, the people will happily endure almost any curtailment of liberty and almost any deprivation."- IBID

I AM your General Ne'er Do Well, Troublemaker & All Around Meanie!!

"Congress has not unlimited powers to provide for the general welfare, but only those specifically enumerated."-Thomas Jefferson