Ron Paul says slavery was banned in the Constitution?

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Hi all, I was reading Ron Paul's book 'Liberty Defined' last night. In it he says that slavery was banned in the Constitution, but I thought slavery was banned and this was how the slave holding states were able to keep slavery. From the book:

"Of course, the Constitution says nothing about abortion, murder, manslaughter, or any other acts of violence. There are only four crimes listed in the Constitution: counterfeiting, piracy, treason, and slavery."
 
LB2oQo1.jpg
 
According to the original Constitution, slaves counted as a third of a person. Slavery was not illegal in the original document (many founding fathers including Jefferson owned them).
 
According to the original Constitution, slaves counted as a third of a person. Slavery was not illegal in the original document (many founding fathers including Jefferson owned them).

I'm fairly certain it was actually three-fifths of a person.
 
Slavery was not illegal in the original document (many founding fathers including Jefferson owned them).

Obviously RP was not talking about the original Constitution. He was talking about what it says now.
 
Slavery on plantataions, domestic political slaves, funding of foreign puppet oppressors/dictators (political slaves), funding occupation of Palestinians and droning of children of other races are banned per US Constitution or the spirit of it.

If US Americans had been following spirit of the Constitution, there would have been no engagements in global wars, 9/11, resulting police state and grpefest at train stations, airports, stadiums etc. This is now a land far far adrift from the founding principles of America.

Government of the money baggers, for the money baggers, by the money baggers. And disgraced drone king is a political slave of the money baggers even if he appears well clothed, well fed.
 
Article 1, Section 2, Paragraph 3 of the United States Constitution:

Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons.
 
Hi all, I was reading Ron Paul's book 'Liberty Defined' last night. In it he says that slavery was banned in the Constitution, but I thought slavery was banned and this was how the slave holding states were able to keep slavery. From the book:

"Of course, the Constitution says nothing about abortion, murder, manslaughter, or any other acts of violence. There are only four crimes listed in the Constitution: counterfeiting, piracy, treason, and slavery."

We already discussed this in another thread. I personally explained there that the Constitution as amended is what the Constitution is today.

You wouldn't be engaging in trolling behavior, would you? Because if you aren't you're as slow a study as our friend Zippy...

Where did that quote of Rand's you found say anything about the original document?
 
Obviously RP was not talking about the original Constitution. He was talking about what it says now.

It didn't specify which is why I indicated the "original" document as written. Yes, it was later amended concerning slavery.
 
When the government got into the business of regulating our choices through anti-discrimination law, it was attempting to regulate our thoughts. It first forbid certain kinds of choices when made “on grounds of” race, sex, religion, and national origin. That was expanded to disability, which includes “mental” disability. Nowadays, our whole society and economy are burden by the anti-discrimination police.
This was the inevitable result of a 30-year old legal trick. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 didn’t forbid any particular racial or sexual configuration in school or the workplace. An employer or admissions officer is free to choose, so long as he doesn’t choose for the wrong reason. Single-race or single-sex workplaces–freedom of association’s acid test–were still allowed. But, according to law, they could not be consciously created. You can hire only white males, but you cannot intend to hire only white males.
How can we prove intent? This is where the trouble begins. Every decision is made from a mixture of motivations. Not even the actor himself can fully know what went into a decision. Certainly the government cannot. But by forbidding certain kinds of discrimination, the government gives itself power to define what constitutes evidence for malintent.
Courts, it’s hardly surprising, took the easiest path. To prove discrimination, look for circumstantial evidence. They discover “disproportionate effects” and “disparate impact.” This translates to: you’re guilty because you have not hired enough women and minorities. To avoid that fate, you must adopt affirmative action, quotas, goals, timetables, and set asides: the spoils system now poisoning American life: http://mises.org/freemarket_detail.aspx?control=244
 
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