My First Name Is Paul
Member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2008
- Messages
- 141
That was not the intent of the founding generation, if that is what you are implying.
lolz.
Horrible article. Speaks in a voice accepting of the tacit presumptions of authority to act. Gigantic, monumental, colossal, catastrophic, utter FAIL.
Care to elaborate?
You think the Louisiana Purchase was a "small degree"?Remember that not all of the Federalists were Hamiltonians. James Madison (The President, not the poster) wrote the thing, and he was a strict constructionist. Which means that the constitution was intended to be strictly constructed, since that is what the writer said was supposed to be done with it. That liberals and their predecessors, the Hamiltonians, created the whole "Living Constitution" crap really just isn't Mr. Madison's fault.
I'll grant you, I'd rather the AoC over the constitution. The constitution is a limited government document, but allows a little bigger than what I would like. I don't know exactly what the AoC contained, but I know it was less, and less is pretty much better. That said, the original intent of the constitution was not for unlimited government. Nor was unlimited government ever instituted under the constitution (The constitution itself was pretty much ignored by Adams, Jackson, Lincoln, and pretty much everyone during and after the Progressive Era possibly exempting Coolidge.) [Analysis is likely incomplete, and exempts Presidents that only violated the constitution to relatively small degrees, like Washington with the Whiskey Rebellion or Jefferson with the Louisiana Purchase].
The bottom line is, thugs with guns can ignore words written in ink. That's it. Its not really the constitution's fault.
Do you really think anyone at the constitutional convention, heck, even Hamilton, would support the monstrosity we have today? I don't think so.
You think the Louisiana Purchase was a "small degree"?![]()
Remember that not all of the Federalists were Hamiltonians. [...]
Do you really think anyone at the constitutional convention, heck, even Hamilton, would support the monstrosity we have today? I don't think so.
• The ratification procedure was crafted so that the Constitution would never come until effect unless it represented the will of a majority of the American electorate. The Framers did this in two ways: (1) Ratification or rejection would come not from state politicians, but from conventions directly elected by the voters for the sole purpose of considering the Constitution, and (2) the Constitution would not go into effect unless conventions in nine states agreed.
Maybe I'm biased since I like Jefferson as a Founder. But compared to anything that was done by Jackson, Lincoln, or the Progressive Presidents... yeah...
Millions of dollars wasted isn't "Small" but it is comparatively so.
This^^It's not just millions of dollars wasted. It's a major step in creating the hierarchy of federal government sovereign over states.