The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
4/12/2006 4:54:08 PM
you won the c/p the 10th amendment game - is there any other purpose to this thread or can you just go ahead and delete it
4/12/2006 4:57:25 PM
?
4/12/2006 5:05:04 PM
Well, obviously there are different ways of interpreting this, and I'm not enough of a law scholar to really know the intricacies of it.I'm just thinking, though...enacting a federal income tax required a Constitutional amendment. So did abolishing slavery.How is slavery any different from, say, abortion, in terms of it being a states' rights issue?The 16th Amendment (establishing a federal income tax) even makes what sounds to me like a specific clarification that the federal government is establishing that particular right, regardless of consensus from the states.how then, for example, did the federal government enact a (now defunct) national 55 mph speed limit?and let me be clear: whether or not Uncle Sam should have the ability to make these sorts of laws is not what I'm arguing...I'm questioning how it is Constitutional[Edited on April 12, 2006 at 5:09 PM. Reason : asdf]
4/12/2006 5:06:11 PM
My guess would be the safety clause.Also, amendments must be ratified by the 75% of the states before they really matter. Effectively, the states consented to a federal income tax. "Why?" you ask. Sounds like a good way to kill a few minutes on Wikipedia if you ask me. [Edited on April 12, 2006 at 5:08 PM. Reason : ...]
4/12/2006 5:07:25 PM
4/12/2006 5:08:03 PM
citizens.
4/12/2006 5:08:47 PM
4/12/2006 5:10:39 PM
i agree - go read wikipedia
4/12/2006 5:11:53 PM
one way they hvae gotten around it is by saying "you can do it, but you wont get money from us"So states could set the drinking age at 11, but they would lose almost all federal funding, which would be a HUGE chunk of their budgets.
4/12/2006 5:29:20 PM
ah, that's true...come to think of it, I think they did the same thing with highway funding with regard to the 55 mph speed limit.
4/12/2006 5:33:13 PM
now for the argument...should the federal government be able to blackmail the states?
4/12/2006 5:43:58 PM
sure, why not?
4/12/2006 6:00:23 PM
4/12/2006 6:12:34 PM
4/12/2006 8:10:10 PM
i think it would be great. would let us get rid of dole and burr.i really dont understand why we pay money to the federal government that is supposed to go to the states. for instance, welfare is implemented differently in each state, with each state getting a certain amount of money. why does this money go through the federal govt at all? (i would prefer a more practical answer instead of the more general/"philosophical" because the fed govt is evil or whatever answer)
4/12/2006 9:54:03 PM
^ Because if it wasn't done that way many states (particularly out west and in the south) would eliminate welfare all-together because it doesn't make sense outside of northern urban centers. Of course, this is less of an issue because the south and west are much more urbanized nowadays, a trend that was greately hindered by the presence of welfare I should point out. The same goes for many other Federal programs such as rent subsidies/government housing/food stamps. It isn't that rural poverty doesn't exist, far from it, it just has to be treated differently and rural state legislatures realize this. Anyway, if the Federal Government didn't make all the states do it then some of the states wouldn't do it (might as well impliment ineffective social programs if someone else is paying for it). The problem arrises, according to progressives, if the south didn't implement all the social programs of the north then northern industry would flee the high taxes by moving to the south. While this has happened anyway it would have happened faster the greater the differential. Has this answered your question?
4/12/2006 10:52:03 PM
this thread needs more edomites
4/12/2006 11:23:13 PM
4/13/2006 12:30:04 AM
Shadegg is a little crazy I think, but those American West conservatives are pretty much money in my book.
4/13/2006 3:13:05 AM
"Necessary and proper." Elastic clause, man. Learn to love it, 'cause it ain't going nowheres.I don't think that it's a bad thing that the founding fathers realized that they may not have accounted for every contigency in human history.
4/13/2006 3:26:31 AM
^ Hmm, read the rest of the clause. "for carrying into execution the foregoing powers"The clause doesn't in any way say congress can do whatever it considers necessary and proper. It says congress can do whatever it considers necessary and proper in order to fullfill its enumerated powers and responsibilities.But you are right, the fore-fathers knew they hadn't thought of everything. That is why they invented the Amendment process. If, in fact, such unconstitutional laws are necessary and proper then the consitution should be changed to reflect that. As it is a couple more appointments to the Supreme Court from the fringe of the Republican Party and all these laws which are so necessary become unconstitutional, again. Win all the elections you want, the SCOTUS has spoken. Even worse, if whatever we believe is necessary and proper is automatically constitutional, then the bill of rights isn't worth the paper its printed on. "We in government believe it is necessary and proper to end seditious speech." "And oh, BTW, your labor and environmental protections are neither necessary nor proper, in my mind, so they're unconstitutional."
4/13/2006 9:49:29 AM
4/13/2006 10:56:23 AM
4/13/2006 1:05:27 PM
It isn't that difficult to understand that the right to some things, like free speech, not getting searched for no reason, et cetera, were deemed so important that they needed to be enumerated, while some things, like the right to mix Cocoa Pebbles with Fruity Pebbles, while imporant, can be left to the states or people.However, if something is so heinous, like slavery or saying I can't eat Captain Crunch, is going on in a state, I have no problem with the federal government putting a stop to that. I know a lot of people feel differently. I'm okay with that.[Edited on April 13, 2006 at 1:26 PM. Reason : ]
4/13/2006 1:23:41 PM
4/13/2006 2:23:51 PM
4/13/2006 2:32:17 PM
4/13/2006 3:07:15 PM
Oh, ok. So when Jefferson compromises the principles he campaigned on after getting elected in the strategic interests of the United States, he's a cowardly bitch, but it's just ordinary and acceptable political practice when it's any other president? Or do you have the same vitriolic nicknames for them?What would you have done differently regarding the Louisiana Purchase? Ignore it?
4/13/2006 3:15:27 PM
4/13/2006 4:29:15 PM
4/13/2006 4:45:09 PM
It is my suggestion that we should pass just such an Amendment. Better to make our shit legal than go on teaching future generations the document can be ignored whenever convenient.
4/13/2006 5:30:46 PM
Baron v. Balitmore, holla
4/13/2006 6:15:29 PM
4/13/2006 8:53:11 PM
^ Ok, as an answer and a suggestion, see the book titled How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution.They determined it was easier to pack the court with like minded individuals than it was to actually convince everyone else of their position, which they would have had to do in order to pass an Amendment.[Edited on April 13, 2006 at 9:34 PM. Reason : ,.,]
4/13/2006 9:34:18 PM
4/13/2006 11:28:13 PM
Come now, let's not be overly dramatic. By which I mean this...
4/14/2006 3:26:47 AM
but campaign donations are considered speech by the supreme court, you need to reconcile that fact with the fact that it is possible to restrict the ammount of speech one person can give.
4/14/2006 7:40:39 AM
4/14/2006 10:47:49 AM
the non rich unknown was eliminated years ago.besides. all non-rich non-incumbents hate freedom, or so i hear mccain says.
4/14/2006 1:29:44 PM
4/14/2006 2:20:23 PM
I would say that 99% of all actions by congress have some language that vaguely authorizes it to take said action. Now the president... that is an entirely different thread
4/14/2006 2:24:18 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dormant_Commerce_Clause[Edited on April 15, 2006 at 3:18 AM. Reason : "BUT REPEAL THE 17th AMENDMENT!!" --- Now this, I can get behind that]
4/15/2006 3:16:26 AM
4/15/2006 9:24:21 AM