The 10th Amendment. Amerca’s last hope?

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 State Representative Dan Itse was the sponsor of HCR6, a resolution affirming States’ rights based on Jeffersonian principles. While ultimately not passed, his proposal gained attention well beyond the Granite State’s borders, with other states joining in. Rep. Itse even appeared on the Glenn Beck Show to discuss the plan to tell the Federal government it’s "gone far enough." Indeed the States’ Rights Movement has gained momentum, with one of Alaska Gov Sarah Pailin’s final acts being the signing similar legislation, along with many others as well. Certainly, Dan is giving it another go here in the Granite State in the upcoming legislative session. He makes a convincing case that a re-affirmation of states’ rights is the only chance we have at saving ourselves from the dustbin of history’s failed societies.

Syndicated columnist Cal Thomas wrote on this very subject this week making the very same point…

Can the 10th Amendment Save Us?

By CAL THOMAS

Does the U.S. Constitution stand for anything in an era of government excess? Can that founding document, which is supposed to restrain the power and reach of a centralized federal government, slow down the juggernaut of czars, health insurance overhaul and anything else this administration and Congress wish to do that is not in the Constitution?

The framers created a limited government, thus ensuring individuals would have the opportunity to become all that their talents and persistence would allow. Those on the left have put aside the original Constitution in favor of a "living document" that they believe allows them to do whatever they want and demand more tax dollars with which to do it.

Can they be stopped? Some constitutional scholars think the 10th Amendment offers the best opportunity. The 10th Amendment states: "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."

In 1939, the Supreme Court began to dilute constitutional language so that it became open to broader interpretation. Rob Natelson, professor of constitutional law and legal history at the University of Montana, has written that even before Franklin Roosevelt’s court-packing scheme, it was changing the way the Constitution was interpreted, especially "how the commerce and taxing powers were turned upside-down, the necessary and proper clauses and incidental powers, the false claim that the Supreme Court is conservative, how bad precedent leads to more bad court rulings, state elections as critical for constitutional activists, and more."

While during the past seven decades the court has tolerated the federal welfare state, Natelson says it has never, except in wartime, "authorized an expansion of the federal scope quite as large as what is being proposed now. And in recent years, both the court and individual justices – even ‘liberal’ justices – have said repeatedly that there are boundaries beyond which Congress may not go."

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