Very interesting!
A true lover of wisdom has hands too busy to hold on to anything! He learns by
doing and every pebble in the path becomes her teacher! Oink
----- Forwarded Message ----- From: Waldo @yahoo.com>To:Sent: Friday,
November 12, 2021, 09:46:45 AM ESTSubject: NO NEED FOR CIVIL WAR 2
| WATCH TO SEE IF THIS BECOMES A MEDIA ISSUE. I THINK IT WILL FROM WHAT I READ
ELSEWHERE. "THE PLAN" IS TO RESTORE EACH UNITED STATE RETURN TO THE
GENERIC CONSTITUTION.
Breaking up is hard enough — creating a new government that can both secure
liberty and survive is even harder.
Better Solutions than a National Divorce
A national divorce? No, thank you. Breaking up is hard enough — creating a new
government that can both secure liberty and survive is even harder. Rather, let
us strive to repair the nation we have.
Returning to the Constitution would be a great first step. The surest route to
doing that would be to end federal primacy over state power via restoring the
original meaning of the Commerce Clause, while forcing Congress to legislate
rather than hiding behind unelected bureaucrats by rediscovering the
nondelegation doctrine.
There are reasons to be hopeful that these limitations will be enforced with
renewed vigor. Just this year, the Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF), of
which I am a part, successfully had the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s federal eviction moratorium struck down as exceeding federal power
under the Commerce Clause. It was the first federal regulation struck down
under the Commerce Clause in 20 years.
As for the nondelegation doctrine, in 2019 four justices of the Supreme Court
expressed a willingness to reinvigorate the long-dormant doctrine, even though
it had gone unenforced for more than 80 years. The lower courts seem to be
taking those justices’ statements seriously. In another case brought by TPPF
last week, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the Biden administration’s
federal vaccine mandate, citing concerns that it may violate the nondelegation
doctrine.
(EXCERPTED END OF THE SECESSIONIST ARTICLE BELOW)
Taken together, a proper application of the Commerce Clause and the
nondelegation doctrine could loosen the national relationship enough that a
formal divorce would be neither necessary nor desired.
A National Divorce Wouldn’t Be As Easy Or Worthwhile As Advertised
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A National Divorce Wouldn't Be As Easy Or Worthwhile As Advertised
Proper application of the Commerce Clause and the nondelegation doctrine could
help enough that a national divor...
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