A Limiting Document?
by Brion McClanahan
Recently
by Brion McClanahan: Winning
by Losing
There is
a common mantra among those who pursue the old republican principles
of freedom and limited government that the Constitution limits the
power of the central government, and therefore if we just followed
the document everything would be ok; if it were only that simple.
They are not entirely wrong, but the characterization of the Constitution
as a “limiting document” is only partly true.
During the
great "sales job" of 1787 and 1788, proponents of the
Constitution swore that the powers of the central government, as
enumerated in the Constitution, could never be enlarged or enhanced.
The Constitution, it was said, differed from the English model because
it was a written document, as opposed to the unwritten British model
of common law that could fluctuate with the will of ambitious and
unscrupulous judges. The only interpretation could be found
in the language of the document itself, and if the general government
exceeded its constituted authority, the people were no longer duty
bound to follow such tyranny. Alexander Hamilton said as much in
the Federalist essays, as did other proponents of the document,
such as James Iredell of North Carolina, George Nicholas and Edmund
Randolph of Virginia, and James Wilson of Pennsylvania, among others.
Many of the
proponents of the document were good, honest men who believed in
sound American principles of government. Roger Sherman of Connecticut,
John Dickinson of Delaware, and John Rutledge of South Carolina
come to mind. Yet, no one would ever accuse Hamilton and Wilson
of being anything more than ardent nationalists, but there they
were, in 1787 and 1788, defending the Constitution on the basis
that its powers were limited by their strict enumeration and that
the Constitution would continue the federal republic as under the
Articles of Confederation. The States bought it and ratified the
document. Unfortunately, the story did not end there nor did all
Americans believe such shysters as Hamilton and Wilson. There were
holes in their story.
The ratification
of the Constitution was a messy business precisely because the opposition
understood what the Constitution could and would ultimately do to
liberty and good government in the United States. Violence, intimidation,
and the suppression of a free press in many States followed. That
is the untold story. In Pennsylvania, opponents of the document
were forcibly dragged to their seats by a mob in order to secure
a quorum to call for a ratifying convention and then once the document
was ratified, mobs whipped up on their opponents in drunken jubilation,
literally at times. At the same time, the press virtually ignored
the opposition and often printed only the speeches and pamphlets
written in support of the document.
The situation
was worse in Connecticut. There the opposition – labeled as the
"Wrongheads" – was blacklisted from the press, and the
only surviving speeches from the January ratifying convention come
from the proponents, not by accident. Connecticutter Hugh Ledlie,
a veteran of the French and Indian War and the American War for
Independence and a member of the Sons of Liberty, wrote shortly
after the document was ratified in his State that the Constitution
would "in the end…work the ruin of the freedom and liberty
of these thirteen dis-united states…" and he called the Constitution
"a gilded pill."
Most Americans
also probably don’t know that Hamilton was taken to task in the
New York Ratifying Convention and, in essence, exposed as a liar.
After one of his speeches in support of the document, John Lansing
produced his notes of the Philadelphia Convention which showed that
Hamilton wanted and favored a Constitution unlike the one he supposedly
supported. Lansing said Hamilton could not be trusted. New York
ratified the document anyway by two votes. As in Pennsylvania, violence
then gripped the State as proponents took to the streets in New
York City. It was hazardous to your health to be a so-called "Anti-Federalist"
in 1788. Of course the famous essays of "Brutus" and "An
Old Whig" along with the speeches of Patrick Henry of Virginia
(every American should read them) and the close votes in New York,
Virginia, and Massachusetts clearly show that the Constitution was
not the glorious culmination of wisdom that modern Americans view
it to be.
How could people
like Ledlie, Henry, "Brutus" and "An Old Whig"
describe the Constitution as a document that would subvert liberty
when, if the "limiting document" school is correct, the
powers of the general government are circumscribed by their enumeration?
Simple. Because opponents correctly saw the Constitution and the
powers granted to it by the people of the States as a vehicle for
unlimited tyranny. The Constitution established a powerful central
authority – with the ability to tax, spend, borrow, and wage war
– one that if unchecked and unleashed would destroy the "Principles
of ’76," namely republicanism, decentralization, and liberty.
To opponents,
the only proper check was a bill of rights, and almost every State
that submitted a set of proposed amendments placed a "State
sovereignty" amendment at the top of the list. These proposed
"State sovereignty" amendments were a direct assault on
the vague language of the document, namely the infamous "sweeping
clauses" now known as the "Necessary and Proper Clause,"
the "Supremacy Clause," and the "General Welfare
Clause." The Constitution only became a "limiting document"
with the ratification of the Tenth Amendment, and that is why its
enforcement is paramount. Without it, the Constitution as written
opens a malleable Pandora’s Box for scheming politicians to use
to their advantage. It was not sold to the States that way in 1787
and 1788, nor would it have been ratified had the people of the
States thought the general government would turn out to be the modern
leviathan in Washington D.C., but when arguing that the Constitution
is a "limiting document," it must always be remembered
that is only the case if we faithfully adhere to the Tenth Amendment
and the Constitution as ratified and sold to the States.
Otherwise, the opponents of the document who warned against its
ratification will forever be proven correct. We were warned.
August
29, 2012
Brion McClanahan
[send him mail] holds
a Ph.D. in American history from the University of South Carolina
and is a faculty member at Tom
Woods's Liberty Classroom. He is the author or co-author of
three books: The
Founding Fathers Guide to the Constitution (Regnery History,
2012); Forgotten
Conservatives in American History (with Clyde Wilson, Pelican,
2012); and The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Founding Fathers (Regnery,
2009).
Copyright ©
2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part
is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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