They Can’t Push Us Around Forever
by State Rep. Susan Lynn (TN)
The following
is a letter from Tennessee to the other 49 State Legislatures.
We send greetings
from the Tennessee General Assembly. On June 23, 2009, House
Joint Resolution 108, the State Sovereignty Resolution, was
signed by Governor Phil Bredesen. The Resolution created a committee
which has as its charge to:
- Communicate
the resolution to the legislatures of the several states,
- Assure them
that this State continues in the same esteem of their friendship,
- Call for
a joint working group between the states to enumerate the abuses
of authority by the federal government, and
- Seek repeal
of the assumption of powers and the imposed mandates.
It is for those
purposes that this letter addresses your honorable body.
In 1776, our
founding fathers declared our freedom in the magnificent Declaration
of Independence; our guide to governance. They established a nation
of free and independent states. Declaring that the purpose of our
political system is to secure for its citizens their natural rights.
The Constitution authorizes the national government to carry out
seventeen enumerated powers in Article 1, Section 8 and the powers
of several of the ensuing amendments.
At the time
of the Constitutional ratification process James Madison drafted
the Virginia
Plan to give Congress general legislative authority and
to empower the national judiciary to hear any case that might cause
friction among the states, to give the congress a veto over state
laws, to empower the national government to use the military against
the states, and to eliminate the states accustomed role in
selecting members of Congress. Each one of these proposals was soundly
defeated. In fact, Madison made many more attempts to authorize
a national veto over state laws, and these were repeatedly defeated
as well.
There
are clear limits to the power of the federal government and
clear realms of power
for the states. However, the simple and clear expression of
purpose, to secure our natural rights, has evolved into the modern
expectation that the national government has an obligation to ensure
our life, to create our liberty, and fund our pursuit of happiness.
The national
government has become a complex system of programs whose purposes
lie outside of the responsibilities of the enumerated powers and
of securing our natural rights; programs that benefit some while
others must pay.
Today, the
federal government seeks to control the salaries of those employed
by private business, to change the provisions of private contracts,
to nationalize banks, insurers and auto manufacturers, and to dictate
to every person in the land what his or her medical choices will
be.
Read
the rest of the article
October
22, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 Tenth Amendment
Center
|