Nullification
Reconsidered
by
Clyde Wilson
by Clyde Wilson
With
the destructive evil of centralized power becoming every day more
evident and 10th Amendment resolutions appearing in various
State capitals, publication this month of the second volume of Professor
W. Kirk Wood’s magisterial three-volume Nullification:
A Constitutional History,
1776–1833 is serendipitous.
For the first
time in a half century and long past due, serious people are beginning
to search for ways that the famous "checks and balances"
of the American constitutional order might be invoked against a
regime which recognizes no limits to its power. Such a search leads
naturally to a new look at accepted history and "law."
Prof. Wood, whose knowledge of the primary documents of early American
history is astounding and incomparable, has marshaled overwhelming
evidence on the matter.
There is not
the least doubt in the mind of any HONEST person who has studied
the record, that the preponderance of people who framed and ratified
the Constitution intended to form a more
perfect Union "for the United States of America," not
to establish a United State, a sovereign national power. This understanding
was reemphasized in the first Ten Amendments, clearly stipulated
restrictions on the powers of the central apparatus. The understanding
was sealed in concrete, so people mistakenly believed, when Jefferson
and his party took office on "the principles of 1798,"
the unequivocal declarations by Virginia and Kentucky of their right
to block acts of the central government that exceeded its delegated
powers.
True, there
was an element among the Founders who wanted an unchecked central
power. Like every other push for more centralized power since, the
primary motive of the Hamiltonians was rent-seeking. But, of course,
rent-seekers always portray their agenda as essential for some good
purpose – general prosperity, equality, national defense, or some
other alleged social good. But so strong was the allegiance to a
confederal understanding of the Constitutional regime, that the
central power men had to lie about their intentions. In power Hamilton
began to push actions that he had argued in the deceitful polemic,
The Federalist, that the central government would never,
ever do.
Professor
Wood’s evidence is not likely to influence academic historians,
political scientists, and law professors. With a few exceptions
they are not interested in evidence, only in fashion. False and
even childishly superficial arguments about our history and the
Constitution flourish today and have long done so. The assertion
that Americans’ "original intentions" were a centralized
state has always rested upon coercion, chutzpah, and lies. The most
egregious being when Lincoln declared the deliberate, open, democratic,
and constitutional acts of secession of the Southern states to be
mere "combinations" of criminals too numerous to be arrested
by the marshals.
The centralists
made a great rhetorical coup when they formed the argument so that
their version of the Constitution seems the natural, unquestionable
one, and the position of the critics is merely "a compact theory"
made up after the fact by bad people for evil purposes. Wood’s evidence
makes it clear that the opposite was the case. It was the centralists
who made up theory post facto against established understanding.
Their theory was bolstered by semantics and false history. James
Madison was not the "Father of the Constitution" but a
weaselly trimmer who constantly contradicted himself. Which is why
he is the hero of every bad historian, "political philosopher,"
and tyrannical judge in the land. Daniel Webster did NOT win the
famous debate with Robert Hayne of South Carolina on State rights.
In the Senate and in public opinion Webster was the loser. He became
the winner only by subsequent propaganda. South Carolina’s bold
nullification of the tariff in 1832, against nearly the entire American
establishment, is always stated by the historians to be a failure.
But it accomplished its purpose – to bring down the rate of taxation.
There
is a large American anti-centralist literature, entirely persuasive
to anyone who will study it, which of course eliminates most American
"scholars." Jefferson, Randolph of Roanoke, Taylor of
Caroline, William Rawle, St. George Tucker, John C. Calhoun, Albert
T. Bledsoe, Alexander Stephens, and the 20th century
work of James J. Kilpatrick recently discussed here all make an
irrefutable case. But never has the evidence been so massively gathered
and deployed as in Wood’s Nullification: A Constitutional History.
He shows an unequaled knowledge of the primary sources and of historians
and their errors.
It is good
to have this ammunition in our arsenal. An interest in devolution
has been modestly flourishing and, it would appear, steadily increasing
in recent years. Not only the Tenth Amendment resolutions, but the
Free Vermont Republic, the Middlebury Institute, the Abbeville Institute,
the Southern National Congress, the Ludwig von Mises Institute,
and other groups have achieved what was only a short time ago unthinkable
– a serious discussion of checking and even escaping from the jaws
of Leviathan by asserting the long dormant power of the people of
the States – the multiple sovereigns who created the United States
and gave it all the legitimacy that it has. When you speak of secession,
devolution, nullification these days you no longer receive derisive
hoots but rather looks of serious if puzzled interest.
One
of the greatest of American sages and most effective critics of
centralized power, John Taylor of Caroline, wrote that States do
not have rights. People have rights. States are instruments by which
the people may assert their rights against usurpers and oppressors.
Little noticed in the national media, the governor of South Carolina,
Mark Sanford, has been embattled with the federal power and the
interest groups of his own State. He is insisting that any money
received from the federal "stimulus" bounty be used to
pay off debt rather than be poured down the black hole of public
"education." The controversy is at this writing not settled,
and Governor Sanford will probably lose. But it is a start.
Meanwhile,
promoters of 10th Amendment resolutions need to understand
that the 10th Amendment does not enforce itself. Nor
will it ever be recognized by any of the three branches of the central
apparatus or existing political parties. It will have to be enforced
by the people of the States whose freedom it was intended to protect.
April
10, 2009
Clyde
Wilson [send him mail]
was a professor
of history but is recovering nicely, thank you. His most recent
book is Defending
Dixie.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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