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from here on April 22, 2009
http://redstateleader.com/blog/?p=289
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Last week, Governor Rick Perry (R-TX) fired a warning shot across the federal
government’s bow with his polite reminder that Texas could always secede from
the Union. He also endorsed a resolution affirming the Tenth Amendment that has
gained traction in several states, increasing the public momentum in favor of
returning power to the states.
And now, one state is offering a bill that would seek to undo an older judicial
doctrine dating back to the New Deal—in the case Wickard v. Filburn of 1942—to
which constitutional scholars date the modern origin of unlimited government in
America. That decision cemented the “intrastate commerce” doctrine that
“constitutionalized” any federal law regulating commerce within a state—as
opposed to commerce among the several states. In Men in Black, Mark Levin, notes
that “for the next fifty years, the Supreme Court used the commerce clause as
legal justification to uphold federal intrusion into ‘just about anything.’”
And since then, there has been no limit really to what the federal government
has regulated. Guns. Energy. Health Care. And on down the line. Nothing has been
spared from the federal onslaught. But that may be coming to an end.
In Montana, Governor Brian Schweitzer, a Democrat, recently signed HB 246, a
bill that affirms the Tenth, Ninth, and Second Amendments, as well as its own
state constitutional protections of the right to keep and bear arms. It also
cites the general understanding of the Second Amendment at the time Montana
entered the Union: “The second amendment to the United States constitution
reserves to the people the right to keep and bear arms as that right was
understood at the time that Montana was admitted to statehood in 1889, and the
guaranty of the right is a matter of contract between the state and people of
Montana and the United States as of the time that the compact with the United
States was agreed upon and adopted by Montana and the United States in 1889.”
The bill itself exempts any “personal firearm, a firearm accessory, or
ammunition that is manufactured commercially or privately in Montana and that
remains within the borders of Montana” from any “federal law or federal
regulation, including registration, under the authority of Congress to regulate
interstate commerce.”
This is a courageous act by yet another state to stand against an increasingly
oppressive federal regime. It is a legal strategy that ought to be emulated by
states across the Union, to undo the critically flawed activist doctrine of
“intrastate commerce,” and any others that violate powers otherwise reserved to
the states and the people under the Tenth Amendment.
The primacy of states in the federal Union was once a bedrock principle that
guided the founding of this nation. It recent years, it has become little more
than an arcane theory of government allowed to gather dust for some 67 years.
But unless all three branches of the government—including the judiciary—return
to federalism, eventually states like Texas may actually invoke their secession
clause. And states’ rights will be a good idea whose time has come—again.
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My comment, submitted under the article on April 22, 2009:
By Elias Alias on April 22nd, 2009 at 11:13 am
Thank you for a great article. I hope it’s read widely. I would only add that
the organization which is most responsible for Montana’s “made in Montana” gun
bill is MSSA - Montana Shooting Sports Association, headed by Gary Marbut. The
nation as a whole owes this organization much, for without MSSA and Mr. Marbut,
this bill would have never made it through the Montana legislature.
http://www.mtssa.org/
Salute!
Elias Alias
Willow Creek, Montana
http://www.thementalmilitia.com/forums/
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