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why not? the accrual of absolute power in the 10 square mile corporate headquarters of DC was incomplete in 1871. it's obvious the process continued with the heavy body blows to the "organic" constitution occuring with the 16th & 17th amendments and the federal reserve act, all in 1913 on the eve of world war. and perhaps the coup-de-grace with the 1933 gold confiscation.The point simply is that Ron Paul appeals to atavism knowing full well it is propaganda, rhetoric, you can't go home again.
seeing we've already been subjugated, this sounds like marketing talk. where are you headed with this?The question going forward is what type of Federalism best fits a free people
see original "organic" constitution, imho...Is it instead a radically de-centered Bio-Regional Federalism?
Elihu wrote: if you know what i mean.
publius wrote:The question going forward is what type of Federalism best fits a free people who purportedly have a free nation of laws and no man above the law.
Is it the super Federalism of a NAFTA and GATT and North American Union and the War on Terror? Is it instead a radically de-centered Bio-Regional Federalism?
there is alot of accusation that paul supporters want to take us back to the pre-reconstruction US. I don't happen to be a member of that school, myself. i always thought that the civil war was fought because of the un-tenable position of a nation founded upon the notion of "all men are created equal." well, does all mean all, or not?I guess there's a school of thought that grants the pre-reconstruction United States an exemplar status in terms of the proper functioning of republican governance. I don't happen to be a member of that school, myself. The "old nation" sucked eggs as badly as this one, if you have to make a distinction between the two.
i don't doubt it. what constitution (or tyrannical force, or marketing persuasion) could ever cure the feelings in people's hearts? the baseline is to extend the law's protection to all equally. btw, it's degrading to relate racist phenomena in geographical terms. as if there's no air up north.Believe me, there are plenty of people in Georgia still holding an abiding grudge against William Tecumseh Sherman.
on the contrary. as i understand the odious amendments, senators used to come from state legislatures and could be recalled at any time. the house was the people's representation and the senate was each state's representation. by making senators popularly elected, the influence of non-geographic political parties expands over all politics. aside from pork there are no local issues. all issues become national issues. ever sit in front of your set on election day hoping and praying that a demo or repub wins some key election in some random state? now is it far-fetched that a madison ave ad agency could take over the whole country?This is one of the problems within the Constitution as it is framed: there is no mechanism to dilute or supercede the power of the largely identical super-parties which have come to dominate national politics.
barracuda wrote:
All this concentration on maritime law, the second constitution, personal sovereignty, and CAPITAL LETTERS is roughly 99% concerned with the negation of manumission, at least that's how it plays out in the real world.
Elihu wrote: i always thought that the civil war was fought because of the un-tenable position of a nation founded upon the notion of "all men are created equal." well, does all mean all, or not?
btw, it's degrading to relate racist phenomena in geographical terms. as if there's no air up north.
on the contrary. as i understand the odious amendments, senators used to come from state legislatures and could be recalled at any time. the house was the people's representation and the senate was each state's representation. by making senators popularly elected, the influence of non-geographic political parties expands over all politics.
ever sit in front of your set on election day hoping and praying that a demo or repub wins some key election in some random state?
eyeno wrote:That is an interesting take on the subject but I am not seeing what you are seeing. I probably have not studied every nuance of the movement but I did look into it in an effort to learn what it was all about. It appeared to me that the throwing off of the shackles of the federal government, attempting to use some form of what they consider legal means, is the goal. Negation of manumission is something that never entered my mind as I studied the movement. What is your angle this?
barracuda wrote:Elihu wrote: i always thought that the civil war was fought because of the un-tenable position of a nation founded upon the notion of "all men are created equal." well, does all mean all, or not?
That's odd, I always thought the civil war was fought for economic reasons having to do with irreconcilable conflicts between the respective production requirements of the agrarian south and the industrialised north. Alternatively or concurrently, to "preserve the union", so-called.
interesting tangent. enigmatic conflict for sure but the knock on conclusion is that the production requirements were resolved in favor of the industrialized north. i can't see how the north (given that the average northern soldier was not an "industrialist" but average joes and farmboys themselves) could have been persuaded to fight for these unspecified ends. or that they fought on behalf of "industrialists". regardless emancipation was the result which takes us back to the point. the outcome put the nation at the crossroads of being able to move the constituion forward. to realize the words it contained for all. it was father abraham's time to put up or shut up. like washington at the conclusion of the revolutionary war. unfortunately he was murdered and we'll never know. for me that's strong evidence that there was invisible agitation behind the war and reconstruction under him would have been completely different. "with malice toward none and charity toward all" or something like that. anyway, i guess it's this aborted future for the newly forged union under the constitution that some of us feel is a reasonable way forward (or backward in this case). it's not inconsistent with an understanding of modern economics. again, an honest money standard for example is not to regress society into different un-equal classes as some slander the idea. WE'VE GOT THAT NOW, hello. not the gold standard of the antebellum past but the honest civics of the future where wanton duplicitous racist war would not be so easy to prosecute.That's odd, I always thought the civil war was fought for economic reasons having to do with irreconcilable conflicts between the respective production requirements of the agrarian south and the industrialised north. Alternatively or concurrently, to "preserve the union", so-called.
touche'People in Georgia don't hate Sherman because they're racists, they hate him because he killed all their families and burned their civilization to the ground. They may, as an adjunct, be racists, but it's not a requirement for hating Sherman.
i am a product of government schools. i shamefully admit my ignorance of this history. we were informed that it was an "enlightened" democratic change. i'm suspicious. at least they got the amendment. i bet it was of the congressionally initiated sort. but i wonder was the remedy an improvement? changing the spirit of the constitution because they couldn't fill some seats? it stinks. i retain my point.No. The mechanism of state legislatures electing senators failed precisely because divergent and independant political parties within these legislatures became increasingly unable to reach agreement on candidates for the Senate, until in the 1850's certain senatorial seats were impossible to fill due to lack of compromise. An outcome unforseen by the founders.
publius wrote:I think the argument is logical.
publius wrote:No. Explain corporate UNITED STATES.
The argument is as a result of the Civil War a new national system formed from the ruins of the old. As a result of this change, the UNITED STATES corporate system formed. This system of government in effect was now Imperial. Flowing from that moment in history we have this outcome today.
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