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Examiner Editorial: States reassert sovereignty with legislation


September 21, 2009

There’s a growing movement on the part of states to override federal laws and regulations under the 10th Amendment, which reserves powers to the states not delegated to the federal government. So far, the battle lines have been drawn at Real ID, medical marijuana and firearms, but federally mandated health insurance may not be far behind.

State sovereignty resolutions were introduced in 37 states this year; seven passed. Although the resolutions are not legally binding, Tenth Amendment Center founder Michael Boldin said they “serve notice” that states will no longer automatically enforce federal mandates in areas they believe the central government has no constitutional authority.

Montana’s first-in-the-nation law reasserting state authority with the regulation of firearms manufactured and sold within state boundaries was soon followed by a similar law in Tennessee. Officials from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives have already sent letters to gun dealers and federal permit holders in both states telling them to ignore the state law. A court battle is next.

Nearly 20 other states have similar legislation in the works, including directives to their governors to order National Guard troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. Next year, Arizona will have a state constitutional amendment on the ballot that allows residents to opt out of any national health care program.

“The federal government doesn’t rule to limit its own power very often. I don’t think going to court and trying to litigate is the best way to put the  federal government in a constitutional box,” Boldin said, pointing out that popular resistance to the hated Stamp Act led by Revolutionary War heroes Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry “effectively nullified the law.” The same thing happened with the Real ID Act, which many states refused to enforce. “The feds had to back off three times,” Boldin said.

State sovereignty supporters stand on solid historical ground. James Madison’s “Virginia Plan,” which would have given Congress veto power with state laws and allowed the federal judiciary to hear all disputes, was soundly defeated by the signers of the Constitution. A needed check on an overreaching federal government that grows bigger by the day, the reassertion of state sovereignty should be a welcome development to Americans concerned about losing their liberties — just like the Founders were.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

MarijuanaLobby

Sep 21, 2009

What your community and State could save on taxing Marijuana, and how much we spend on the War on Marijuana...

MarijuanaLobby.org
Change we can engage in...

 

Starchild

Sep 22, 2009

Excellent editorial! And one of many recent strong editorials from the Examiner, I might add. Way to go, whoever's writing 'em! It's about time the people had a voice speaking out for both economic freedom and civil liberties in the local print media.

 

Starchild

Sep 22, 2009

P.S. - The Examiner has become San Francisco's #1 paper in more than circulation.

 

Humanitarian_always

Oct 21, 2009


What they are talking about is very easily fixed by reclaiming your State Citizenship in whatever state you live in. Go to www.state-citizen.org and read the files. Then, if you want to check the info out, go to your local law library and look it up. Then, if you decide you do not want the feds forcing you to take poison (Cough the swine flu vacccine), or tired of their growing control, for a small fee the owner of that website helps people step by step to get them through the process. We can take a stand people and say we are done with the lies and the control.

 


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