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I am going to borrow heavily from two outstanding
columns that appear on my son's web site,
LibertyDefenseLeague.com.
One author, Russell Longcore, is a publisher; the other,
Wilton Strickland, is an attorney. Both are avid
proponents of State sovereignty and independence.
Longcore's column is entitled
"Edwin Vieira on Secession, New World Order and the
American Republic."
Strickland's column is entitled
"Staying Away From The Federal Courthouse."
Both of these gentlemen share my conviction that the
only chance we have to maintain and defend liberty in
these United States is for free and independent states
to rise in righteous indignation against the onslaught
of federal tyranny that is rapidly destroying our
republic.
America–as
one nation–is
beyond redemption. The federal government is too
arrogant, too malevolent, and too drunk with power to
ever allow itself to be returned to the principles of
federalism and constitutionalism. And this is true no
matter which of the two political parties is in charge.
Fortunately, America's founders did not create
"one nation"
with 13 (now 50) provinces. They created a confederated
republic with 13 (now 50)
"Free and
Independent States." [Declaration of Independence].
This means that. even after the US Constitution was
ratified in 1787, the states maintained independent,
nation-state status. Therefore, each State is duly
authorized and charged with the responsibility of
protecting the rights and liberties of its citizens–even
if that means resisting (peaceably or otherwise) the
federal government—including the right of states to
secede, if need be, in order to protect their liberties.
In opposing my friend and Harvard-trained attorney Edwin
Vieira's column propounding the unconstitutionality of
State secession, Longcore proffers the Natural Law (my
term, not his) right and process by which states may
secede from an unnatural and coercive union. He calls it
a "practical
blueprint for secession."
Here it is:
"Done! Secession completed. Now the REAL work begins."
Longcore ends his treatise with these words,
"Secession is the
Hope for Mankind. Who will be first?"
Strickland's column is equally trenchant. He
perceptively says the following:
"Under the Constitution of the Founders, the states
decided which powers the federal government would have;
today, it is the federal government that decides which
powers the state governments will have."
"Conservatives"
and
"libertarians" who run to federal court and beg for
this treatment are their own worst enemies. Their quest
for a federal veto on local matters such as gun control
or property takings does just as much harm as the
American Civil Liberties Union's quest to eradicate
religion from public view or to establish abortion as a
secular sacrament.
"Liberty cannot survive without independence, and a
temporary victory in federal court today blazes a path
to a thousand defeats tomorrow. As the Founders
understood, any power that MIGHT be abused WILL be
abused, so it must be avoided. Although the states abuse
their power as well, such abuses have limited geographic
scope and allow us to escape as a last resort. There is
no escape from federal power, unless one wishes to
expatriate or renounce citizenship (which the federal
government is making more difficult every day).
"If you confront an unjust law in your state, advocate
its repeal. If that doesn't work, vote for candidates
who will one day repeal it. Failing that, bring a
challenge in state court based on the state
constitution–the U.S. Supreme Court cannot interfere
unless the case involves the U.S. Constitution or
federal law. And as mentioned before, leave the state if
you are ultimately unsatisfied with it; do not spoil it
for the others who wish to remain there."
Amen! Brilliantly stated!
Right about now I can hear all the Big-Government
centralists and unionists out there shouting,
"What about the
supremacy clause of the Constitution?" To which my
son, Tim Baldwin (a constitutional attorney, historian,
and author), writes:
"One of the constitutional tools by which socialist and
nationalist ideologues have incorporated political
principles of centralization and state annihilation is
through the
'Supremacy clause'
of the U.S. Constitution, which states, 'This
Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which
shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties
made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the
United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land.'
(USC, Article 6) To many people, this phrase has been
construed to mean whatever laws and treaties those in
the federal government pass, execute and uphold are
binding on the people of the states and their respective
governments. Admittedly, this concept has taken a
stronghold in America and has been treated as the
accepted principle of constitutional law for
generations. Undoubtedly, every law student attending an
ABA accredited law school is taught this as fact, just
as I was when I attended
Cumberland School of Law at Samford University.
Not everyone agrees with this construction, however.
"Big-government and monarchist himself, Alexander
Hamilton sheds light on the error of this position in
1787 when he addressed the concerns of those Americans
who rejected the U.S. Constitution because of the fear
that the expected effect of the 'Supremacy clause' would
be to subvert the sovereignty of the States to govern
themselves according to their constitutions. Hamilton
attempts to calm their fears, saying, 'It will not
follow from this doctrine [of supremacy] that acts of
the large society [i.e., the union] which are NOT
PURSUANT to its constitutional powers, but which are
invasions of the residuary authorities of the smaller
societies, will become the supreme law of the land.' (Federalist
Paper 33)
Perhaps everyone in America would concede this, but what
is not agreed upon is what the States can and should do
about those laws that are NOT PURSUANT to the
constitutional powers of the federal government. Many
place the burden of correcting that grievance on the
U.S. Supreme Court, as if a body of nine judges
appointed by the executive of the federal government are
an adequate remedy for the machinations of that
distorted philosophy broadly accepted by those in
federal office. Contrarily, those who believe in the
principles of a federalist system should recognize that
each unit of the union (i.e., States) have the duty to
do what Hamilton suggested in response to those laws
contrary to the constitution: 'These [laws] will be
merely acts of usurpation, and WILL DESERVE TO BE
TREATED AS SUCH.' (FP 33, emphasis added) These laws
should be treated as no law at all, and moreover, as
attacks on liberty, and should be resisted on every
level of the union, from federal to state to local
governments, as well as individuals."
As I have said before, if the founders intended that the
federal government should have unlimited power and
authority to decide (translate: dictate) all matters of
law and liberty, why, in the name of common sense, did
the states retain their individuality, independence, and
sovereignty following the ratification of the US
Constitution?
What was the
10th Amendment
all about, if the federal government was the final
arbiter and authority in all matters of law and liberty?
Our form of government has often been called a
"great
experiment," but why?
There have been similar documents protecting individual
rights and liberties before the US Constitution and Bill
of Rights were written. Our founders were well versed in
the sagacious counsel of the enlightenment philosophers,
theologians, and patriots of many generations preceding
them. For example, read
John Locke's
Second Treatise of Government,
and you will easily see where Thomas Jefferson came up
with many tenets of the Declaration of Independence. In
fact, many will argue today (with good points) that the
Articles of Confederation were superior to the
Constitution of 1787 that replaced it. America did not
invent republicanism or the love of liberty.
What America did invent is the doctrine of FEDERALISM:
that a nation would exist with dual jurisdiction
(federal and State), that each authority (State and
federal) would respect the other's jurisdiction and
would not intrude upon the other's jurisdiction, and by
so doing, liberty and republicanism could be better
protected. That was the great American experiment.
With that said, should the US Supreme Court eventually
attempt to declare
Arizona's anti-illegal immigration bill unconstitutional,
the State of Arizona should forthwith IGNORE IT!
Or better yet, the Arizona State Supreme Court should
declare the US Supreme Court ruling unconstitutional.
Arizona, and as many states that still have any sense of
freedom and federalism left in them, should also ignore
and refuse to participate in Obama's national health
care monstrosity.
In fact, there is a host of unlawful federal dictation
that states should ignore.
Since the War Between the States (and especially since
the Presidential administrations of
Woodrow Wilson
and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt),
the principle of federalism (dual jurisdiction) has been
eradicated to the point that today most people have lost
all understanding of, and appreciation for, this
distinctively American principle.
Today it is so bad that virtually everyone within the
federal government (with the exception of
Congressman Ron Paul
and a handful of others) sees Washington, D.C.'s power
and authority as being virtually unlimited.
Remember the US congressman who
recently said the federal government could do anything?
Sadder still is the fact that most attorneys, newsmen,
ministers, and even State governors and legislators
today believe the same thing.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is a prescription for
disaster. And that is exactly what we are experiencing
right now: a disaster. And that's why continuing to
focus on electing
Republicans or Democrats
to national office will never accomplish the goal of
restoring liberty to the people of the states:
Washington, D.C., doesn't believe the people of the
states have any liberties, except by their leave.
I say again, the only chance we have to maintain and
defend liberty in these United States is for free and
independent states to rise in righteous indignation
against the onslaught of federal tyranny that is rapidly
destroying our republic.
And this demands that people who understand, and are
committed to, federalism and State sovereignty run for
State office, and that people who believe in freedom,
and want to protect it, support only those men and women
who will boldly stand for this great American principle.
America has only one chance to regain freedom–only one
chance: a State (or better, a group of states) standing
forcefully on the principle of State jurisdiction and
authority (federalism), which means it (they) should
immediately implement Mr. Longcore's first three
action-points mentioned above; and if it becomes
necessary, points four and five as well.
Obviously, there are some states that are much better
suited to resist the intimidations and bribes of
Washington, D.C, and stand for their own independence
and authority than other states.
But as Mr. Strickland said above, if your State is
determined to remain the slave of Washington, D.C.,
"Leave the state
. . . do not spoil it for the others who wish to remain
there."
New Hampshire's State Motto is
"Live Free or
Die!" It's time that states (including New
Hampshire) understand that if they are indeed going to
"live free,"
they must reinvent, for this generation, the American
experiment of federalism and heed the sage counsel
proffered by Russell Longcore and Wilton Strickland (and
others like them): face up to the fact that the states,
not the US Supreme Court (or any other federal
component), must decide law and protect freedom for the
people of their states.
And if states do not heed this counsel and stand up NOW, this insatiable, liberty-eating monster that is known as Washington, D.C., will quickly swallow up the few remaining liberties that we have left.
Dr. Chuck Baldwin is the pastor of Crossroad Baptist Church in Pensacola, Florida. He hosts a weekly radio show. His website is here.