The States Can Stop Obama
By Sheriff
Richard Mack (Ret.)
By now we have all heard the clichés and seen
the posters from the ‘Tea Parties’ espousing freedom, less government, and
perhaps most of all, how the federal government had better back off trying
to shove their national healthcare down our otherwise healthy throats. The
truth of the matter
is
all the slogans of “Don’t Tread On Me” or “Give Me
Liberty Or Give Me Death” or “We’re Mad As Hell And We’re Not Taking It Anymore,”
don’t mean a thing when compared to reality; the real and actual answer to
all the protests, marches, and outrage. The answer is in our own backyards!
The States can stop every bit of it! That’s
right, the individual States can stop ‘Obamacare’ and
all other forms of out-of-control federal government mandates and ‘big
brother’ tactics. If Missouri, Illinois, Kansas, Texas, etc. want nothing to do
with national healthcare as proposed by Barack Obama or Congress, then all they have to do is say “No!”
For you skeptics who think the States could
no more do that than fly to the moon, let’s look at the law. First, the U.S. Constitution is the ultimate and
supreme law of the land. More specifically, the Bill of Rights was established, because some of our Founding Fathers, feared that the Constitution
did not go far enough in restricting or limiting the central government.
Hamilton was one of a select few who wanted
a bigger and powerful federal government. However, several key states and
powerful delegates such as Patrick Henry, said they would not support the
formation of a new government if the Constitution
did not contain a Bill of Rights, a
supreme law to establish basic and fundamental human rights that could never,
for all future American generations, be violated, altered or encroached upon by
government. So the Framers of our Constitution
came up with ten; ten God-given freedoms that would forever be held inviolable
by our own governments.
The last of these basic, foundational, principles was the one to protect the power, sovereignty,
and the autonomy of the States; the Tenth
Amendment. This amendment and law underscores the entire purpose of the Constitution to limit government and
forbids the federal government from becoming more powerful than the ‘creator.’
Let’s be very clear here; the States in this case were the creator. They formed
the federal government, not the other way around. Does anyone believe
rationally that the States intended to form a new central government to control
and command the States at will? Nothing could be further from the truth.
Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution
details what duties the federal government will be responsible for under our
system of ‘balanced power.’ Anything not mentioned in Article 1, Sec. 8, is “reserved to the States respectively, or to the
people.” (Tenth Amendment) Hence, the
federal government was not allowed creativity or carte blanche to expand or
assume power wherever and whenever they felt like it. The feds had only
discrete and enumerated and very limited powers. Omnipotency
was the last thing the Founding Fathers intended to award the newly formed
federal government. They had just fought the Revolutionary War to stop such
from Britain and their main concern was to prevent a recurrence here in
America.
In perhaps the most recent and powerful Tenth Amendment decision in modern
history, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Mack/Printz v U.S. that “States are not subject to federal
direction.” But today’s federal Tories argue that the “supremacy clause” of the
U.S. Constitution says that the
federal government is supreme and thus, trumps the States in all matters. WRONG!
The supremacy clause is dealt with in Mack/Printz,
in which the Supreme Court stated once and for all that the only thing “supreme”
is the Constitution itself.
Our constitutional system of checks and
balances certainly did not make the federal government king over the states,
counties, and cities. Justice Scalia opined for the
majority in Mack/Printz,
that “Our citizens would have two political capacities, one state and one
federal, each protected from incursion by the other.”
So yes, it is the duty of the State to stop
the Obamacare ‘incursion.’ To emphasize this
principle Scalia quotes James Madison, “The local or
municipal authorities form distinct and independent portions of the Supremacy,
no more subject within their respective spheres, to the general authority than
the general authority is subject to them, within its own sphere.”
The point to remember here is; where do we
define the ‘sphere’ of the federal government? It’s right in Article 1, Section
8 of the Constitution. Anything not
found within this section belongs to the States or to the People. So where does
healthcare belong? The last place it belongs is with the President or Congress
It is NOT their responsibility, and the States need to make sure that Obama does not overstep his authority.
Just in case there is any doubt as to what
the Supreme Court meant, let’s take one more look at Mack/Printz. “This separation of the two
spheres
is one of the Constitution’s structural
protections of liberty. Hence, a double security arises to the rights of the
people. The different governments will control each other...” What? The Constitution,
the supreme law of the land, has as a “structural protection of liberty” that
States will keep the federal government in check? No wonder it was called
a system of “checks and balances.” The States (and Counties) are to maintain
the balance of power by keeping the feds within their proper sphere.
So do the States have to take the bullying
of the federal government? Not hardly! The States do not have to take or
support or pay for Obamacare or anything else from
Washington DC. The States are not subject to federal direction. They are
sovereign and “The Constitution
protects us from our own best intentions.” (Mack/Printz) Which means the States can tell national
healthcare proposals or laws to take a flying leap off the Washington monument.
We are not subject to federal direction!
In the final order pursuant to the Mack/Printz
ruling Scalia warned, “The federal government
may neither, issue directives requiring the States to address particular
problems, nor command the States’ officers, or those of their political
subdivisions, to administer or enforce a federal regulatory program. Such
commands are fundamentally incompatible with our constitutional system of dual
sovereignty.” It is rather obvious that nationalized healthcare definitely
qualifies as a “federal regulatory program.”
Thus, the marching on Washington and pleas
and protests to our DC politicians are misdirected.
Such actions are ‘pie in the sky’ dreaming that somehow expects the tyrants who
created the tyranny, will miraculously put a stop to it. Throughout the history
of the world such has never been the case.
Tyrants have never stopped their own corrupt
ways. However, in our system of “dual sovereignty,” the States can do it.
If we are to take back America and keep this process peaceful, then state
and local officials will have to step up to the plate. Doing so is what States’
Rights and State Sovereignty are all about.
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Author/speaker and former county sheriff, Richard
Mack has served in a wide variety of roles over the course of his nearly twenty
year career in law enforcement, which began in Provo, Utah. After nearly 11
years with the Provo Police Department, Mack decided to return to his childhood
turf in Arizona and run for Graham County Sheriff. His campaign took off and
he was elected in 1988. He was named Elected Official of the Year by the Arizona-New
Mexico Coalition of Counties in 1994, received the National Rifle Association
(NRA) Law Officer of the Year, inducted into the NRA Hall of Fame, 1995 Cicero
Award, Samuel Adams Leadership Award from the Local Sovereignty Coalition,
and Gun Owners of America Defender of the Second Amendment Award. During his
tenure, federal officers informed the sheriffs of the state that they would
be required to enforce the so-called "Brady Bill" and run background
checks at their expense under the law. In 1994, Mack and six other sheriffs
from across the country, challenged the constitutionality of the Brady Bill
and ultimately, fought it all the way to the United States Supreme Court,
where they won a monumental decision for freedom. Three years later, in a
landmark 5-4 split decision based on the Tenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution, Mack won his case. A graduate of Brigham Young University, Mack
now lives with his wife and family in Safford, Arizona. Sheriff Mack is available
for live speaking events and television or radio interviews and can be reached
via E-mail at sheriffmack@hotmail.com or by phone at (928) 792-4340.