Las Vegas Review-Journal

Constituti­on has at least slowed down big government

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DID you think about the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce this week?

The July 4 holiday is meant to honor that, not just fireworks. Ironically, government’s grown so much since 1776 that fireworks might be illegal in your town.

The Declaratio­n wasn’t about creating rules for citizens to obey. It wasn’t just about condemning the British, either.

Thomas Jefferson and his colleagues created a document steeped in the idea of individual rights. He could have written about the desire to replace a bad king with a good king, but he didn’t.

The founders’ bold plan was to design a completely new sort of country — one where people could rule themselves.

The Colonies were already known around the world for being a place where enterprisi­ng people could chart their own destiny. Now they would become a nation.

The population grew quickly as opportunit­y attracted immigrants. There were no walls to stop people from coming ashore and few rules to stop anyone from building a home or a business, or trying out new ideas.

So people prospered. When the Declaratio­n was written, no one had indoor plumbing or running water. Just 3 million people lived here. Most were much poorer than their relatives in England.

But within a century, America was the most prosperous country in the world.

Although it’s the Declaratio­n that we celebrate on the Fourth, it was another document, the Constituti­on, ratified 12 years later, that really gave the details of the system of limited government that would shape America.

The founders were sick of British tyranny. They understood the danger of big government.

Jefferson said, trust no man with too much government power; instead “bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constituti­on.”

James Madison wrote, “The powers delegated by the proposed constituti­on to the federal government are few and defined.”

Some delegates still opposed the Constituti­on, not because it was too radical, but because they feared it still left government too much power.

Looking at what politician­s and regulators have done since, I guess those delegates were right.

One wrote, “Conceiving as I did that the liberties of America were not secured by the system, it was my duty to oppose it.” He was outvoted, but objections like his inspired the Bill of Rights to further bind government.

The limits it imposed have done a lot of good.

During the Korean War, when steelworke­rs threatened to strike, President Truman nationaliz­ed the steel industry, claiming he had that power because America was at war. The Supreme Court overruled him and returned the steel mills to their owners. Good.

In 1895, Congress passed an income tax. The Supreme Court said, no, the Constituti­on does not give you the power to do that, and struck the income tax down. Eventually, politician­s and state legislatur­es amended the Constituti­on to allow the tax. But at least they had to go through proper constituti­onal procedures and get a two-thirds vote.

Maybe those rulings made Presidents Bush and Obama think twice about trying to nationaliz­e America’s banks when the housing bubble burst. Maybe it will restrain President Trump when he … OK, I don’t know what he may try to do, but his shifting moods make me nervous.

So far, the Constituti­on has at least slowed down big government. For a long time, the U.S. Supreme Court justices ignored the Second Amendment, but now they’ve started to enforce that, too.

The Constituti­on and Declaratio­n didn’t fully succeed. After all, Thomas Jefferson promised “a wise and frugal government,” one leaving men “free to regulate their own pursuits.”

Still, thanks to the founders’ vision of limited government, we’re closer to that ideal than most people who have ever lived.

That’s a reason to celebrate.

John Stossel is the author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individual­s Succeed.”

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