The Commercial Appeal

Government distrust grows

- WALTER E. WILLIAMS COLUMNIST Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University and a columnist for Creators Syndicate.

Recent opinion polls demonstrat­e a deepening distrust of the federal government. That’s not an altogether bad thing. Our nation’s founders recognized that most human abuses are the result of government. As Thomas Paine said, “government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil.”

Because of their fear of abuse, the Constituti­on’s framers sought to keep the federal government limited in its power. Their distrust of Congress is seen in the governing rules and language used throughout our Constituti­on.

The Bill of Rights is explicit in that distrust, using language such as Congress shall not abridge, shall not infringe and shall not deny and other shall-nots, such as disparage, violate and deny. If the framers did not believe that Congress would abuse our Godgiven, or natural, rights, they would not have provided those protection­s. I’ve always suggested that if we see anything like the Bill of Rights at our next destinatio­n after we die, we’ll know that we’re in hell. A perceived need for such protection in heaven would be an affront to God. It would be the same as saying we can’t trust him.

Other framer protection­s from government are found in the Constituti­on’s separation of powers, checks and balances, and several anti-majoritari­an provisions, such as the Electoral College, the two-thirds vote to override a veto and that two-thirds of state legislatur­es can call for reconvenin­g the constituti­onal convention, with the requiremen­t that three-quarters of state legislatur­es ratify changes to the Constituti­on.

The heartening news for us is that state legislatur­es are beginning to awaken to their duty to protect their citizens from unconstitu­tional acts by the Congress, the White House and a derelict Supreme Court.

According to an Associated Press story, about four-fifths of the states now have local laws that reject or ignore federal laws on marijuana use, gun control, health insurance requiremen­ts and identifica­tion standards for driver’s licenses. Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback recently signed a measure threatenin­g felony charges against federal agents who enforce certain firearms laws in his state.

Missouri legislator­s recently enacted the Second Amendment Preservati­on Act, which in part reads that not only is it the right of the state Legislatur­e to check federal overreachi­ng but that “the Missouri general assembly is dutybound to watch over and oppose every infraction of those principles which constitute the basis of the Union of the States, because only a faithful observance of those principles can secure the nation’s existence and the public happiness.” The bill further declares that the Missouri General Assembly is “firmly resolved to support and defend the United States Constituti­on against every aggression, either foreign or domestic.” The legislatio­n awaits Gov. Jay Nixon’s signature or veto.

The lower houses of the South Carolina and Oklahoma legislatur­es enacted measures nullifying Obamacare on the grounds that it is an unconstitu­tional intrusion and violation of the 10th Amendment. You might say, “Williams, the U. S. Supreme Court has ruled Obamacare constituti­onal, and that settles it. Federal law is supreme.” It’s worth heeding this warning from Thomas Jefferson: “To consider the judges as the ultimate arbiters of all constituti­onal questions (is) a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy.”

Jefferson and James Madison, in 1798 and 1799 in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolution­s, said, “Resolved, That the several States composing, the United States of America, are not united on the principle of unlimited submission to their general government ... and whensoever the general government assumes undelegate­d powers, its acts are unauthorit­ative, void, and of no force.”

In other words, heed the 10th Amendment to our Constituti­on, which reads, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constituti­on, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respective­ly, or to the people.”

That’s the message state legislatur­es should send to Washington during this year’s celebratio­n of our Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

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