Source: http://ourfederalism.com/notes/
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 22:55:07+00:00

Document:
“All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” United States Constitution Amendment 14, Section 1.
Section 1 of the 14th Amendment concerns citizenship, so the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” must be considered in that context because context determines meaning.
“The phrase, ‘subject to its jurisdiction’ was intended to exclude from its operation children of ministers, consuls, and citizens or subjects of foreign States born within the United States.” Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. 36, 73 (1872).
Children belong to their parents. Likewise, citizenship in such instances is determined by the legal status of the parents, because the 14th Amendment refers to political jurisdiction, and citizenship is its extract.
Will the new President of the United States be sentimentally American?
What will it take for him to succeed? Exactly what it took to be elected: prefer the United States of America over other countries, other interests and other people. But what once sounded easy is today problematic, as we see a new impediment about: Americans who disfavor their own country and promote others against it.
“You see my kind of loyalty was loyalty to one’s country, not to its institutions or its office-holders. The country is the real thing, the substantial thing, the eternal thing; it is the thing to watch over, and care for, and be loyal to; institutions are extraneous, they are its mere clothing, and clothing can wear out, become ragged, cease to be comfortable, cease to protect the body from winter, disease, and death.” ∼ Mark Twain, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court 107 (Harper & Brothers Publishers 1917) (1889).
The formula for success is simple: primary allegiance to the United States. A sentimentally American President who governs as such would be deemed a success, because although that bar is pathetically low, it has not been cleared recently.
The state of the Union is deplorable, as the States and their people have come under the boot of the nation. As we nationalize here at home, our common-law liberties are lost. The national state (devoid of common-law rights) was never meant to predominate locally. Its power resides abroad.
There is a solution: constructive amendments to re-localize that predominance, to put domestic authority back where it belongs.
In the meantime ambiguous governance prevails, further socializing our “free economy” and simultaneously bringing all activity (whether economic or not) under the rule of money, defiling the history-bending advance of ordinary American law and the freedom associated with it.
…because it means law personified —— though we are a nation of laws, not of men.
…because it means a national society —— though the American people act through their States, never packaged as a whole.
…because it is ever-changing, unknowable —— a blank check and an invitation to tyranny.
Instead of a government with “no existence beyond the scope of its powers” and a system where the people have “set limits upon the extent and mode of law-making even by themselves,” we see the deformity of law incarnate and a “living constitution,” which returns us to the old age of an arbitrary sovereign.
“The Constitution is a written instrument. As such, its meaning does not alter. That which it meant when adopted, it means now. Being a grant of powers to a government, its language is general, and, as changes come in social and political life, it embraces in its grasp all new conditions which are within the scope of the powers in terms conferred. In other words, while the powers granted do not change, they apply from generation to generation to all things to which they are in their nature applicable. This in no manner abridges the fact of its changeless nature and meaning. Those things which are within its grants of power, as those grants were understood when made, are still within them, and those things not within them remain still excluded.” South Carolina v. United States, 199 U.S. 437, 448-449 (1905).
The people of the United States, formerly a fellowship of Kings, have become, once more, mere subjects, in a place where sovereignty belongs to the United States but not to any of them, nor to their people, and the power of its rulers is limited only by their imagination.
America’s federal democracy has had its say. The test: whether the people would come around, or tread on even more.
Pronounced dead, apparently the funeral got to be a little too much for the corpse —— condition upgraded to critical.
Nonetheless, witness how far and how fast the general decline, and wonder whether Americans are conscious and alert enough to grasp that the government has effectively created its own national society —— of the government, by the government, for the government, without a modicum of fidelity to the law of the land, smothered in money and fueled by a financial system that encourages national disloyalty, shopping the world for others more willing to serve it, choosing to import a new electorate rather than serve its own people —— a brooding national superstate founded by itself.
Diagnosis: the country is alive and unwell. Prognosis hopeful.
“The Government Has Fallen” is not a phrase associated with election results in the United States. In fact it’s never happened here. It won’t happen this time, either, and that’s no accident, but another unusual aspect of the American system of government: it is legally impossible to destroy the United States or any of them.
From time to time, governments elsewhere are “brought down” or “fall” because they are constituted electorally, and results may not provide the necessary ingredients to form a government. For instance, an election may fail to produce a majority coalition, causing the technical destruction of the government, at least until new elections take place.
“The government of Prime Minister fill-in-the-blank has fallen.
That is the sound of a “national society” at work, lacking a permanent constitution, lurching from one vote to the next, no high law, no high rights, mere majority rule —— a nation of men, with everything up for grabs.
“One’s right to life, liberty, and property, to free speech, a free press, freedom of worship and assembly, and other fundamental rights may not be submitted to vote; they depend on the outcome of no elections.” West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624, 638 (1943).
“The Constitution, in all its provisions, looks to an indestructible Union, composed of indestructible States.” Texas v. White, 74 U.S. 700, 725 (1868).
…but not the United States.
How many United States are there?
The constitutional compromise between keeping totally independent States or consolidating them into one mere Nation had produced an American system of government having “no technical terms or phrases appropriate to it,” according to James Madison. The Wizard of Oz called ours “the land of E Pluribus Unum,” which basically gets it right. Poet Walt Whitman wrote about “not merely a nation but a teeming nation of nations.” He had it figured out, too.
At last count there are fifty United States, though they act abroad as one nation vis–à–vis other nations­.
So are there fifty? Or is there just one?
In a way there are two different United States, one federal and one national, a plural “union of States” here at home and a singular “nation of people” abroad. But because “the Constitution of the United States as such does not extend beyond the limits of the States which are united by and under it,” the full force of its protection does not extend to the national state or its constituents. C.C. Langdell, The Status of Our New Territories, 12 Harv. L. Rev. 365, 371 (1899). As our States go, so goes our freedom.
“No political dreamer was ever wild enough to think of breaking down the lines which separate the states, and of compounding the American people into one common mass.” McCulloch v. State, 17 U.S. 316, 403 (1819).
Unfortunately, even courts succumb to the vague notion that “things change,” so it makes sense to reinforce our States by constructive amendment rather than devolve into “one common mass” of rightless supplicants, dependent on grants of privilege and favor from­, and otherwise under the boot of­, a partisan national government.
Let’s face it, there are crackpots who imagine the United States were somehow coalesced into one comprehensive nation overall by the 14th amendment, by the power of money, or by the influence of technology and the march of time.
In one sense perfection is an absolute, its definition uncompromising, by terms either with or without defect. But it also means “finished” or “complete” and may be qualified, and this is how the word is used in the Constitution.
Why form a more perfect union? Why not an altogether perfect union?
That extreme would have meant consolidating all governmental power in one central authority, in a consummate national polity­ —— a “perfect incorporation” to include, of course, a national police state. The founders rejected that setup in favor of an ideal division of powers between States and Nation resulting in a technically perfect system of American jurisprudence and the freest country in history.
…but that was 1938, and unfortunately they didn’t stay long.
Maybe they’ll come home again some day, and write more like this.
“I am aware that what has been termed the general law of the country—which is often little less than what the judge advancing the doctrine thinks at the time should be the general law on a particular subject—has been often advanced in judicial opinions of this court to control a conflicting law of a State. I admit that learned judges have fallen into the habit of repeating this doctrine as a convenient mode of brushing aside the law of a State in conflict with their views. And I confess that, moved and governed by the authority of the great names of those judges, I have, myself, in many instances, unhesitatingly and confidently, but I think now erroneously, repeated the same doctrine. But, notwithstanding the great names which may be cited in favor of the doctrine, and notwithstanding the frequency with which the doctrine has been reiterated, there stands, as a perpetual protest against its repetition, the Constitution of the United States, which recognizes and preserves the autonomy and independence of the States…” Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 78 (1938).
America’s founding generation confronted one of the problems we now face: judicial misconstruction of the Constitution. Soon after its passage, the Supreme court botched the case of Chisholm vs. Georgia, taking away from each State something that had not been surrendered, namely its sovereign immunity.
In short order the States got together and passed the 11th Amendment to correct the court’s misconstruction, or in other words to ensure that the controversial provision (Article III, § 2) was henceforth construed correctly. In this way, the Constitution was amended without really changing it in any way.
We face the same problem today. The original text is not deficient, only its interpretation. The principal culprits, the ones now botching it, also sit on the Supreme Court of the United States. Their fundamental error is the same one made by the court in Chisholm vs. Georgia: the failure to grasp that each State in the Union retains all powers not actually surrendered­ —— and moreover, that nothing “federal” takes place, that takes place solely within one State.
shall not be construed to extend to commerce within the several States.
shall not extend to sources within the several States.
The problem is that Congress, power-hungry if not power-mad, continues to conflate its jurisdiction over certain matters into a compound authority over all. As seen, this has been done by way of their power to regulate interstate commerce. Now, outlandishly, it is even done under the taxing authority, with respect to matters that do not concern taxation.
To any who would assert, with a straight face, that the government of the United States indeed has plenary authority throughout the United States, one need only consider Article 1, § 8, clause 17 and Article IV, § 3, clause 2, to see that such authority exists expressly within the District of Columbia, Territories and Possessions: in short, those areas of the United States where no State territory is involved.
…back in merry old England, the man and the office were nearly one and the same. The King was a personal sovereign. The legal definition of sovereignty is “absolute power” in some sense.
When the United States achieved their independence, the personal sovereignty of the British Crown fell upon the individual people of the thirteen States. They determined to create a nation where all are equal under law, by making their constitution the supreme law of the land and the repository for their sovereignty.
Personified law became a thing of the past, and written law became king.
Today some would refashion America into a nation of men, not of laws.
So if you don’t like it, just don’t take it personally. And if you’re from the United States, then you don’t have to take it at all.

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