A guy named
Paul ORourke wrote a nasty
blog post today claiming that Ron Paul doesnt know what
hes talking about when it comes to the Constitution. I always
find it funny when conventional left-liberals like ORourke
single out Ron Paul of all people for criticism, when (here as
elsewhere) he knows more about the subject than the rest of the
Republican contenders put together. (Really, Paul, you think youd
have a useful constitutional discussion with Tim Pawlenty?)
They cant stand an anti-establishment candidate, so they
focus their anger on him. As I never tire of saying, these people
want us to shut our mouths and be content with the Biden/Romney
spectrum.
Here are
the key points to bear in mind:
The merchant
marine health-care thing is supposed to prove that Ron Pauls
view of the Constitution is wrong. But how could it? It is indisputable
that the Constitution was sold to the people in the ratifying
conventions in a particular way. Federalists refuted expansive
interpretations of the general welfare clause, brought forth by
concerned Antifederalists, with reminders that the federal government
would have only the powers expressly delegated to
it (and yes, the word expressly was used, again and
again). Patrick Henry was one such skeptic, and he was thus reassured
by Edmund Randolph and George Nicholas, no mean authorities. Thus
any interpretation of the clause other than Madisons couldnt
possibly be correct. It is the ratifiers whose opinions
count, as Madison explained, since what they believed themselves
to be agreeing to is what binds us.
The fact
that years later the Constitution is violated cannot undo the
brute fact that that document was ratified with this particular
understanding. The word ratifiers appears nowhere
in the ORourke piece. There is a reason for that.
Jefferson
said that no matter how long the British had oppressed us, the
length of time of such oppression would not have legitimized it.
Indeed.
If I entered
into a contract with Paul ORourke on the basis of a particular
understanding, and then turned around and violated that understanding,
first in small things and then in great, what would he say? Would
he say, Hey, youre violating our agreement?
If so, I guess I could come back with, Youre living
in the past, man! Ive been violating that agreement for
years!
Alexander
Hamilton is cited on behalf of ORourkes interpretation
of the general welfare clause. Prior to ratification, as
I show in my 33
Questions book, Hamilton had taken a much less expansive
view of the clause. Once the Constitution was safely ratified,
he came out in favor of the position ORourke cites. Does
that not strike you as a bit, well, sneaky? Why should we take
Hamiltons post-ratification view as the definitive one?
Wouldnt it make far more sense to cite the view Hamilton
actually peddled to the public at the time of ratification?
Also, why
stop with adopting Hamiltons post-ratification view of the
general welfare clause? Why not adopt Hamiltons whole program?
We could have presidents elected for life, senators elected for
life, state governors appointed by the president, etc. Hamilton
also favored enforcement of the Sedition Act. Oh, and you know
how the Sedition Act was justified? With the general welfare clause!
Then we read
about Joseph Story, who adopted Hamiltons post-ratification
view of the general welfare clause, and whose views we are urged
to adopt. We are not told that Story had opponents. But he did.
Abel Upshur mercilessly dismantled Story in his book A
Brief Enquiry into the True Nature and Character of Our Federal
Government. Storys view of the Constitution was
long ago exploded as unhistorical; see James McClellans
Joseph
Story and the American Constitution: A Study in Political and
Legal Thought. His comments on the general welfare clause,
written before Madisons notes from the convention had been
made public, are rooted in highly debatable inferences from the
constitutional text.
Continuing
with ORourke, why is it impossible for the Supreme Court
to have been wrong in U.S. v. Butler when it held that the taxing
power was not limited by the enumerated powers in Article I, Section
8? The whole justices-as-infallible-overlords thing is a bit creepy.
Moreover, in that decision the Court overturns the Agricultural
Adjustment Act on the grounds that it involved the exercise of
a power not delegated to the federal government by the states.
Is ORourke really of the view that the federal government
has no authority over agriculture? I doubt it. So he dissents
from the most critical part of this case. Why does he jump up
and down with glee regarding one aspect of the decision and remain
perfectly silent about the other?
Then to read
that the Founders werent classical liberals and that this
is just a right-wing myth, well, thats a bit much. Of course,
the Founders were not a homogeneous blob, and some favored more
power for government than others. But ORourkes insistence
on calling the Constitution and Declaration liberal,
by which he intends the modern, 21st-century, Barack Obama meaning,
is beyond absurd.
ORourkes
ignorant comments about the words We, the People alone
prove he is not entitled to an opinion. This is not an example
of collectivism. The original words were We,
the States. This was changed by the Committee on Style,
without a single dissenting vote, so it obviously did not involve
a matter of substance. We, the People refers to the
peoples of the states the people of Massachusetts, the
people of Virginia, etc. What is supposed to be collectivist
about that? No originalist denies and indeed all of them
affirm that the U.S. was the creation of a group of separate
and distinct societies.
In case you
need evidence that Jefferson was indeed a classical liberal rather
than a liberal in the tradition of Hillary Clinton, you can find
it in the excellent new book by Marco Bassani, Liberty,
State, and Union: The Political Theory of Thomas Jefferson.
In the comments
section of the ORourke piece you can see further how confused
our author is. He thinks we have seen a major move in the direction
of the free market over the past 30 years, and that this is the
reason for our current problems. If that were so, I wonder why
the most free-market economists were the ones most likely to predict
the crash. Were they repudiating their own position? Or did they
see something a teensy bit non-free-market in the activities of
the Federal Reserve, the government interventions into the housing
market, the regulations that make it impossible to discipline
management at financial firms, the prudential regulation that
encouraged everyone to flock into AAA-rated MBS, etc.?
As usual,
Ron Paul was right, and his snooty critics, who insist on picking
on the rare non-drone in politics, dead wrong.
Reprinted
with permisson from TomWoods.com.