Dixie - In Memoriam
New member
You wrote, "According to the man who wrote the "general welfare clause" it means what is articulated specifically in Article 1 Section 8 of the Constitution, and can't possibly or logically mean anything else." I counter that the framers couldn't possibly or logically have meant the Federal Government was prohibited from attempting to stop the needless deaths of tens of thousands of citizens each year even though such a scenario may have been beyond their current understanding.
Sorry, it's not in Article 1 Section 8, that the government is responsible for stopping needless (or needed) deaths.
Again, we go back to the Preamble. "It states in general terms, and courts have referred to it as reliable evidence of, the Founding Fathers' intentions regarding the Constitution's meaning and what they hoped the Constitution would achieve."
Only a goofball LIBERAL would dare to argue with James Madison over founding intent, citing the SCOTUS cases through the years! LMMFAO!
What we have is "reliable evidence" the SCOTUS gets it wrong often, with regard to the meaning of the Constitution. Like when the SCTOUS determined black slaves were property and not people. Like when they determined it was okay to deny women the right to vote or get equal pay.
So, what did they hope the constitution would achieve? "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."
And as Madison so brilliantly stated, these "general clauses" found throughout the Constitution, are all specified in meaning under the few enumerated powers of government. There is no purpose or reason to have a Constitution, if these phrases are to be taken literally to mean the generalities they establish, without regard for the specificity to which they were intended. Madison said, if THAT is what it means, this thing should be cast into the fire!
Can that be accomplished when one group of citizens sit idly by while another group needlessly suffer and die when help is readily available? The founding fathers had no idea how mass food production coupled with medicine/medical care would almost double the general life span. To propose the founding fathers' intention to form a more perfect country with domestic tranquility, promoting the general welfare and desiring that citizens secure the blessings of liberty encompassed watching tens of thousands of citizens needlessly die is beyond absurd.
Wait... so in your mind, there are two groups of people, and one group is healthy and never gets sick or needs doctors, while the other group suffers from chronic illness and requires constant medical attention so as not to die? And the well group is opposed to paying for the sick group? Is that how you see this in your fucked up little world? We all get sick and need doctors from time to time in our lives, that's why we developed a capitalistic venture called INSURANCE! You pay them a small amount each month, and they cover the cost if you ever need medical care.
The Founding Fathers laid out a system of government where the central government authority had very little power, it was specifically enumerated, in Article 1 Section 8. They also had the brilliance to develop a system by which the citizens could alter and change the Constitution at a later date, should some new technology or circumstance arise. Now, since hospitals were not prevalent back in 1776, and physician care was greatly limited to where you were, people dying from sickness and disease must have been much greater and more of an everyday concern than it is today. Yet, they didn't see fit to obligate the federal government with such a responsibility as caring for the sick. Why should we believe they would feel any differently if they were alive today?
Does the 48% represent the same citizens, year after year? Or is it a general percentage? Just as people change jobs, some unemployed for a while, they make a contribution over their lifetime. Some years more, some years less.
I'm going to say it's likely many of the same people year after year, with very few exceptions.