Steelplate
New member
We have embraced the global economy considerably. Have you noticed our appetite for outsourcing and importing foreign manufactures?
Yes.....for the profit of our few in particular and the detriment of our people in general.
We have embraced the global economy considerably. Have you noticed our appetite for outsourcing and importing foreign manufactures?
So you can see, then, that not every new economic aspect of globalisation is automatically a net benefit, then.
But I thought you guys favored a strict interpretation of the Constitution? Or even the Bill of Rights?
Could Jefferson's words apply even to the Second Amendment?
Ouch. That hurt you, didn't it?
Things like this happened pre-capitalism, under the mercantilist system. How many ordinary British benefited from the crown's monopolistic charters to such companies as the Musgrove Co, East India Company, and the other companies that were set up around the globe?
Obviously they who argued that the federal government was going beyond its constitutional powers by enforcing the bill of rights were full of shit. Again, my position on limited government has nothing to do with your bullshit argument.No it's not a bullshit argument. It's an argument that has historically been used to oppress people and deny others the blessings of liberty. Slavery and Jim Crow laws are the most obvious examples. When the nation moved to abolish those constitutionally their defenders argued both that the Federal Government was going beyond its proscribed constitutional powers (while hypocritically opposing constitutional reforms) and defended States rights to continue those odd institutions.
The Federalist papers hold absolutely ZERO bearing on much of anything. That's the problem with you folk you take ONE of our many founding fathers' OPINION.....and embrace it as a unfailing schematic of the Constitution. Hamilton was not on an Island onto himself....Not even close.
Well, the Constitution was written first, so it has bearing on them. They, however, were written about each concept and facet of the Constitution, so reading them is like reading a lenghthy dissertation about what it means. Hamilton did grow up on an island, away from the other Founders, so that is actually pretty close.![]()
The Constitution was drafted first, the Federalist papers were a series of article written by several of the Founders to "sell" the document to the public so it would then be signed into law. As such, the arguments presented in the Papers are an important tool to understanding the mindset of those who wrote the Constitution.
Again, I advocate a plain language reading of the Constitution and that's that. But when someone attempts a "creative interpretation" to expand federal power, I simply point them to the appropriate argument in the Federalist to correct them.
Well....you can advocate all you want. You can say the Constitution is the third Testament of God, was divinely inspired, and should be read with the same reverence that a Fundamentalist reads the Bible.
It's a Free Country. But unless a great majority feels the same way? You're pissing into the wind.
No one quotes it because Jefferson was not a Federalist, and therefore bad for America.
Well....you can advocate all you want. You can say the Constitution is the third Testament of God, was divinely inspired, and should be read with the same reverence that a Fundamentalist reads the Bible.
It's a Free Country. But unless a great majority feels the same way? You're pissing into the wind.
We have embraced the global economy considerably. Have you noticed our appetite for outsourcing and importing foreign manufactures?
How many times do we need to explain this to you? Enlighten yourself. You might want to start with the rudimentary education. Something commensurate with your education level. May I recommend Schoolhouse Rock?
Now that statement I like. But everyone's farts smell and none admit it. We need an agreement that some smell lingers with everyone's statements, so others are allowed the distance of the smell of their own farts. We must start respectful argument. I know some answers, but not all. Perhaps you know a few. Could we find the common ground, please.
This country is in such trouble. We have the highest disagreement quotient since Reconstruction. The only period with less general agreement went from 1852-1865. We might be wise to avoid a redoing of that period. As honorable people, interested in the welfare of our nation on the anniversary of its founding, let us take a new oath in the name of civility and the common good, that we will seek first for common ground.
the reason is the right wants this country to die.
Its why they sign the Grover pledges.