The 108th Congress should
- live up to its constitutional obligations and
cease the practice of delegating legislative
powers to administrative agencies; legislation
should be passed by Congress, not by unelected
administration officials;
- before voting on any proposed act, ask whether
that exercise of power is authorized by the
Constitution, which enumerates the powers of
Congress;
- exercise its constitutional authority to
approve only those appointees to federal
judgeships who will take seriously the
constitutional limitations on the powers of both
states and the federal government
If history
teaches anything, it is that human well-being and
progress—indeed, civilization itself—depend on
the rule of law.
For when the rules of human conduct are unjust,
arbitrary, or ever changing, people simply cannot
plan their affairs with any confidence that
today's rules will apply tomorrow.
Unfortunately,
American law and legal institutions have become
increasingly uncertain and unstable over the
course of the 20th century as statutory law has
come increasingly to replace common
law and as common law itself has become
increasingly politicized. That pattern has only
increased under the Bush-Clinton regime, which has
proposed countless programs that enjoy no support
under the Constitution, has
drawn more and more power into the executive
branch, and has exercised that power often
with minimal respect for due process or legal
principles.
For more on these
subjects, click
here for Cato Institute symposium.
One of the most ridiculous examples of political
ignorance was the recent banning of the Ten
Commandments in Alabama. Pundits like Rush
Limbaugh pontificated on how Judge Roy Moore
violated "the rule of law" by ignoring the
utterly unconstitutional edict of a federal judge.
"The Rule of Law" is the idea that we
are "A government of laws, not of men."
The rule of law is the rule of principle, rather
than whim. In The Road to Serfdom, Professor
of Economics and Nobel laureate F. A. Hayek says the
Rule of Law
means that government in all its actions is
bound by rules fixed and announced beforehand ---
rules which make it possible to foresee with fair
certainty how the authority will use its coercive
powers in given circumstances and to plan one's
individual affairs on the basis of this
knowledge."
Not a single person who signed the Constitution,
helped ratify the Constitution, or even read the
constitution prior to 1947
could have foreseen that the federal government
could order the State of Alabama to remove the Ten
Commandments from public display. The First
Amendment reads:
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof
Implicit in this Amendment is that the federal
judiciary shall make no similar law,
though it was never imagined that the judiciary
would be making laws as it does today.
The
Ten Commandments is the basis of American Law.
Thus it could not have been anticipated that a state
court or legislature would ever ban their public
display, much less that a federal judge would
do so. The federal government had no power in the
area of religion, and no state government would ever
use its power to undermine true
religion.
Everything about the event is utterly
unconstitutional:
- A judge making a law
- A federal judge making a law
- A federal judge making a law regarding
religion
- A federal judge making a law banning
the Ten Commandments
is absolutely the most unprincipled decision any
of the Founding Fathers could have imagined.
Unforeseen. Preposterous. Proof that the
Constitution is now a myth, as is "the rule
of law."
In a sense even "the rule of law" was a
myth. The idea that ours is a "government of
laws, not of men" is
a fallacy. The Founding Fathers agreed that bad
men corrupt good laws. Good men will rule well in
the absence of good laws. A man of integrity,
virtue, and the Character
of Christ with little political experience is to
be preferred over a "seasoned politician"
who despises God's Commandments. Read
their words.
In any case, we are clearly now A
Government of Unprincipled Men.
next: Congress, Courts and
the Constitution
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