PAT MATHEWS wrote:

Someone on FourthTurning came up with a very sensible idea. It was that the only time the federal government should interfere with state law is if the state is violating the Bill of Rights. (This does not restrict the power of the feds to regulate air traffic, public health, etc...we're talking about laws affecting individual liberties.) And that every Constitutional amendment from #1 on down should carry the proviso, now used for the newest ones, that "the Congress shall have the power to enforce this amendment."

Works for me. But would it require a constitutional amendment to retroactively add those words to the amendments that do not explicitly have them?

I have no problem with this, but it doesn't address the greater problem - an executive that considers himself above the bill of rights and possibly, with its new justices, a Supreme Court that might agree with him.

No, but it gets the structure in place. As for the situation you describe, it's for the people to turn him out (in 2008) and the Congress to put a leash on him and the opposition party to come up with better arguments and ideas in order to do so.

Of course, the brilliance of the two-term Presidency will do that for us, but what remains to be seen is whether the country figures out that keeping his ilk in power for four, eight, twelve more years (about as long as it'll take to completely end the American Experiment).

I wonder which "state" will receive the most attention on Tuesday evening. The one whose population almost elected him once and barely did a second time, or the one that he invaded without provocation?

I'm not taking any bets, because I'm fairly certain it's the latter.

Dave

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