--- In [email protected], Jon Roland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


When the Supreme Court Stopped Economic Fascism in America
*B Y R I C H A R D  M . E B E L I N G

*Seventy years ago, on May 27, 1935, the U.S. Supreme Court said no 
to 
economic fascism in America.The trend toward bigger and ever-more 
intrusive government, unfortunately, was not stopped, but the case 
nonetheless was a significant event that at that time prevented the 
institutionalizing of a Mussolini-type corporativist system in 
America.

In a unanimous decision the nine members of the Supreme Court said 
there 
were constitutional limits beyond which the federal government could 
not 
go in claiming the right to regulate the economic affairs of the 
citizenry. It was a glorious day in American judicial history, and is 
worth remembering.

When Franklin Roosevelt ran for president in the autumn of 1932 he 
did 
so on a Democratic Party platform that many a classical liberal might 
have gladly supported and even voted for. The platform said that the 
federal government was far too big, taxed and spent far too much, and 
intruded in the affairs of the states to too great an extent. It said 
government spending had to be cut, taxes reduced, and the federal 
budget 
balanced. It called for free trade and a solid goldbacked currency.

But as soon as Roosevelt took office in March 1933 he instituted a 
series of programs and policies that turned all those promises upside 
down. In the first four years of FDR's New Deal, taxes were 
increased, 
government spending reached heights never seen before in U.S. 
history, 
and the federal budget bled red with deficits.The bureaucracy 
ballooned; 
public-works projects increasingly dotted the land; and the heavy 
hand 
of government was all over industry and agriculture.The United States 
was taken off the gold standard, with the American people compelled 
to 
turn in their gold coin and bullion to the government for paper money 
under the threat of confiscation and imprisonment.

In June 1933 Congress passed the National Industrial Recovery Act 
(NIRA), after which FDR created the National Recovery Administration 
(NRA). Modeled on Mussolini's fascist economic system, it forced 
virtually all American industry, manufacturing, and retail business 
into 
cartels possessing the power to set prices and wages, and to dictate 
the 
levels of production.

Within a few months over 200 separate pricing and production codes 
were 
imposed on the various branches of American business.

The symbol of the NRA was a Blue Eagle that had lightning bolts in 
one 
claw and an industrial gear in the other. Every business in the 
country 
was asked to have a Blue Eagle sign in its window that declared,"We 
Do 
Our Part," meaning it followed the pricing and production codes. 
Citizen 
committees were formed to spy on local merchants and report if they 
dared to sell at lower prices.

Propaganda rallies in support of the NRA were held across the 
country. 
During halftime at football games cheerleaders would form the shape 
of 
the Blue Eagle. Government-sponsored parades featured Hollywood stars 
supporting the NRA. At one of these parades the famous singer Al 
Jolson 
was filmed being asked what he thought of the NRA; he replied, "NRA? 
NRA? Why it's better than my wedding night!" Film shorts produced by 
Hollywood in support of the NRA were shown in theaters around the 
country; in one of them child star Shirley Temple danced and sang the 
praises of big government regulation of the American economy.

The NRA codes were soon joined by similar controls over farming with 
the 
passage of the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA). Farmers were given 
subsidies and government-guaranteed price supports, with Washington 
determining what crops could be grown and what livestock could be 
raised. Government ordered some crops to be plowed under and some 
livestock slaughtered, all in the name of centrally planned farm 
production and pricing.

Much of the urban youth of America were rounded up and sent off to 
national forests for regimentation and mock military-style drilling 
as 
part of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). The Works Progress 
Administration (WPA) created makework projects for thousands of 
ablebodied men, all at taxpayers' expense. Since unemployed artists 
were 
"workers" too, they were set to work in government buildings across 
the 
land. Even today, in some of the post offices dating from the 1930s, 
one 
can see murals depicting happy factory workers and farm hands in a 
style 
similar to those produced in Stalin's Russia and Hitler's Germany.

This headlong march into economic fascism was brought to a halt by 
the 
Supreme Court. The catalyst was a legal case known as the /Schechter 
Poultry Corp. v. United States/. Schechter, a slaughterhouse that 
sold 
chickens to kosher markets in New York City, was accused of violating 
the "fair competition" codes under the NRA. The case made its way up 
to 
the Supreme Court, with the nine justices laying down their unanimous 
decision on May 27, 1935.

Three hundred people packed the court that day to hear the decision, 
with prominent members of Congress and the executive branch in the 
audience.The justices declared that the federal government had 
exceeded 
its authority under the interstate-commerce clause of the 
Constitution, 
since the defendant purchased and sold all the chickens it marketed 
within the boundaries of the State of New York. Therefore, the 
federal 
government lacked the power to regulate the company's production and 
prices. In addition, the justices stated that the NRA's power to 
impose 
codes constituted arbitrary and discretionary control inconsistent 
with 
the limited and enumerated powers delegated by the Constitution. 


*AAA Rejected

*This was soon followed by the Supreme Court's rejection of the AAA 
in 
January 1936, when the justices insisted that the federal government 
lacked the authority to tax food processors to pay for the farmers' 
subsidies and price supports. Furthermore, since farming was 
generally a 
local and state activity, the federal government did not have the 
power 
to regulate it under the interstate-commerce clause.

Franklin Roosevelt was furious that what he called those "nine old 
men" 
should attempt to keep America in the "horse and buggy era" when this 
great nation needed a more powerful central  government to manage 
economic affairs in the "modern age." FDR's response was his famous 
"court packing" scheme, in which he asked Congress to give him the 
power 
to add more justices to the Supreme Court in order to tilt the 
balance 
in favor of the "enlightened" and "progressive" policies of the New 
Deal. But this blatant power grab by the executive branch ended up 
being 
too much even for many of the Democrats in Congress, and Roosevelt 
failed in this attempt to assert naked presidential authority over 
another branch of the federal government.

Shortly after the Supreme Court declared both the NRA and AAA 
unconstitutional, David Lawrence, founder and long-time editor 
of /U.S. 
News and World Report/, published a book titled /Nine Honest Men 
/(1936). He praised the justices for their devotion to the bedrock 
principles of the Constitution, and their defense of the traditional 
American ideals of individual liberty, private property, and the rule 
of 
law--even in the face of the emotional appeal of government to "do 
something" during an economic crisis.

Since that landmark decision 70 years ago against the imposition of 
economic fascism in America, the U.S. government has continued to 
grow 
in power over the American citizenry. But it should be remembered 
that 
men of courage, integrity, and principle can stand up to Big Brother 
and 
resist the headlong march into economic tyranny.

http://www.fee.org/pdf/the-freeman/1005RMEColumn.pdf

-------------------------------------------
Do not separate text from historical background. If you do,
you will have perverted and subverted the Constitution, which
can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of illegitimate
government.  -- James Madison
-------------------------------------------

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