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It's the Constitution that's radicalizing our politicians (Repeal the 17th Amendment!)
American Thinker ^ | April 24, 2010 | John W. Truslow, III

Posted on 04/23/2010 11:02:09 PM PDT by neverdem

It is likely that conservatives will fail to understand why health care "reform" became law, and they are likely to fail if they start any post-mortem by accepting the conventional wisdom's realist premise:  1) Two election cycles produced a critical mass of radicals in the legislative and executive branches of government.  2) The personalities of those in the elected majority were more dynamic and compelling than those in the minority, and 3) the tactics employed by the majority prevailed over those with less adequate tools at their disposal. 

Without challenging the premises, conservative analysis so far has asserted the only conclusions it could:  elect more conservatives, recruit more vibrant leaders, and become more ruthless in the application of power when it is obtained.  These are the strategies of populist radicals, and commentators have suggested that conservatives should and can beat the radicals at their own game.  However, given the prevailing cultural and demographic winds, that is not only exceptionally unlikely over the next century, it is both shortsighted and unhelpful precisely because it is a prescription neither for stability nor securing lasting liberty, only an electoral variation doomed to be swept in and out again with the flow of the political tides.  Conservatives must begin from a different starting position and make other, more significant changes.


The conservative claim is that structural order has been lost and that structural order must be restored, or put another way:  If the construction of the political system remains the same, then the outputs of that system also will remain the same.  The three part preoccupation with establishing a permanent majority, the cult of personality (including the veneration of President Reagan), and dubious tactics to secure required ends is a postmodern perversion of conservatism, and these tendencies distract from the core values that make conservatives critical to the sustainability of society. 

In contrast to the above, 1) Conservatives understand that unchecked majority rule can be tyranny.  2) Conservatives distrust the coercive power of individual celebrity, putting their faith in just institutions.  3) Conservatives believe that a principled process is more valuable than an efficient practice.  So, when analyzing the current political debacle as conservatives, there is a very different conclusion to be drawn:  The system itself encourages radicalism (be they Republicans in 2003 or Democrats in 2010), and without systemic change, radicalism will continue to advance.  Therefore, conservatives must work first to restore the integrity of the constitutional order.

The 17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (1913) is a clear catalyst for American radicalism, bringing a century of immeasurable disorder to the original constitutional framework.  Before the passage of the 17th Amendment, the Constitution provided moderate, temperate government primarily by limiting the federal government's power.  It did this by a) establishing a political - not judicial - arena for the competition of unaligned self-interests, b) broadly diffusing power through a process of checks and balances existing between the federal and state governments, and also among three branches of the federal government, and c) enumerating specific powers, such as the commerce clause (from which Congress justifies the bulk of its current activity).  The 17th Amendment eviscerated all three parts of that structure, and in doing so created the context in which radicalism has flourished in both parties.  Consider each of these in turn:

First, before the passage of the 17th Amendment, Members of the Senate were chosen by state legislatures to be the agents of those sovereign governments in Washington, D.C., much like ambassadors today at the United Nations.  While a Member of the House would represent the intemperate passions of the people as citizens, a Senator would represent the very different interests of the people's state governments.  The interests of the two bodies were purposefully not aligned - their constituencies were different.  The 17th Amendment allowed for the direct election of Senators by the citizens of each state.  What the U.S. had prior to 1913 was a bicameral legislature competing bill-by-bill for the direction and scope of the federal government.  Now that both Representatives and Senators have an identical interest (pandering to the citizenry) Congress is one herd of cattle in two pens. 

Second, by removing the states' voice in the federal government, the 17th Amendment crippled the original meaning of both "separation of powers" and "checks and balances."  As a direct result, the states are effectively powerless to stop the expansion of national government into their sovereign affairs.  There is no other effective restraint.  Put differently, given the structure of government under the 17th Amendment, there is no reliable way to stop the spread of national government power because the constitutional check against its expansion was eliminated.  Electing a majority of "better" candidates to high office will not solve this problem because -- as the Framers well knew -- a system in which political power is unchecked radicalizes the behavior of any man within it.

Third, mindful of their different constituencies, the Constitution gave the Senate functions different from those of the House, such as the confirmation of Supreme Court justices. There was a reasonable expectation that the emissaries of the states in the Senate would approve only of those nominees possessing a view of government that defended the state's sovereignty and right to govern responsively.  With the Senate no longer populated with members appointed to represent the interests of the states, Supreme Court justices have allowed the original (and very limiting) meaning of the commerce clause to erode in the favor of Congress's interests. 

Congress -- now aligned with the majority's fanaticism -- has responded by taking as much power as possible.  Consider the plight of states' Attorneys General as they file suit to halt the implementation of the healthcare reform law:  the states are making their constitutional appeal to justices confirmed by Senators who do not have the states' interests at heart.  Prior to the 17th Amendment, there was virtually no chance that any legislative action filled with unfunded mandates to the states would ever clear a Senate comprised of states' representatives.  Today, all the states can do is pray that justices confirmed by the exact body that voted for the law in question will come to their aid.  Good luck with that.

Conservatives view the current political structure as broken, not simply populated by the wrong group of scoundrels.  Focusing first on large conservative majorities, better communicators, and merciless implementation is playing the short game.  To set the country on a sustainable path, we must first embrace the old and tried and repeal the 17th Amendment.

John W. Truslow, III is Director of the Campaign to Restore Federalism, found online at restorefederalism.org


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 17thamendment; americanradicalism; lping; seventeenthamendment
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To: neverdem; rabscuttle385; Abathar; Abcdefg; Abram; Abundy; akatel; albertp; AlexandriaDuke; ...
Repeal the 17th Amendment!

Amen!



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21 posted on 04/24/2010 9:44:51 AM PDT by bamahead (Few men desire liberty; most men wish only for a just master. -- Sallust)
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To: bamahead; neverdem; rabscuttle385
"Several advocates of federalism have called for the Seventeenth Amendment's repeal. For example, then-U.S. Senator Zell Miller of Georgia, shortly after announcing his intention to retire from the Senate, made this statement from the Senate floor:

"Direct elections of Senators … allowed Washington’s special interests to call the shots, whether it is filling judicial vacancies, passing laws, or issuing regulations. Libertarian author and economist Thomas DiLorenzo has characterized the Seventeenth Amendment as "one of the last nails to be pounded into the coffin of federalism in America."

"The amendment has been blamed, together with the Sixteenth Amendment, for greatly expanding the authority of the United States Congress in the 20th century."

Organizations have been created to support the amendment's complete repeal.

In 2003, the Judiciary Committee of the Montana House of Representatives passed a resolution calling for the repeal of the Seventeenth Amendment by a vote of 6-3, but the resolution was defeated in the Montana Senate by a vote of 39-10.

~Wiki repeal of 17th amendment

22 posted on 04/24/2010 10:16:14 AM PDT by Lady Jag (Double your income... Fire the government)
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To: neverdem
2) Conservatives distrust the coercive power of individual celebrity, putting their faith in just institutions.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Ok...While I agree that the 17th Amendment should be repealed and would be an improvement, the root cause America's dysfunction is spiritual sickness.

For years now I have been posting that conservatives assiduously hack away at the trees ( immediate legislative bills before congress) and are oblivious to the fact that atheistic, secular humanist, Marxists are continually planting forests all around us! The Marxist do these by means of our government K-12 schools and colleges, the media, and the arts.

Conservatives MUST MUST MUST do two things:

1)Work to bring a spiritual revival to all Americans.

2) Conservatives MUST MUST MUST work to shut down and get our nation's children out of our temples of atheistic, secular humanist, Marxism!!!! ( Mis-named “public” schools)

Conservatives MUST MUST MUST work to see that every child in the U.S. has access to a private education that teaches and supports our nation's founding principles and our Judeo Christian values and **thoroughly** integrates these values into all of their school policies and courses.

If conservatives were to do this, within 10 years our nation's college classrooms would be full to the brim with students who were well prepared to defend their faith and our nation's founding principles. Their Marxist professors would wither before their righteousness. Soon these young people would be taking their place in academia, the media, and the arts.

Government schools can NOT be reformed. Simply by attending, children learn to be comfortable with having the government take money from their neighbor to pay for a service their parents want for tuition-free. Well?....If the government can take money from a neighbor for tution-free school, why not a thousand other wants and needs?

Atheistic Marxism is our nation's MOST serious threat. Government schools are the Marxist's MOST powerful weapon.

23 posted on 04/24/2010 10:55:18 AM PDT by wintertime
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide

...”It’s the Constitution”? No. It’s the 17th amendment, I agree, should be repealed. I’m still looking at the 27th...


24 posted on 04/24/2010 11:56:54 AM PDT by gargoyle (..."I have not yet begun to fight" John Paul Jones...)
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To: fporretto
...Hmmm, interesting point ya got there on the 16th. I'm for repeal of the 17th. and maybe the 27th...

...Reminds me of a year ago. I attended a talk by Rand Paul, here in Lex KY. It was a republican meeting, and, independent, conservative, libertarian me, infiltrated the meeting. I brought up the 17th issue during the Q and A. He urged me to switch my party affiliation to republican, for the primary Though I support Paul for senator, I disagree that 2012 would not be a good time to take action, and I made it clear. When I asked him to pledge this in the future, and sign my Heritage pocket Constitution on the page of the 17th, he did...

...For all it's worth, I got him by the ass!!!

25 posted on 04/24/2010 12:15:05 PM PDT by gargoyle (..."I have not yet begun to fight" John Paul Jones...)
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To: neverdem

Very good article. This needs to be talked about so much more.


26 posted on 04/24/2010 6:44:54 PM PDT by Clump (the tree of liberty is withering like a stricken fig tree)
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide
FDR gave us the new deal, and Hussein is giving us the raw deal. No doubt the 17th amendment fundamentally screwed up a system that was purposely designed to protect our liberty. The Founders were simply brilliant.
27 posted on 04/24/2010 6:54:34 PM PDT by Clump (the tree of liberty is withering like a stricken fig tree)
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To: Clump

Saw a comic: FDR announcing the New Deal, Truman announcing the Fair Deal and Obama with Biden announcing the Big F&%#ing Deal.


28 posted on 04/24/2010 7:02:51 PM PDT by UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide (NEW TAG ====> **REPEAL OR REBEL!** -- Islam Delenda Est! -- Rumble thee forth)
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To: Cacique

“We need to learn that politics are emotions and most people vote with emotions, regardless of logic. Conservatives had better understand this or we will die.”

Well said.


29 posted on 04/24/2010 8:24:15 PM PDT by webstersII
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