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Nullification and Liberty
Lew Rockwell ^ | 12/10/02 | Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Posted on 12/10/2002 6:57:25 AM PST by billbears

Not long ago I wrote an article on nullification for a well-known libertarian publication. Nullification is the idea, pioneered by Thomas Jefferson and John C. Calhoun, that an American state has the right to "nullify" federal legislation that it believes violates the Constitution. As Virginian political thinker Abel Upshur put it, since no common umpire exists between the federal government and the states to render judgments on breaches of the Constitution, each state – as a constituent part and co-creator of the Union – has to make such determinations for itself. (The idea that the Supreme Court, itself a branch of the federal government, could function as this common umpire is rather like saying that we shouldn’t feel apprehensive that a mafia family has taken over our town since, after all, if we have a dispute with them their cousins will be happy to adjudicate.)

Along came "libertarian" Timothy Sandefur, who (I’m told) argues in a recent issue of Liberty magazine against the right of a state to secede and who, as a follower of Daniel Webster, denies to the states any authentic existence or any real sovereignty. Unable to get his reply published in the magazine in which my article appeared, he posted it to his website. His attack on my article showed him to be only very superficially acquainted with the issues at stake (he claimed, for instance, that nullification was intended to be carried out by state legislatures; why all this time did we think it was to be done in sovereign conventions?).

But his article was nevertheless useful in that it illustrated a standard blind spot in mainstream classical liberalism: having absorbed virtually all of the basic assumptions of modern political theory, the classical liberal cannot conceive of secession, devolution, competing or overlapping jurisdictions, or indeed any of the fabric that ultimately made Western liberty possible. They imagine a strong, large-scale state defending everyone’s natural rights. And they’re actually surprised when it never works!

A surprising number of my students, when nullification is explained to them, find it an intriguing idea. At the same time, I have plenty of students for whom Daniel Webster’s conception of an unbreakable union is so familiar, since they’ve all learned what American history they know from an absurd Lincolnian point of view, that they cannot imagine any other way of organizing society. They honestly believe that voting guarantees that only good legislation will be enacted, and that to defy "majority rule" is to commit some kind of blasphemy. They cannot break out of the model of the single, irresistible sovereign voice; they believe it is this that makes a society wealthy and strong.

Yet it was in the context of a very different model of society, in the Middle Ages, that Western liberty took root. The modern idea of sovereignty simply did not exist. As Bertrand de Jouvenel observes of our day and theirs,

A landlord no longer feels surprised at being compelled to keep a tenant; an employer is no less used to having to raise the wages of his employees in virtue of the decrees of Power. Nowadays it is understood that our subjective rights are precarious and at the good pleasure of authority. But this was an idea which was still new and surprising to the men of the seventeenth century. What they witnessed were the first decisive steps of a revolutionary conception of Power; they saw before their eyes the successful assertion of the right of sovereignty as one which breaks other rights and will soon be regarded as the one foundation of all rights.

In such a society, where a multitude of legal jurisdictions abounded and no single sovereign voice could be found, the king did not make the law but was himself bound by it. Law was something to be discovered, not made (as with the absolute monarchs and parliaments of the modern age). In his classic study of Cardinal Wolsey, Alfred Pollard described the decentralization of power that characterized the Middle Ages, as well as the lack of reliance on legislation:

There were the liberties of the church, based on law superior to that of the King; there was the law of nature, graven in the hearts of men and not to be erased by royal writs; and there was the prescription of immemorial local and feudal custom stereotyping a variety of jurisdictions and impeding the operation of a single will. There was no sovereignty capable of eradicating bondage by royal edict or act of parliament, regulating borough franchises, reducing to uniformity the various uses of the church, or enacting a principle of succession to the throne. The laws which ruled men’s lives were the customs of their trade, locality, or estate and not the positive law of a legislator; and the whole sum of English parliamentary legislation for the whole Middle Ages is less in bulk than that of the single reign of Henry VIII.

The great sociologist Robert Nisbet described medieval society as "one of the most loosely organized societies in history." Political leaders who desired centralization found themselves up against the historic liberties of towns, guilds, universities, the Church, and similar corporate bodies, all of whom guarded their (often hard-won) liberties with great vigilance, and all of whom would have been baffled at the modern idea that a single sovereign voice, whether of a king or of "the people," could on its own authority have redefined or overturned those rights, whether or not "majority rule" sanctioned it.

Our "democracy" today feels itself bound by no such obligations, and routinely overturns settled ways of life in one community after another. The myths of democracy – that it is necessary for economic prosperity, that it guarantees that government will not become abusive, that it ensures that the "will of the people" is expressed in law – seem more absurd and ridiculous than ever. Today we have a two-party system that is so utterly corrupt, so totally dominated by crooks and ignoramuses, and so deliberately rigged against any outside challenger – and with a media positively wedded to the current arrangement – that it is beyond laughable to speak in any way of "the will of the people," if such a thing can be said to exist in any case. I’m sure the same students who reject nullification as treason against the holy will of the majority would defend the upcoming Iraq war as a reflection of the will of the people, despite the fact that "the people" had virtually no antiwar candidates to vote for.

Earlier this year, 90 percent of the US Congress voted for a resolution supporting the policies of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, in a show of support much greater than his own government gives him. Was that a reflection of the will of the American people?

The vast majority of Americans know absolutely nothing about the US Constitution and what it authorizes, so the idea that their votes alone will prevent unconstitutional legislation is simply laughable, and completely contradicted by the evidence of everyday life and indeed of the entire twentieth century. Moreover, most Americans know absolutely nothing about, say, money and banking, so how can the Federal Reserve be described with a straight face as what "the people" demand? Do the people demand a million illegal immigrants a year?

Should there be a state in our day with enough courage and intelligence to resist the unconstitutional federal interference in their affairs that goes on as a matter of course – just consider the popular referenda in Colorado and California alone that federal courts imperiously overturned in the 1990s – then far from lamenting this descent into "anarchy," we should positively rejoice that at last the American people have come to understand their own tradition once again.

I don’t want to romanticize the people too much: plenty of government expansion has taken place with their approval or connivance. The great John Randolph of Roanoke referred to unfettered democratic governance as rule by "King Numbers," but so many students have been raised on the religion of democracy that they cannot even conceive of how a state or community might be oppressed by the untrammeled "democracy" of the remainder. I sometimes ask: if majority rule is such a precious principle, and if I hold my property only at the sufferance of a majority of my fellows, then why not let India and China vote on how much American wealth they’d like to confiscate? That would be "majority rule" in action, so why exactly would it be wrong?

Hans Hoppe is right: no "limited government" can stay that way for long, and if anything the democratic system only accelerates the move away from government’s original limitations. Once the right to tax is conceded to an institution said to possess a monopoly on the use of force, no feeble constitution can stand in the way of its expansion.

The genuine reactionary in our day should not be pining to take over the reins of the modern state, but should rather aim to dismantle this destructive institution that was absolutely foreign and unknown to medieval Europe. As Hoppe, Ralph Raico, and others have pointed out, it was precisely the decentralized nature of European political life that allowed capitalism to develop and the good things of civilization to flourish. According to David Landes, "Because of this crucial role as midwife and instrument of power in a context of multiple, competing polities (the contrast is with the all-encompassing empires of the Orient or the Ancient World), private enterprise in the West possessed a social and political vitality without precedent or counterpart" (emphasis in original). Likewise, Jean Baechler wrote that "the expansion of capitalism owes its origins and raison d’être to political anarchy."

As radical as it doubtless sounds, the time has come to think very seriously about alternatives to the modern state. That the central state here in America is on the side of every degenerate aspect of culture and society goes without saying, and this is true regardless of which party is in power. (Bob Dole’s Viagra commercials just about sum up the Republican Party on cultural questions.) It has squandered everyone’s retirement money, slowed job creation, created the business cycle, debased the currency, all but nationalized education, dictated social policy to every community in America, confiscated money from ordinary Americans to pay farmers not to grow anything, made war on freedom of association – I could go on for quite a while. And what it’s supposed to do – protect us from criminals and from foreign attack – it does appallingly badly. (Remember the visas our immigration service issued to the September 11 hijackers months after the fatal attacks?) Our legal system is a complete shambles, which is why private dispute resolution companies are flourishing.

As Donald Livingston has argued, the modern unitary state has a lot to answer for, having been responsible for terror and destruction without precedent in history:

Its wars and totalitarian revolutions have been without precedent in their barbarism and ferocity. But in addition to this, it has persistently subverted and continues to subvert those independent social authorities and moral communities on which eighteenth-century monarchs had not dared to lay their hands. Its subversion of these authorities, along with its success in providing material welfare, has produced an ever increasing number of rootless individuals whose characters are hedonistic, self-absorbed, and without spirit. We daily accept expropriations, both material and spiritual, from the central government which our ancestors in 1776 and 1861 would have considered non-negotiable.

Unworkable and utopian, some will say of the pure private-property order. But the more you think about it, the clearer it becomes that what is truly unworkable and utopian is the idea of "limited government," whose epitaph stands right before our very eyes.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: nullification; statesrights
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To: billbears
The people of each state created their respective state government - not the other way around.

The states collectively and severally created the FEDERAL government - not the other way around. Their decisions were unilateral - devoid of coercion.

As parties to the compact that created the federal government, the states are the final arbiter of decisions with respect to federal relations - NOT the federal Supreme Court, Legislature or Executive.

The legislature and executive have had laws and orders overturned by the courts, and decisions of the Supreme Court have been overturned by the people of the several states via Constitutional amendment 4 times in our history.

21 posted on 12/10/2002 10:16:14 AM PST by 4CJ
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To: billbears
By legal secession or by nullification of laws the seperate and sovereign states disagree with

There is no process of legal secession under U.S. law except for the conflict resolution -in- the Constitution -- that is the amendment process.

The states are not completely sovereign under the Constitution. The Articles of Confederation had failed. When enough people realized that, something stronger was adopted. THAT was the Constitution with, as George Washington called it, "a coercive power". It was strong -enough- so that the government set up by the framers has existed from 1790 until today.

Walt

22 posted on 12/10/2002 10:17:22 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: WhiskeyPapa
Don't worry Walt. The Empire is sickeningly lurching through history. Under the bureaucratic juggernaut of centralization first forwarded successfully by the northern butcher at whose feet you worship.
23 posted on 12/10/2002 10:18:34 AM PST by billbears
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To: billbears
I have not read the original articles, but as defined here, the Nullification idea is absurd:

Nullification is the idea, pioneered by Thomas Jefferson and John C. Calhoun, that an American state has the right to "nullify" federal legislation that it believes violates the Constitution. As Virginian political thinker Abel Upshur put it, since no common umpire exists between the federal government and the states to render judgments on breaches of the Constitution, each state – as a constituent part and co-creator of the Union – has to make such determinations for itself.

Why stop at the federation? Apply the same to counties and states: since there is no common arbitration (allegedly) between the two, each county has to have the nullification power.

Don't stop at counties either: continue on to the cities and townships, individual school boards --- until you finally reached the individual. Since there is no common arbiter between you and the state, YOU should be able to nullify whatever state has decided --- whenever YOU deem something unconstitutional.

The problem arises, of course, because of the false premise, that the Supreme Court will not act on behalf of a state.

24 posted on 12/10/2002 10:21:16 AM PST by TopQuark
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To: WhiskeyPapa
That's why this blithering idiot thinks he can write this crap and get away with it.

Judging by some of the responses, a few of them are here and posting.

And these idiots believe that the Tenth Amendment was thrown in there just cuz the quill had extra ink in it...

25 posted on 12/10/2002 10:24:17 AM PST by Publius6961
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To: ThomasJefferson; billbears
This crackpot idea destroys the concept of the Rule of Law and the idea of a Union under a "...supreme Law of the Land." Of course, no one who has studied the life and beliefs of Thomas Jefferson is the least surprised by his underhand attempt to subvert the Constitution and all its treasonous implications. Fortunately John Marshall was in place to frustrate his idiot designs and destructive influence and keep the nation united by law as the true patriots (Washington, Hamilton and even Madison) intended in 1787.

Had he been in the country when it was being debated, and written it is very likely that he would have successfully led the movement to defeat its ratification. Continued weakness in the national government would have led to State alliances with foreign powers and the strangling of the USA in its cradle.

What could be more absurd than a State nullifying a Treaty, conducting its own foreign policy? Who or what was to tell it that it couldn't?
26 posted on 12/10/2002 10:24:33 AM PST by justshutupandtakeit
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
The states collectively and severally created the FEDERAL government - not the other way around.

That is not true.

The Constitution was ratified in special conventions called for the purpose -- the states were bypassed.

Chief Justice Marshall said as much.

Now, one of you neo-rebs has --quoted-- Chief Justice Marshall's majority opinion in McCullough v. Maryland from 1819 in an attempt to skew perception of these events -- (I think it was you. If not, please deny.)

So you --know-- better and yet you persist in an interpretation that is ahistorical.

From McCullough:

"The convention which framed the constitution was, indeed, elected by the State legislatures. But the instrument, when it came from their hands, was a mere proposal, without obligation, or pretensions to it. It was reported to the then existing Congress of the United States, with a request that it might "be submitted to a convention of Delegates, chosen in each State, by the people thereof, under the recommendation of its legislature, for their assent and ratification." This mode of proceeding was adopted; and by the Convention, by Congress, and by the State Legislatures, the instrument was submitted to the people. They acted upon it, in the only manner in which they can act safely, effectively, and wisely, on such a subject, by assembling in Convention. It is true, they assembled in their several States; and where else should they have assembled? No political dreamer was ever wild enough to think of breaking down the lines which separate the States, and of compounding the American people into one common mass. Of consequence, when they act, they act in their States. But the measures they adopt do not, on that account cease to be the measures of the people themselves, or become the measures of the state governments."

The people ratified the Constitution, not the states.

Walt

27 posted on 12/10/2002 10:30:54 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: justshutupandtakeit
Please go take your Prozak, you are slipping back into dementia. Now, you are back on "ignore".
28 posted on 12/10/2002 10:34:33 AM PST by Protagoras
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To: WhiskeyPapa
I cite lots of cases ;o) But an attempt to skew the "record"? I think not. Neo-reb? Again, I think not.

The point made is that the people of every existing state did not - in unison - ratify the Constiutution. The people of EACH state individually (unilaterlly) assembled in convention to vote up or down. Given that 9 of 13 states' ratifications would give life to the new union (via secession from the old one) if my math is correct there would be 715 possible combinations of ratifications that would produce that result. The people of New York could not - and did NOT - vote for the people of Georgia.

29 posted on 12/10/2002 10:45:18 AM PST by 4CJ
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
The point made is that the people of every existing state did not - in unison - ratify the Constiutution. The people of EACH state individually (unilaterlly) assembled in convention to vote up or down.

For convenience only, as the Chief Justice indicated.

It's "We the people", not "we the states."

"But the measures they adopt do not, on that account cease to be the measures of the people themselves..."

Walt

30 posted on 12/10/2002 10:49:23 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Back then there was "Free and Independant States", even the people knew that. Not anymore.
31 posted on 12/10/2002 10:50:02 AM PST by B4Ranch
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
But an attempt to skew the "record"? I think not.

You cited a portion of McCullough that was contradicted by the very next sentence in the ruling.

That is an attempt to skew the record, or if you like, the perception, of these events.

Walt

32 posted on 12/10/2002 10:52:39 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
The people of New York could not - and did NOT - vote for the people of Georgia.

No one said they did or could.

But the statement you made in #21 is false.

And you knew it was false based on McCullough

Walt

33 posted on 12/10/2002 10:54:20 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: billbears
Under the bureaucratic juggernaut of centralization first forwarded successfully by the northern butcher at whose feet you worship.

I suppose you mean President Lincoln. I don't worship at his feet.

But care to expound on the reasons he might be called a "butcher"?

Walt

34 posted on 12/10/2002 10:56:25 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: billbears
The modern state is the friend of tyrants and cannibals, but the enemy of all humanity.

It's tough to see how it will simply evaporate, however.

Interesting times ahead, imo.
35 posted on 12/10/2002 11:02:39 AM PST by headsonpikes
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To: ThomasJefferson
YOur inability to refute my comments reveals all that is necessary for an onlooker to realize your intellectual vacuity. Of course, reading the absurdities you post to others does that as well.
36 posted on 12/10/2002 11:32:11 AM PST by justshutupandtakeit
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To: WhiskeyPapa
I suppose you mean President Lincoln. I don't worship at his feet.

Your actions indicate otherwise, Walt.

In the meantime on this question of the union and its nature, I'll happily yield to Alexis de Tocqueville:

"If the Union were to undertake to enforce by arms the allegiance of the federated states, it would be in a position very analogous to that of England at the time of the War of Independence.

However strong a government may be, it cannot easily escape from the consequences of a principle which it has once admitted as the foundation of its constitution. The Union was formed by the voluntary agreement of the states; and these, in uniting together, have not forfeited their sovereignty, nor have they been reduced to the condition of one and the same people. If one of the states chose to withdraw its name from the contract, it would be difficult to disprove its right of doing so, and the Federal government would have no means of maintaining its claims directly, either by force or by right. In order to enable the Federal government easily to conquer the resistance that may be offered to it by any of its subjects, it would be necessary that one or more of them should be specially interested in the existence of the Union, as has frequently been the case in the history of confederations.

If it be supposed that among the states that are united by the federal tie there are some which exclusively enjoy the principal advantages of union, or whose prosperity entirely depends on the duration of that union, it is unquestionable that they will always be ready to support the central government in enforcing the obedience of the others. But the government would then be exerting a force not derived from itself, but from a principle contrary to its nature. States form confederations in order to derive equal advantages from their union; and in the case just alluded to, the Federal government would derive its power from the unequal distribution of those benefits among the states.

If one of the federated states acquires a preponderance sufficiently great to enable it to take exclusive possession of the central authority, it will consider the other states as subject provinces and will cause its own supremacy to be respected under the borrowed name of the sovereignty of the Union. Great things may then be done in the name of the Federal government, but in reality that government will have ceased to exist." - Democracy in America

37 posted on 12/10/2002 11:42:36 AM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: GOPcapitalist
In the meantime on this question of the union and its nature, I'll happily yield to Alexis de Tocqueville...

Who I am sure would be glad to yield to Chief Justice Marhall:

"...there is certainly nothing in the circumstances under which our constitution was formed; nothing in the history of the times, which justify the opinion that the confidence reposed in the states was so implicit as to leave in them and their tribunals the power of resisting or defeating, in the form of law, the legislative measures of the Union."

Walt

38 posted on 12/10/2002 11:55:23 AM PST by WhiskeyPapa
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To: justshutupandtakeit
Of the twenty two things that you want people to know about you, you list being white as number two.

You really do need some help. After you take your medicine, and before you put your sheet on, look in the yellow pages under mental hospitals and make the call.

39 posted on 12/10/2002 12:17:47 PM PST by Protagoras
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To: ThomasJefferson
Hey boy, you are the one who names himself after a man who enslaved his own children. Thus, your babblings are ignored by all thinking/knowledgable people.
40 posted on 12/10/2002 12:21:46 PM PST by justshutupandtakeit
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