Elmarnieh wrote:
Actually the highway system was a result of the military moving troops and supplies coast to coast. Postal routes are not highways.
Actually, any road is a postal route. Mail and packages regularly move by large truck. The Constitution doesn't say what is or isn't a postal route; you don't get to impose your own limitations.
Elmo wrote:
In your interpretation it absolutely grants the power to legislate for the general welfare. I suggest you examine Helvering v Davis and US v Butler. Helvering is how our SS system got tagged as legal and that includes the legislating of taking SS taxes from the payroll - not just the spending portion. US v Butler ruled "The clause confers a power separate and distinct from those later enumerated [,] is not restricted in meaning by the grant of them, and Congress consequently has a substantive power to tax and to appropriate, limited only by the requirement that it shall be exercised to provide for the general welfare of the United States. … It results that the power of Congress to authorize expenditure of public moneys for public purposes is not limited by the direct grants of legislative power found in the Constitution." So yes it can legislate so long as the legislation is deemed for the public welfare. The road to hell is paved with such good intentions.
SS is taxation and spending legislation, not directly legisating the general welfare. SS taxes income and then spends the money.
As for the road to hell, that's just appeal to consequences.
Elmo wrote:
Only in your mind is our highest legislative body playing the role of extortionist not immoral. Oh, how does it requires states to comply without legislation - that's right, it doesn't.
Exactly it doesn't. It's not extortion at all, and whether it's moral has nothing to do with whether it's Constitutional. Frankly I think it's stupid and possibly immoral, but perfectly legal. Claiming it's illegal is just setting your own morality in place of law.
Elmo wrote:
Ok so people who fought against roughly 5% taxation then established a nation 10 years later where unlimited taxation would be allowed by a central government that they wished to keep small and limited? This doesn't help to illuminate a little flaw in your thought process?
They didn't fight against particular tax rates; they fought against the lack of representation they had in the government that established them. In any case, it doesn't illuminate any "flaw in my thought process" because I really don't care what they thought at the time. They are not Saints nor are their written ideas Holy Government Scripture, excpt for the Constitution itself. They are simply citizens, and their ideas applied in their time. If they didn't write an upper tax rate limit in, one doesn't exist unless it was later established by an Ammendment.
I would support such an ammendment, but right now it doesn't exist.
Elmo wrote:
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Not at all. States are specifically required to exist by the Constitution; it states every state shall provide Repulican forms of governmnet.
Except by your statement it is empowered to do such a thing. A 100% income tax would deplete all states of income and they would cease to function.
Obviously. That would require the Federal government to fund the states sufficiently to run their governments. Such a move would be wildly impractical and stupid. It would also be Constitutional. Stop appealing to consequences.
Elmo wrote:
Except its not just him, several other signers, and in fact the impetus for the separation from Britain are wholly at odds with your view.
That's nice. I also pointed out that some agree with me. They're all just citizens in any case. Their writings are not special.
Elmo wrote:
Yes and Hamilton was completely wrong. The man who wrote the document is the one who knows its meaning despite what other people want that writing to mean. You've still not dealt with the same thing Hamilton never explained is how it is a limited government when the power to tax is unlimited. Taxation is control and power, it is the ability to destroy - with unlimited power to do so we have no such thing as a limited government.
No, the man who wrote it is not the one who knows what it means. He wrote based on what others decided; he was just a secretary. His own views on what it meant do not count beyond his representation as a delegate.
In any case, I don't need to "deal" with anything, nor does Hamilton. The limitation is quite clear; the government can tax and spend. Yes, taxation is very powerful, but it is limited by the fact that excess will destroy the source of revenue. Just because it passes some arbitrary line in your mind of power does not mean it's not "limited". Having "limited government" does not mean "limited to Elmo's satisfaction".
This is just you claiming "this view is wrong because I like someone else's better!!!"
Elmo wrote:
The clause of general welfare is explaining the following listed power - exactly how hard is that to understand especially when the same kind of language and phrasing had been used in the document and you understand how that is used yet for some reason this phrasing is not the same as the other?
Because it is not explaining the following powers, and is not the same language as used earlier. The item is the first in a list, and it is preceeded in the sentence by other specifically mentioned powers. You're just making up bullshit.
Elmo wrote:
Yes, that is rather my point. Those both fall under general defense which is why they are explicit power which the government has which it can use to provide for the general defense as outlined in the clause we are discussing.
Yes, it can, but it is not limited to only those actions in providing for the common defense.
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The phrase general defense and welfare is introductory, it introduces the explicit powers listed below exactly like the introductory phrase of the second amendment. The specific powers granted to follow through with the introduction are listed below as I have already explained. The parts do not grant unlimited power to the Federal Government just because it is convenient for you and convenient for those in the federal government.
Aside from the fact that the Scond Ammendment was written AFTER the rest of the Constitution, making your claim to use the same phrase absurd in itself, the "well-regulated militia" part is BEFORE the specific right it discusses. The first item in the list of powers has no introduction. It starts right out with taxation and debts and moves on to grant powers for common defense and general welfare.
So, yes, they do. All you're doing is trying to impose limitations that don't exist, and based on fictitious claims about "phraseology".
Rant harder, though. come on, RANT HARDER!! REPEAT YOURSELF MORE!!! ALL THOSE IMAGINARY PEOPLE THAT AGREE WITH YOU ARE GONNA HELP YOU WITH THE REVOLUTTTIOOONNN!!!"