Written November 19th, 2010
We
must view all political issues as inherently economic in nature.
Besides asking if a bill is constitutional, we must also ask how we
will fund it and whether the methods and means by which we fund it
are also constitutional. Besides requiring all future bills to cite
in them the specific clauses which explicitly grant the congress the
authority to pass such laws, I would support a federal
balanced-budget amendment, which would prevent deficits and debt
increases, requiring the government to either cut spending, raise
taxes, borrow more, and / or print more money (the latter only as a
last resort, however!).
In
that all political issues are inherently economic in nature, we must
view government itself through the lens of economics. Government
apparati are little other than contract-enforcement agencies;
organizations which provide us security and justice for a fee,
obligated to hold up their end of the bargain. The federal government
behaves as a corporation that desires to become a monopoly. It sees
states, local communities, and private security firms, and offers
them legitimacy if only they will consent to take orders from, and
become integrated into, the overarching, monolithic centralized
power.
The
federal government is not at the top of the power structure. The
people are. Just as the states can take back the powers which they
have vested in the federal government, the people can take back the
powers which they have vested in the state governments, and therefore
the people can compel the states and congress to reclaim for they the
people the powers which states and the congress have vested in the
executive branch and in the president, especially those powers
illegitimately and wrongfully appropriated to those who hold such
positions.
For
more entries on budgets, finance, debt, and the bailouts, please
visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/debt-and-federal-budget.html
For
more entries on taxation, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/tax-cuts.html
For
more entries on theory of government, please visit:
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