The American Revolution Revisited

Let's be honest; America is facing
the same legal, moral and ethical questions that our Founding generation did,
especially regarding the issue of "Who Is Sovereign in the United
States." For our Founders, they fought, bled and died on the principles
that no man or government has the right to rule over others contrary to their
agreement (i.e. compact, constitution) and contrary to the principles of
natural law as revealed in the Creation of God; that all men are born in nature
with the power to govern themselves; and that no Sovereign government,
established lawfully by the consent of we the people, can be usurped and
controlled by any other entity. Thus, today in America, the question once again
comes down to "Who is Sovereign in the United States?"
Today, there are 3 basic options for
"Who is Sovereign in the United States": (1) the Federal government,
(2) the State governments or (3) We the People. I feel confident in stating
that most contemporary Americans believe that the answer to this critical
question is the Federal government--especially as it concerns any practical
effect on the power of and over government. For years, Americans have been
brainwashed though public education, major media networks and politicians that
ALL federal laws are the "supreme law of the land" and that no state
law or action to the contrary is valid, citing Article 6, paragraph 2 of the US
Constitution as their "irrefutable" proof. Of course they are
completely wrong: American ideology and legal fact states that sovereignty
rests with "we the people." However, the question must be more
narrowly defined.
That is, does the sovereign power of
we the people rest with all the people in the nation as one body, or does the
power rest with the people THROUGH the respective States? The answer to this
question cannot be overstated, because if the sovereign power rests with we the
people collectively as one body, then the States have absolutely no power and
at the ratification of the US Constitution, the States lost all powers
originally granted to them by their respective sovereigns (the people of that
State). To the contrary, if Sovereignty rests within or through their
respective States, then the States conversely have more power than what is
being admitted today by the "Centralists" of our day.
Through an honest study of the
history and the context of the Articles of Confederation, the US Constitution,
the Constitutional Convention and subsequent Ratification debates, the
Federalist Papers, the Anti-Federalist Papers, the rulings of subsequent US
Supreme Court Rulings and the writings of political philosophers and statesmen
of the 1700s and 1800s, the conclusion is undeniable and clear: We the People
are the Sovereigns of the States respectively and of the States United through
our respective States.
Thus, the issue is not who is
Sovereign, because we know that We the People are sovereign in the US and that
the Sovereigns of each State have never ceded to the Federal government any
power not expressly granted to it by the Compact (the US Constitution). But
rather, the issue is one of JURISDICTION: in other words, who has the power to
act on behalf of and in compliance with the Sovereign? The issue of
jurisdiction is so important because it acknowledges that since the Sovereign
has "paramount authority" in government, any powers that are granted
from the Sovereign to government are to remain within that grant of authority.
Put another way, the States can no more grant authority to the Federal
government against the will of the Sovereign--the people--than the Executive branch
of the Federal government can give to the Judiciary branch the powers that we
the people granted to it alone. To deny that such a grant exists or conversely
to ignore the limitations placed on the governments by the Sovereign is to
suggest that tyranny is a lawful act and that it must be complied with.
America's founders would have considered such a political theory to be
treasonous. Do we the people think so seriously of the matter? According to
recent events, the answer to this question will likely be answered sooner than
later.
As some of you may know, several
states have and are passing legislation regarding the independence and
sovereignty of the people of their respective states. ( http://www.tenthamendmentcenter.com
) More specifically, the states of Tennessee and Montana have passed
"Firearms Freedom Acts," which have become law and which reaffirm
their Sovereignty under the 10th Amendment of the US Constitution. This law
states that any firearms that are made, sold and bought in that state are NOT
subject to the Federal regulations of firearms, because they are inherently
internal affairs, which exempt them from the commerce clause of the US
Constitution.
As you would imagine, the Federal
government, through its agency, the Department of Justice, did not take too
kindly to Tennessee's assertion of jurisdiction over this matter and position
that the federal laws did not apply to the subject matter at hand. This federal
opposition has become known through the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
and Explosives (ATF), whereby they informed the firearms licensees in an
"open letter" in Tennessee that the recently enacted law (Firearms
Freedom Act) does not apply and is void and that they (the firearms licensees)
must still obey and submit to the federal laws, regardless of the State's
statute. (See http://www.tfaonline.org/downloads/ATFfirearmsfreedomact.pdf )
This ATF response tells us the
following about the federal government's ideology of Sovereignty: (1) the
federal government does not recognize the lawful and independent jurisdiction
of the Sovereigns of Tennessee to operate their internal affairs as they deem
proper and fitting; (2) the Sovereigns of Tennessee do not possess lawful
jurisdiction to govern themselves through constitutional means; (3) the federal
government has the power and authority to control the internal affairs of all
States, as they deem fit. Bottom line, the Federal government is Sovereign.
With their theory in mind, however, what commodity, what relationship, what
contract, what service, or what molecule in this entire country would not be
subject to their control and power?
This issue is the very same reason
why the Colonists declared their independence from Great Britain in 1776 and
why Great Britain declared the Colonies to be in a state of rebellion against
the government. The conflict was in fact the application of their Constitution:
whether it be a "living" constitution or whether it be
"fundamental laws" based upon the intent and will of the people. The
fact is, it was the Great-Britain-view of their constitution versus the
American-view of their constitution that caused the conflict between the crown
and the colonies. One historian summarizes the conflict this way:
"The contrast cannot be too
strongly insisted upon. [The colonists], on the one hand, believed that the
British Constitution was fixed by 'the law of God and nature,' and founded in the
principles of law and reason so that Parliament could not alter it, but [Great
Britain believed] that 'the constitution of this country has been always in a
moving state, either gaining or losing something,' and 'there are things even
in Magna Charta which are not constitutional now' and others which an act of
Parliament might change. Between two such conceptions of the powers of
government compromise was difficult to attain . . . Such differences in ideals
were as important causes of a breaking-up of the empire [of Great Britain] as
more concrete matters like oppressive taxation." (Claude Halstead Van
Tyne, The Causes of the War of Independence, Volume 1, [University of Michigan,
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1922], 235, 237).
Indeed, the issues of taxation
during the 1760s and 1770s were only fruits of the underlying issue, and that
is, who is Sovereign in America. According to Great Britain, the government had
the power to impose its will on the people of America despite the will of the
colonies and despite the natural laws governing the compact between the English
people and their government. In other words, the government believed that their
constitution was "living," giving the government power to impose its
will on the people, without the people's consent. The colonists, however, saw
the matter to be a usurpation of their God-given right to be governed by their
consent and in compliance with their constitution. The end result: the
Sovereigns in each colony seceded from the empire of Great Britain because of
Great Britain's refusal to follow their constitution.
Do Sovereigns throughout our States
United not see the significance of the issue we are facing today? Are we so
blind to history that we cannot compare this scenario to the very scenarios
that led to the American Revolution? Are we so ignorant as to the intents and
purposes of the US Constitution? Consider that the "supreme laws of the
land" were never meant to be carte blanche powers of the Federal
government, but instead federal laws were expressly limited by the terms of the
compact between and for the States, found in the Constitution. This concept of
"supreme law of the land" was expressed by a founding father, whom
many would consider to be a "centralist" in belief, Alexander
Hamilton, in Federalist Paper #27:
"[T]hat the laws of the
Confederacy [meaning, the United States of America--yes, even Hamilton, along
with many other founders, such as George Washington, called the US Constitution
a Confederacy, because they knew that the nature and character of the compact
of the US Constitution did not change from the Articles of Confederation] as to
the ENUMERATED and LEGITIMATE objects of its jurisdiction, will become the
SUPREME LAW of the land, to the observance . . . in each State, will be bound by
the sanctity of an oath. Thus the legislatures, courts, and magistrates, of the
respective members, will be incorporated into the operation of the national
government AS FAR AS ITS JUST AND CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY EXTENDS."
Hamilton's legal position concerning
the limited power of the federal government and the "supreme law of the
land" was the consensus of the founders, the States, and we the people.
Nowhere in America's founding was there the notion that the supreme laws of the
land were anything contrary to the compact FOR the States. The supreme laws of
the land are simply those "fundamental laws" that we the people have
created and imposed upon the government to follow and uphold.
Of course, the question has been
raised over the past 150 years of "who has the power to determine whether
or not the Federal government has usurped their constitutional authority?"
The popular answer is (wrongfully), the US Supreme Court. God forbid that the
Sovereigns of each State must wait and rely on 9 federal judges to make rulings
of this nature before a State would have any legal rights or justification to
act in accordance with the will of their Sovereigns. Indeed, the ATF
interpreted the Constitution unilaterally without the opinion of the US Supreme
Court and without opinion or order denied the constitutionality of Tennessee's
Firearms Freedom Act. The Sovereigns in each state have the same power, and the
historical and legal evidence is plentiful. Consider Thomas Jefferson's
position:
"[T]he States should be
watchful to note every material usurpation on their rights; denounce them as
they occur in the most peremptory terms; to protest against them as wrongs to
which our present submission shall be considered, not as acknowledgments or
precedents of right, but as a temporary yielding to the lesser evil, until
their accumulation shall overweigh that of separation." (Thomas Jefferson
and John P. Foley, ed., The Jeffersonian Cyclopedia, A Comprehensive Collection
of the Views of Thomas Jefferson, [New York and London: Funk & Wagnalls
Co., 1900], 133)
I will not attempt to persuade the
reader at this point on the fallacious position that only the US Supreme Court
can make a determination of constitutional actions. However, for those who
would argue that the US Supreme Court is in fact the only legal means by which
a State can say "no" to the federal government, then I believe that
such a person has reached the point of voluntary slavery, and such a person is
dangerous to the concepts of federalism, American-sovereignty, and constitutional
limits and freedom, as expressed by thousands of the most influential men in
our history. And such a person has accepted only those political means of
redress whereby the Sovereigns of each State drudge through the treacherous mud
of tyranny and get absolutely nowhere.
What we are seeing today, and have
seen for over 100 years in America, is the usurpation of the federal government
over Sovereignty--we the people--and over Jurisdiction--the States. While this
article cannot begin to expound in depth the true character and nature of the
US Constitution, a study of history reveals that the US Constitution was an
agreement between the Sovereigns of each State whereby they acceded to give up
only certain parts of their sovereignty for the "more perfect union"
of the people within those States. As with any sovereign people or government,
accession may be limited to whatever means and ways necessary to protect the
freedom of that society. This is in fact what the Colonists did in 1776 when
declaring independence from Great Britain, what the States did in 1781 when
ratifying the Articles of Confederation, and what the States did in 1787 when
ratifying the US Constitution. It was the Sovereigns, through their respective
States, who declared their natural rights under God, who secured their natural
rights through independence from governments, and who expressed that any act
outside of their consent is tyranny.
When this recognition resounds in
the hearts and minds of the people, as our Declaration of Independence states,
"it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute
new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its
powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety
and Happiness." Do you really think after only 11 years from the signing
of the Declaration of Independence that those same people who risked everything
for independence from those "living-constitutionalists" in Great
Britain and who believed in the principles seen in the Articles of
Confederation would have completely renounced their understanding of a
Confederacy and Federalism and would have resigned the same and delegated all
of their powers that they fought and died to secure for each State and for
their citizens? If you think so silly a notion, you severely impose injustice
upon the intelligence and intentions of our founders.
However, the record is clear that
the Sovereigns of each State never ceded to the federal government powers not
expressly vested to it and never waived the ability to reclaim that power
through their proper channels--the States--the same channels by which the US
Constitution was ratified. Consider the Sovereigns' voice in the State of
Virginia in 1787:
"We the delegates of the people
of Virginia . . . Do, in the name and in behalf of the people of Virginia,
declare and make known, that the powers granted under the constitution, being
derived from the people of the United States, may be resumed by them whensoever
the same shall be perverted to their injury or oppression, and that every power
not granted thereby, remains with them and at their will; that therefore no
right, of any denomination, can be cancelled, abridged, restrained or modified
by the congress, by the senate or house of representatives acting in any
capacity, by the president or any department, or officer of the United States,
EXCEPT IN THOSE INSTANCES IN WHICH POWER IS GIVEN BY THE CONSTITUTION FOR THOSE
PURPOSES." (Emphasis added.)
However, the Federal government
today does not recognize the Sovereignty in the people of the respective
states; it does not recognizes the respective States' jurisdiction over all
matters not expressly delegated to the federal government; and it does not seem
to acknowledge State Sovereignty under the 10th amendment of the US
Constitution. Given their evident intent and purposes to continually grow in
power and to continually oppress and suppress the sovereignty of we the people,
against our respective states, the question becomes, how will they be made to
understand this? It is of course up to the Sovereigns in each state to answer
this question. And we see the answers arriving through State laws such as the
Firearms Freedom Act.
The time has come in America where
to be free necessarily means to resist status quo and federal usurpation and to
actively change the course and philosophy being shoved down our throats. There
really is no middle ground any more. This is not a matter of politics anymore.
This is not a matter of Republican and Democrat. This is a matter of FREEDOM,
as much so as were the matters of 1775 and 1776. It is staring you in the face,
daring you to make a move. May we never be guilty of causing, whether by our
apathy, indifference, laziness, or comfort, this nation to lose the freedoms
that our founders attempted to secure with infinite pains and labors. We the
people must once again reassert our Sovereignty in this country, and the States
must recognize and act upon their role as Freedom protectors and tyranny
resisters.
© Chuck Baldwin
Timothy Baldwin, Esq. is an attorney who received his Juris Doctor degree from Cumberland School of Law in Birmingham, Alabama. He is a former prosecutor for the Florida State Attorney's Office and now owns his own private law practice. He is also the son of Dr. Chuck Baldwin, who was the Constitution Party’s 2008 Presidential candidate.
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