Posted November 09, 2012
Krypsyn: 236 years later, and the U.S. is still fighting this battle with each other. The major turning point was the Civil War (or as we call it here in North Carolina, the 'War of Northern Aggression'). That is when I believe the industrialization (i.e. Big Business) plutocrats, like Rothschild and Carnegie), started taking control of the country politically and centralizing their power in Washington D.C. to suit their agenda.
(Slavery was horrible, and I am glad it is gone. I am merely speaking to the political rationale behind the events.)
The industrial monopolists/robber barons did gain a lot of power, but I feel like that would've happened with our without a strong central government. Carnegie started his "Empire of Steel" about 10-15 years after "The Civil war" (and yes the proper name is "The Civil War" - I don't think the South gets to name it if they fired first, fought for slavery, and then lost - sorry but I really draw the line on that). The monopolists had even more control over the state and local governments than they did over the Feds. Which is scary given the level of control they had - even past the busting of the 1900s all the way through the 1920s. But that's one reason, ironically as it has sometimes turned out in modern times, that many states created ballot initiatives to try to get around the monopolist control of their state and local governments. (Slavery was horrible, and I am glad it is gone. I am merely speaking to the political rationale behind the events.)
Krypsyn: Possibly? I don't know. I do know that everyone tends to express their position with their own set of inherent biases. I am sure state's rights folks might tend to weight some situations and events more heavily than others. The same would go for anyone arguing against them, I suspect.
Why do they need to? If Kansas wants to teach Creationism, then let them. I really don't see how it is the business of anyone at the federal level.
My favorite part is when J.T. and the rest decided that a black person should be considered 3/5 of a person for representation purposes. So, we went from 'Taxation without representation' to 'Forced labor with stolen representation'? Lovely.
Well sometimes it is people's business beyond the state, because it means a section of the population becomes essentially unfit for education and civil life. States as they currently exist seem a little ... outdated. I know I may take some flak for that, but consider a state like California: A conservative agro-farmer in the inland empire has little to nothing in common politically with a hippie in Santa Cruz. Meanwhile, the big cities in California have more in common with the big cities in Texas or North Carolina and likewise so do the countrysides between each respective state than the countryside and the cities do with each other within any given state. Even that paints too broad a brush as some countrysides are liberal and some cities are conservative. I just don't see the states as they are set up currently to have that any more "moral authority" than the Feds when it come to governing. Why do they need to? If Kansas wants to teach Creationism, then let them. I really don't see how it is the business of anyone at the federal level.
My favorite part is when J.T. and the rest decided that a black person should be considered 3/5 of a person for representation purposes. So, we went from 'Taxation without representation' to 'Forced labor with stolen representation'? Lovely.
There are certain things which are good to at least set boundaries on at the national level - things that are important for the nation. And now more than ever, people move all over the map within the US - spend at least part of the time in different states or at least different parts of the state they grew up in. So what one state does - what one piece does, does affect the whole country. Education is a very personal issue, I get that - but interjecting a particular religion into the class room is a clear 1st and 14th amendment violation (1st - the establishment clause and 14th - that the US constitution applies the states, they can't violate the US constitution either).
This is not to say that there aren't things which are incredibly important to keep local or have strong local components. The details of the actual implementation of policy is always more effective at local levels - that doesn't mean there shouldn't be national policy, organization, or support, but that offices responsive to the needs of the local people will be best able to tailor programs to those needs (as long as they are not corrupt or incompetent).
However, the 3/5ths clause ... yeah that's part of the reason why I hate appeals to the founders in arguments. And why I was amused that when the Tea Party required every member in the House to read the Constitution out loud ... they skipped that part. :) Jefferson also wrote that he hoped people would look back on them as barbarous ancestors. So while we should respect what the founders created (and the constitution is an incredible document), we should indeed also remember that our country was born of compromise, some of it anathema to our modern morality, and it was not until The Civil War that America was unable to live with much of that compromise.
Post edited November 09, 2012 by crazy_dave