Is the Tenth Amendment American's Last Best Hope?

By Scott Reynolds


The tenth amendment to the Country's Constitution, an element of the Bill of Rights, might well be one of the most exquisite and potent few words ever drafted. Even though this brief sentence is so elegant and powerful, it can be read in in all of just a few seconds. Get ready: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

Why are Obama and all of his starry eyed zombies so scared of the tenth amendment - and strong supporters of the tenth amendment like Rick Perry? How can an incredibly straight forward sentence strike jolts of apprehension into national political figures, bureaucrats plus the armies of government personnel that do their bidding? Might there be a buried significance in that rather simple sentence drafted over 200 years ago?

To figure out the power of the tenth amendment you'll have to grasp the central concepts of America's creators. Their predominant target in starting America was to build a totally free culture that could never be put under the thumb of an oppressive central government. A culture that could never go through the tyranny and haphazard dictates over personal liberties that were suffered by the colonists under the rule of a British king an ocean apart.

Second, the tenth amendment elegantly sums up the founder's overall purpose in producing the American system of government. They tailored America's framework of constraints to properly commit power among many different branches of government, so no one element could become a gigantic crushing busybody creature, exerting unwarranted influence over individual liberties. Over again, the whole American system was designed to prevent what the English monarchs had done to the colonists by interfering in their daily lives from afar.

Lastly, and perhaps even more importantly, the tenth amendment, in a single sentence, undoubtedly shows that the founding fathers meant for most of government power to be at the state level, as close to individuals as possible.

Why did the founding fathers place almost all of the power as near to the people as possible? Easy. The founders realized from hard experience that far-away rulers that are overseeing tremendous swaths of the people, each with different desires and needs, are probably not going to take an interest in representing YOU. Therefore the founders wanted to guarantee that almost all of the rules and decisions put in place by government were conducted in the community level - where you have a chance of affecting outcomes. Local political figures, being beholden to you for their jobs, tend to be more prone to be receptive than a faraway national politician or bureaucrat.

Alas, over the past few decades, the courts have whittled away at the defenses the tenth amendment explicitly provided you and me proper protection against ever-increasing central government. We all are now paying for and suffering with a government in Washington which has become so massive, costly and invasive that it threatens to topple the entire nation.

Don't give up hope, though. There are solid indicators that America may well be turning back in the direction of its Constitutional origins, acknowledging that the federal government has expanded to the point where it's unmanageable and reinstating the liberties and prosperity our founding fathers wished us to have. November, 2012 is definitely the most critical election since the founding of America!




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