State Lawmaker: Secession an Option Urges people to assert
power as nearly 25% open to breakaway by Michael Carl
With a surprising number of
Americans open to secession in the wake of the Scottish referendum, a U.S.
state lawmaker is pointing citizens to the nation’s founding documents, which
he contends support the right of states to break away from the union.
A Reuters/Ipsos survey found nearly 25 percent of the American public strongly
supported or tended to support the idea of their state breaking away. The poll
found the historic Scottish referendum last week, even in defeat, has fueled
talk of secession in the U.S.
New Hampshire Republican state Rep. Dan Itse, the author of a new book on state rights, contends the Constitution of his state and the U.S. Constitution give states sovereign authority over their own affairs.
“If you look at our New Hampshire Constitution from 1784, which predates the U.S. Constitution by a few years, the Bill of Rights in New Hampshire refers to New Hampshire as a free, sovereign and independent state,” he said in an interview with WND.
New Hampshire Republican state Rep. Dan Itse, the author of a new book on state rights, contends the Constitution of his state and the U.S. Constitution give states sovereign authority over their own affairs.
“If you look at our New Hampshire Constitution from 1784, which predates the U.S. Constitution by a few years, the Bill of Rights in New Hampshire refers to New Hampshire as a free, sovereign and independent state,” he said in an interview with WND.
Secession, he believes, is the last resort of the states to ensure
that the union is held together by the consent of the governed.
He pointed out that contemporaries of the Founders often
used the words state and nation interchangeably in their writings.
“This was not accidental, because they saw the need to
ensure that any state in a union of states had the right to maintain their
liberties independent of an all-powerful central government,” Itse said.
Itse, author of the book “States
Have Powers: The Power of the People,”
emphasizes the Founders were intentional in their use of the word “state.”
They also carefully used the term “union,” he said, ensuring
that with the formation of a union, safeguards would be in place to protect the
rights of states.
Itse said that in his effort to understand the Founders’
ideas, he tried to “think like James Madison.” “What was he thinking when he
worked out the details of the balance of power between the central and the
federal government?” Itse asked.
“I wondered, if I were sitting in their shoes, how would I
think about it? How would they write this out since they had a great economy of
words? What did they mean by the phrase ‘perpetual union,’ for instance?
He pointed out that the phrase is in the Articles of
Confederation, which recognized the states as sovereign and independent. The
articles were written, he noted, after fighting a seven-year war against the
British Empire, which the colonies at one time had trusted to guarantee their
liberties.
“Thinking on this, and as they drafted the Articles of
Confederation, would they have entered into a union, a perpetual union, if they
could not also withdraw from that union when that union became injurious to
their liberty?” Itse asked.
“The answer is categorically no,” he told WND. “And I have
never posited that question to anyone wherethey didn’t come up with the proper
conclusion.”
Itse added that anyone who examines the conditions leading
to the drafting of the Declaration of Independence must conclude the Founders
would never have intentionally put themselves into another situation that would
lead to an authoritarian government.
“The Founders stated in the Declaration that a people have
the right to throw off tyranny. They would not have put themselves in a
position where they would have to resort to arms if they couldn’t do it
legally,” Itse said.
Independent powers
Veteran constitutional attorney Edwin Viera agrees that the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution viewed the states as sovereign
entities.
“The Declaration of Independence explicitly treats the
states as independent states (in the plural) with independent powers,” Viera
said.
He acknowledged the Founders did not “preclude the states,
or ‘We the People,’ from stripping some of those powers in whole or in part
from the states and transferring them to Congress.”
Nevertheless, he said, the states and the individual have
clearly defined authority and autonomy, according to the U.S. Constitution.
“The government has no lawful power to do to any citizen
what any person would not have the lawful power to do to another person
themselves,” he explained.
He said the Founders emphasized in the Constitution, in
Article Eight and others, that all power derives from the people.
“This means that all officers and their agents are
accountable to the people. If all power derives from the people, then the
government can’t have any power that the people don’t have individually,” Itse
said.
One of Itse’s strongest beliefs is in regard to the
limitations on treaties. In his book, he writes that no treaty can legally be
ratified that nullifies the authority of the Constitution or takes away any
right granted to the people.
“It should be pointed out that treaties are approved by the
Senate, which is a house of Congress. Therefore, the treaties which they can
lawfully approve would be limited to those areas of the law in which they have
been given lawful authority,” he writes.
Itse applies the principle to the Second Amendment. “If the
Constitution says the people have the right to keep and bear arms, how can the
Congress legally ratify a treaty that would take away that right?” he asks.
“They can’t. If the Constitution says that the federal government can’t
infringe upon the right to keep and bear arms, then how can they ascribe to a
treaty that limits that right?”
Itse told WND that as an engineer, he tries to keep things
simple. “It’s a logical impossibility for the Senate to actually ratify a
treaty that would take away a constitutional right. In fact, it’s not
constitutional or legal for them to approve a treaty that would go against the
Constitution,” Itse said.
Viera agreed. “No treaty can violate the Constitution.
Therefore, a purported treaty that attempts to do so cannot be ratified. I
should imagine that some purported “treaties” would also violate the
Declaration of Independence, and be invalid on that ground,” Viera told WND
Itse contends many members of the federal government are
either unaware or are ignoring the limits set by the Constitution.
“Here’s whee the people need to be cognizant of the limits
of federal power: The people need to be aware of the illegitimacy of those
treaties so they feel empowered to act. One of the best ways to act is to
prevail upon their state legislators to force their federal lawmakers to
enforce the Constitution,” he said.
Viera argued an international agreement that would take away
Second Amendment rights, such as the Small Arms Treaty, cannot be legally
binding on the American people.
Another current issue, he said, is the stream of executive
orders coming out of the White House.
“The president has no authority to make law himself or to
write an executive order that changes or nullifies any act of Congress,” he
said. “He can write an order telling the members of the executive branch to
follow the laws of Congress, but he has no authority to tell any person to do
anything.”
Lawmaking power, he noted, has been delegated to Congress.
“We did not delegate the power to make law to the president,
nor did we delegate the power to make law to the judiciary,” Viera said.
“Furthermore, the legislature doesn’t have the legal power
to delegate the lawmaking power to any other branch of the government. We
didn’t give them the power to delegate it.”
The people must act
Itse said his book was written as a commentary on the New
Hampshire Constitution as it relates to the constitutions of the other states
and the federal government.
He said the only remedy the country possesses to stop the
federal government’s usurpation of power from the people is for the people to
act.
“The first thing that has to be done is to spell out the
issues in a believable manner. You have to be able to explain these issues in a
way that doesn’t make you look like a wing nut. I think I’ve done that. There’s
no hyperbole in the book.
“I don’t point to any grand conspiracies. It is simply a
fundamental doctrine in the documents. We have to make it clear,” Itse said.
He uses as an example an 1808 letter drafted by the New
Hampshire Legislature to President Thomas Jefferson.
“The letter to Jefferson stated clearly that the union of
the states was not accomplished by the Constitution. The letter refers to the
states as independent states,” Itse said.
Itse believes the ultimate issue the people need to remember
is that the Founders believed in the power of the states more than in the power
of strong central government.
“The Constitution itself doesn’t hold us in union; it forms
a framework for the union. What holds us together is a sense of common purpose
– unanimity. We believe the same things,” Itse said.
He said the people need to remember that when the common
purpose is no longer represented by the central government, there is nothing
holding the nation together.
Source:
http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/state-lawmaker-secession-an-option/
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/state-lawmaker-secession-an-option/#rX8Dc00Tz5PhQeBt.99
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/state-lawmaker-secession-an-option/#rX8Dc00Tz5PhQeBt.99
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