If Congress doesn't follow the Constitution
now, why would they follow it if we change it? Let's defend it, not amend
it.
There is going to be a showdown at
the Cherokee Cattle Company on Canton Rd. in Marietta, Wednesday, December 03,
2014 starting at 6:30 p.m., where activists are gathering to draw down on
whether an Article V Constitutional Convention is the right way to remedy
federal overreach.
A recently formed group, Restore and
Preserve the Constitution, is sponsoring the event where participants will
examine whether the Georgia legislature made the right move last session when
they passed a resolution asking Congress to call a convention for the purpose
of proposing changes to the Constitution.
“Georgia and other states backed
away, rescinding their call for a convention back in 2004, and need to do so
again.” said the group’s founder and chair Debbie Staver.
“People are so desperate to rein in
runaway federal spending and the government’s gross overreach of its powers
that they jumped on the convention bandwagon without really bearing in mind
that it could result in wholesale changes to the Constitution that legitimize
the powers the federal government has usurped”, says Staver.
The featured speaker at the forum
will be Publius Huldah, a retired attorney who has gained a national following
for her insights on how the states and citizens can peacefully restore federalism,
the rule of law and their rights.
Group member Richard Arena of
Roswell explained, “Leading advocates for the Convention of States (COS) have
been invited to present their perspective with equal time, but so far none have
accepted the challenge”.
Staver explains that the convention
issue began when radio columnist and author Mark Levin published his
best-selling book “The Liberty Amendments” where he argues that a convention
called under Article V of the Constitution is the mechanism the Framers
provided in the event all three branches of the federal government overstepped
their bounds.
About the same time Mark Levin’s
book came out Citizens for Self Governance, a nonprofit advocacy group, began
promoting a convention for the propose of proposing changes to the Constitution
that would further clarify the limits of federal powers. Whether a
convention called under Article V will be controlled by the states, the
Congress or through some compromise is a matter of speculation and debate
because the Constitution is silent on the issue and there has never been an
Article V convention, so there are no applicable precedents.
The Convention of States advocates
from both ends of the political spectrum are meeting to plan the convention
rules and procedures – or maybe not depending on where Congress, and possibly
the Supreme Court, come down on the issue once the threshold number of states
required to call the convention is reached.
This December 3rd debate is open to
the public and will be at the Cherokee Cattle Company located at 2710 Canton
Rd, Marietta, GA 30066 at 6:30 p.m.
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