dgs49:
You wrote:
dgs49 wrote:… if you want to understand what a document means, do you look to the document, or to what a group of partisans decided it meant in the 1930’s despite a hundred and-some-odd years of contrary understanding?
And you refer to “much of what has been read into the Constitution over the past 80 years ….”
Your problem there is that your side of the argument has
ALWAYS lost. You lost during the presidency of George Washington – and it doesn’t get much earlier than that – and you are still losing.
I realize that it is politically convenient to blame it all on the New Deal. But historically, that claim is going nowhere.
The truth of the matter is that although your side of the argument has some merit – otherwise, it wouldn’t have been taken seriously for centuries, as it has been – it has been the losing side right from the get-go. Even Madison, one of its most famous expounders, threw it overboard when he signed into law the charter of the second national bank.
If you want to make the argument, go ahead and make it.
But misstating the readily obtainable facts about what the Supreme Court has decided – whether one agrees with them or not, the decisions are out there for anyone and everyone to read – is not advancing your cause. And ignoring historical facts which date back far beyond the New Deal – and which, again, are out there for anyone and everyone to see – is not advancing your cause either.
As it happens, I have somewhat more sympathy with your position than you might think. (It is not an accident that I have repeatedly inveighed against the hyper-expansion of the commerce power.)
But if those of us who want to restrain the central government to its constitutionally proper powers are going to make any headway, we will have to do so by confronting what really confronts us. And that requires describing the truth of what confronts us, not pressing points that are demonstrably false.
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.