State-level
civil disobedience
by
Don Hank
The
difference between the Article 5 convention and nullification is like the
difference between a pop gun and a machine gun.
Nullification
has stopping power. Article 5 is a genuflection to the federal power. It is
simply writing more amendments for the Fed to ignore, absurdly pretending that
the federal government is made up of sincere individuals who will obey the will
of its citizens.
On
the other hand, when a state nullifies a federal law, it is not
asking the feds for anything or treating them as a body of sincere
individuals. It is demanding, with a
gun to the head of the unruly federal government. And that is
the only way the fed can be made to back off.
Now
some have reasoned that there are legal limits to nullification. However, if
individuals have the right to civil disobedience, thatn so do the states. This
goes further than mere nullification of a law by a state court. This is one step
before insurrection, and judging by their actions in the past, particularly the
way they backed off in the Bundy ranch standoff, the feds would not dare to go
into a state and enforce their law at gunpoint because they know that such
would lead to a new American revolution.
The
Feds would then no doubt do what they are doing to Russia, ie, impose sanctions.
But the state that used the "civil disobedience" approach could also fight back
by withholding funds to the feds, much in the way that Russia is imposing
sanctions of its own. They could, for example, temporarily release their
citizens from the obligation to pay federal taxes, enjoining them to pay the
funds to the states instead but reducing the overall
amount.
There
is no doubt that this would work, though causing some temporary hardship. It is
all up to the American people. They need to wake up and realize that Washington
is the enemy, by definition, and that desperate times demand desperate
measures.
One
very important use of civil disobedience would be for states to man up and
refuse to admit anyone into their state who entered the US illegally,
regardless of federal laws to the contrary. Initially, this
would constitute nullification in the original sense, where the state
would decide, on the basis of Article 4, Section 4, that the federal
government was acting unconstitutionally to award legal residence
to invaders.
The
argument is straightforward and logical: The Constitution was a contract signed
by the state representatives. By analogy with contract law, both parties must
comply with each clause under penalty of dissolution or partial dissolution of
the contract. The state could rightfully argue that it was induced at the
founding of our nation to enter into a contract that provided protection but
that the protection had been unlawfully withheld, thereby leading to dissolution
of all or part of the contract.
Article
4, Section 4 of the Constitution enjoins the federal government to protect
the States against invasion. By refusing to allot sufficient funds and
manpower to the protection of the southern border and by restricting the ability
of the Border Patrol to arrest lawbreakers, by releasing apprehended illegal
border crossers back into the US, by releasing convicted illegal alien criminals
back onto the US streets after they have served their time rather than deporting
them, and by rewarding lawbreakers with temporary or permanent residency using a
variety of tricks such as allowing them to serve in the military in exchange for
residency, the federal government has not only failed to protect the states from
invasion as mandated by the Constitution, but has in fact aided and abetted the
invaders and has thereby rendered itself an outlaw government that need no
longer be obeyed but must in fact be resisted.
In
case any reader should doubt that the massive immigration from the southern
border constitutes an actual invasion, they need only read
the article in Business Insider showing that of the 13
most dangerous street gangs in America, a full 10 are Hispanic. The most
dangerous and violent of these is Mara Salvatrucha. To get a graphic portrayal
of this gang's behavior, you need only view this video. But be forewarned. It is brutally
violent and not for the weak hearted. And what you see there is a
direct result of unconstitutional federal policies.
If
the Supreme Court decided that, despite the overwhelming evidence to the
contrary (only a smattering of which is presented at the linked sources), the
massive influx of illegals does not meet the definition of an invasion, and
that this was a wrong interpretation of the Constitution by the state in
question, then it would be up to the state to implement "state-level civil
disobedience," averring that, in this decision, the Supreme Court represents only the federal government, a narrow
interest group – thereby denying the states and their citizens equal protection
under the law – to the detriment
of the states.
State
borders would become sovereign again, as they should have been in the first
place.
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