Beware of Power. Always.
But with the power to do good comes the power to do evil. Nobody can be trusted with that kind of power.
The post Beware of Power. Always. first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
But with the power to do good comes the power to do evil. Nobody can be trusted with that kind of power.
The post Beware of Power. Always. first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Some people will tell you nullification isn't "constitutional." I would argue that it is. But more fundamentally, nullification is a natural right.
The post Nullification Is a Natural Right first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Letting the feds determine the extent of their own power is a surefire way to ensure that their power grows.
The post Who Decides the Extent of Federal Power? first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
In a constitutional system, government powers are fixed by the Constitution, not created by "tacit implication."
The post Implied Powers Are a Tool of Tyrants first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
If a power isn't delegated to the federal government in the Constitution, the federal government can't do it. It's as simple as that.
The post Not Delegated Means No! first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
The real problem with the biggest government in history isn't the people in power. It's the power in the first place. That means you can't solve the problem by simply switching out the people.
The post The Real Problem is Power first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
You can't trust anybody to limit their own power. This is especially true of the federal government. If we fail to limit its power, it will only grow -- no matter which team is in power.
The post You Can’t Trust the Federal Government to Limit Itself first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
The government insists that we follow every law, rule, and regulation it lays out to a T. Meanwhile, it ignores the limits on its own power.
The post You Can’t Play the Game If You Don’t Follow the Rules first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
The founding generation called the centralization of political power "consolidation." And they warned against it over and over and over again.
The post Centralization of Power is Tyranny first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
They shouldn't have called it the "Bill of Rights." They should have called it the "Bill of Restrictions." That's because the Bill of Rights doesn't give us rights.
The post The Bill of Restrictions first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.