Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Stop Obamacare in your state




Send your state Governor and State Senator and State Representative (State Legislators or assembyman) a personal note to have them introduce or support a bill to nullify Obamacare in your state.


Sunday, June 13, 2010

Electrifying America by using Nuclear Power Plants




Written by Rebecca Terrell , contributor to The New American magazine
Tuesday, 08 June 2010 15:15
Interview of power generation expert Art Crino



The New American sat down with an expert in power-generation technology to discuss why nuclear is the safest, most efficient answer to the so-called “energy crisis.”

Art Crino, P.E., is a retired licensed electrical engineer. He began his career in design and construction of gas-fired steam electric and large hydro stations. He later managed factories that produced switching equipment for the electrical utility industry. Crino has authored many papers on power-generation issues. He lives in Tigard, Oregon.

The New American: Thank you for taking time to discuss energy sources. There is much controversy over electrical generation, largely due to negative publicity from the environmentalist lobby. Is there really a problem, and if so, what do you see as the solution?

Art Crino: First, it needs to be made clear that CO2 is not a pollutant. It has a minuscule effect on Earth’s temperature, and vegetation of all kinds depends on it. The more the better. Records from 30 of the world’s most advanced economies show a positive correlation between CO2 emissions and increases in national income. There’s a similar correlation between per-person energy consumption and national income. Of course, CO2 isn’t the direct cause; the market economy causes the increase in energy use and emissions. But wealthier economies emit less per unit of production than developing nations, which translates to a cleaner environment and an economy prepared to control pollution.

But there is a better alternative for electrical-power generation. The single greatest technological advance in recorded history was when we learned to make heat and electricity by converting mass to energy in nuclear reactors. This advance provided the safest, cleanest, and, except for hydropower, the most inexpensive and potentially most plentiful and useful energy in human history.

But the environmentalist lobby doesn’t like nuclear any more than it does coal-fired generation, mainly because it works! The alternatives they give are non-solutions.

Take wind turbines that require some kind of back-up — usually gas turbines with very high fuel costs. European studies show that when about 5-10 percent of grid electricity is generated by wind, the grid becomes unmanageable because of constant fluctuations.

Fluctuations are a part of balancing the grid, but most can be anticipated. Not so with wind. Moreover, the peak electricity usage in most of the United States is on summer afternoons, the very time that wind is at its minimum. The highest winds come on winter nights, the very time when there is an excess of inexpensive base load power being produced.

Without laws forcing utilities to use “renewable energy” and without “production tax credits” and other subsidies, wind turbines would be found mostly at amusement parks.

Ocean wave and solar technologies are equally incapable of providing a consistent source of affordable, reliable electrical energy and, like wind, have a following only because of the hefty government subsidies available. Without government handouts, they would quickly die out.

TNA: Are the gas turbines used as back-up for wind generation also subsidized?

Crino: Government subsidies caused the frenzy over natural gas in the 1990s. It was an open secret that private firms could obtain a fixed-price gas source for five years, a contract with the local power company for five years, and end up with the plant “written off.” The fully depreciated generating station is only five years old. All that construction was in part responsible for a significant increase in the price of natural gas. Now, many industries dependent on natural gas, such as fertilizer and plastic manufacturing, have moved to Mexico or Saudi Arabia where gas is cheaper.

TNA: Are there other “alternatives” aside from those you’ve discussed?

Crino: Of course, there is hydro power, which provides approximately 10 percent of United States electricity and at very low cost. But, there are no prospects for additional hydro sites and there are those actively working to reduce the existing installations.

TNA: If nuclear is the best solution, why is it not pursued in the United States? Aren’t other countries using it to their own advantage?

Crino: Nuclear technology was developed in the United States, but after many decades it only provides 20 percent of U.S. electricity, while coal provides nearly 50 percent. The nuclear number would be much larger except for the hysteria over Three Mile Island and Chernobyl.

There are 104 operating commercial nuclear reactors in the United States, producing electricity 90 percent of the time. There are more than 440 commercial reactor plants, spread out over 31 countries, that supply 16 percent of the world’s electricity. France generates approximately 80 percent of its electricity by nuclear.

In 2006, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was hailed as the “Green Chancellor” for promising to rid her country of coal and nuclear power. Now she is actively supporting construction of 26 new coal-fired plants, as well as keeping nuclear plants operating. Italy has reversed its decade-long “no nuclear power” policy.

Worldwide there are 47 nuclear plants under construction plus 133 more planned for the next decade, for a total of 180. China has 14 reactors in process and has plans for 86 by 2020. Though nuclear generation of electricity was developed in the United States, plans are more modest.

TNA: Why the difference?

Crino: One explanation could be that most leaders in China are scientists, whereas the United States is led by lawyers. It’s all political. You hear, “If you elect me, I’m going to see to it we have more jobs.” If we let the rest of the world embrace nuclear power, the United States is going to be handicapped.

How are you going to create new jobs when you’re letting other countries outstrip you in power generation?

Electricity is crucial for advancing civilization. The Energy Information Agency projects that by 2030 the U.S. electrical demands will increase by approximately 45 percent.

TNA: Let’s talk about objections to nuclear. There are those who point out the history of cost overruns in construction of nuclear power plants. What do you say to that?

Crino: When the industry was new, cost overruns were common because there was no such thing as a standard reactor. Now reactors and reactor sites are pre-approved, which makes cost overruns a thing of the past. A selected location is approved with an Early Site Permit (ESP) from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), and then the utility ordering the reactor selects a pre-certified design. The only thing left is the Combined Construction and Operating License, known as the COL. It’s true all this bureaucratic red tape makes the process take longer here than in China or Japan, where construction is usually completed in fewer than five years. But it is a more efficient process than the past. Finance charges should also be reasonable under this NRC pre-approval program.

TNA: What about environmentalist lawsuits?

Crino: Well, we’re going to have those, but the approval process makes those more spurious.

TNA: There’s also the “NIMBY Syndrome” (Not-In-My-Backyard). Could that stand in the way?

Crino: During the site approval process, delays by public action do not become very costly because the reactor can be ordered after site approval. The enviable performance record, low operating costs of the existing reactors, and recognition of the carbon-free character have had a positive public impact for nuclear. Remember, we already have 104 reactors running in this country with no fatalities and no injuries over many thousands of reactor-years.

The ironic thing is a coal plant can’t possibly meet the requirements for radiation of a nuclear plant because they’re much bigger emitters. The heavy metals of poisonous by-products don’t have a half-life, so they’ll stay around forever. But I don’t like to harp on that point because radioactive emissions from either coal or nuclear plants are nothing to worry about. People only worry because of lies from the environmentalist movement.

TNA: What about spent-fuel -problems?

Crino: This objection is entirely political. Russia, France, Japan, India, and Great Britain have been reprocessing their fuel since the late 1960s. There is a great economic incentive because there is more usable energy in the spent fuel than consumed while in service. Reprocessing depends on the availability of new uranium sources. For example, Canada does not reprocess because they have an abundant supply. But reprocessing reduces the volume of waste by about 80 percent. Our politicians ignore this fact.

In 1972, escalating regulations shut down the West Valley, New York, reprocessing center. President Jimmy Carter dismantled the center in Barnwell, South Carolina, in 1977. President George W. Bush later authorized another center in the same state, but President Obama closed it on June 9, 2009.

TNA: Others say there is not enough available nuclear fuel.

Crino: Current reserves are sufficient for 90 years, but this number is expected to increase for quite a few reasons. Reactor designs continually demonstrate improved efficiency. All light-water reactors now have uranium enrichment in the 3 to 4.5 percent range and are non-explosive, as weapons-grade uranium must be enriched to at least 90 percent U235.

France has developed a process to dilute the 90+ percent uranium bombs from Russia with uranium tailings to form 3-percent fuel for reactors — also non-explosive. Half of the fuel used in the U.S. nuclear stations is from France. The Russians have copied the process for their electric generating stations.

Ultimately breeder reactors could be employed with numerous economic advantages. The most important advantage is they multiply the existing fuel supply by a factor of at least 50 to 75 times. Few people realize that 25 to 40 percent of our power from nuclear plants comes from plutonium that is formed in the reactor during operation — and is completely free!

TNA: How do you overcome all the negative publicity so the public will embrace nuclear?

Crino: I just talk about economics now, because everybody believes the lies Al Gore has told about science. (Actually, Gore tends to ignore nuclear power instead of fighting it, which is a compliment to nuclear power.)

Let me tell you about some success we’ve enjoyed recently with the Oregon state legislature. The 2009 Oregon legislature introduced Senate Bill 80 with great fanfare. It was Oregon’s version of “cap and trade” and was to be Oregon Governor Kulongoski’s legacy as he approached the end of his second and final term. I met with SB 80 joint committee members to warn them of the economic effects of reducing energy use and carbon dioxide emissions. They each got a copy of the 2008 Cascade Policy Institute paper Oregon Greenhouse Gas Reduction Policies:


The Economic and Fiscal Impact Challenges. I emphasized three points during our meeting.

  1. First, a one-percent increase in energy use is associated with a one-percent increase in national income.
  2. Second, a one-percent increase in CO2 emissions is associated with a 0.71-percent increase in national income.
  3. Lastly, since SB 80 called for a 10-percent reduction in CO2 emissions below 1990 levels by 2020, passing the bill would mean an approximate 11-percent decrease in income for the state. That was the end of SB 80! I think we can have the same type of success educating legislators about the advantages of nuclear power.

TNA: What’s a realistic expectation for sources of power generation in the near future?

Crino: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has received applications for up to 28 new reactors at 18 locations. But the primary sources of U.S. electrical energy in the near future will likely be gas-fired turbines, large nuclear plants, and large coal plants. Meanwhile, the government will continue to waste taxpayers’ money on wind, solar, and other so-called renewables.

Various states have enacted “renewable portfolio standards” (RPS), setting up quotas of renewable energy that utilities have to include among their sources of power generation. If renewables were so great, utilities would adopt them voluntarily to help lower their costs. RPSs are sure to keep energy prices inflated and production inefficient.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

What is CAPITAL AND CAPITALISM?

Millions of us consider ourselves "capitalists" in that we own businesses and hire people. We do all the obvious things that "capitalists" do. However, very few of us hire lobbyists and set up our private tax exempt foundations to hide our money. Very few of us "capitalists" use the granting power of tax exempt foundations to "so alter life in the United States" by giving millions to certain groups (mostly leftists) to go out into the political world to shake things up. Very few of us capitalists reap the benefits of the "shaking up." Very few of us "capitalists" engage in political stratagems such as getting laws passed in Congress that give us monopoly control over certain industries. Very few of us "capitalists" desire to acquire "granting power" to help us "alter life" in our favor.

This type of "capitalism" has been described as "crony capitalism, but it really isn't capitalism as much as it is a perversion of capitalism.

CAPITAL: THE MEANS OF PRODUCTION. Capitalism is a derivative of capital therefore anyone person who uses "capital" is by definition a capitalist.








In essence we either have honest people or you have dishonest people using an economic system that is inescapably capitalistic.

Even if a person tried to escape the capitalist world by living in a cave with little or no contact with the outside world that person would still need capital to survive. They would have to beg for food using their wits to acquire food. In this case isn't the ability to use their wits a form of capital? After all a person's talents can get him either pocket change from a stranger or a major recording studio recording contract.

They can steal food or grow it or hunt for it. If they grow it or hunt for it they'll need tools to help them acquire it. Any implement, even a crudely made hoe or hunting tool, is something that provides a person with the potential to eat or to make a living by using these tools. Tools are "capital." We can't eat these tools but we use them to get us something to eat. Therefore a simply-made spear or a crudely-made bow and arrow are also "capital." These tools are the “means of production.” In other words, CAPITAL.

Our stomach is only so big and can hold only so much food at any one time. But our eyes are sometimes bigger than other people's bellies and some folks want to acquire more and more. There isn't anything wrong with that except when perverted capitalists use people as capital for their own personal gain and satisfaction. Perverted capitalists do it out of hatred and from their evil nature to hate human beings. Therefore, it was for this very reason that the Founding Fathers crafted a system of economics (based on Adam Smith’s model) that the least amount of government interference in the market is best.

The less government there is in a particular society the better since government is nothing but a tool of people in society to keep others from stealing your capital! And since man is in his heart evil and since we don't know which one of us is the most evil, the Founders built checks and balances into our republican form of government to trip up dishonest and evil men from using government for their own benefit instead of for the "general welfare" of society. In other words the welfare of society is not to give people others' capital as it is to establish a uniform governmental system so that the general society benefits from living in an honest system. People can then work and be assured that they can keep the fruits of their labor and not have it stolen from their pockets and savings by thievery fashioned in "welfare" programs" or via thievery through inflation which devalues the money we earn or have set aside as capital formation.

Sadly some people don't like to work and some even secretly yearn to be a slave of the state. For these people who have sufficiently been propagandized by those who wish to "so alter life in the United States" from free markets to controlled markets, there is ObamaCare waiting to enslave them. For a time these folks will benefit from someone else’s labor and “capital,” but the time will come when the managers of this fraudulent system will decide the time has come to ration their healthcare and only keep those who best serve the needs of the perverse capitalist system called SOCIALISM.
Monopoly capitalism goes by many names. The most common forms have been and are:
State socialism (fascism)
International socialism (communism)
National socialism (Nazism)
Fabian socialism as practiced in England.

I for one don't wish to be a slave to the state or to crony capitalism. And for those who also don’t wish to be a cog in a socialist machine, please go here to get ObamaCare voided and nullified: Choose Freedom. Stop ObamaCare

In a free market capitalist society one does not have to be a so-called successful man. Society's pressures drive certain people to do that. In a productive free market economy there are many wonderful benefits for everyone. The spill-over or excess of goods and jobs from those who become productive giants keeps food on the table and a roof over everyone’s head. A free market system based on a republican model protects our property and keeps "crony capitalism" at a bare minimum. But even free markets, based on a republican form of government, is not sufficient to keep it going. It requires that people be moral and exercise internal restraints to govern themselves. Without a moral people no system, no matter how wonderful, will collapse since honesty in commerce is a vital part of supplying goods and services to consumers. In turn the entire system depends upon honest businessmen and an honest government.

Americans need an honest court system and a money system that is the people’s money system. The job of government is to protect the value of the medium of exchange - money- by keeping it out of the hands of cartelists by denying the monopoly bankers a banking system from which to wage war against the people.

If tomorrow people began to be truthful half of the world’s problems would disappear.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Free Enterprise Capitalism versus Monopoly Capitalism

The millions of people who have lived in America have enjoyed a unique form of free market capitalism coupled with a republican form of government that protects private property. We Americans own our businesses, hold title to them and we have the ability to dispose of it as we choose. We can donate our wealth, give it away or squander it if we so desire. In a monopoly capitalist system as Cuba's no one owns anything. Even the people are the property of the government.

The free enterprise system has produced the greatest wealth the world has ever known. The key to it all is that the capital has been in the private hands of millions of people and not concentrated in one location like a socialist bureaucracy. The other form of capitalism is when the capital (the means of production) is controlled by the government or the few who run the government. That system impoverishes everyone except those at the top.

The most common forms of monopoly capitalism beginning in the 20th century; history books label them as: communism, nazism, fascism and socialism.

It is these forms of state monopoly that have led to poverty and misery for those who have lived under those forms of monopoly capitalism. It is those forms of state monopoly that lead to shortages and shoddy goods and services. Those who own all the capital aren't under any pressure from consumers to produce anything of quality nor worry about things that free market capitalists worry about such as customer relations, production control, qualilty control, overhead and marketing, etc.

The socialist use capital ( machinery, tools, factories, farm equipment, oil rigs, computers, etc.). But the key to understanding the difference between a socialist's capitalistic system and a free enterpriser is who owns and controls the capital.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

May Day Riots


Why do communists celebrate May First?

May Day, the leftists organized their typical demonstrations around the world. This May Day the reds and the radical left used Greece as their stage.
If you click on the slideshow you'll come across a photo taken of some men wearing construction type hard hats. These "workers" even took time to bring some red flags with them to the show.It's typical street theater and the media feeds this junk into people's TV sets.
Take a look at the red hard hats these supposed "workers" are wearing (its' on the slide show). Notice that in this closeup picture there are only nine "workers" all wearing plastic red hard hats and holding red flags. Brand spanking new hats.
We're supposed to believe that these demonstrators are "workers" who spontaneously showed up to protest Greece's economic cut backs. Greece's "austerity" programs are stipulations made on Greece's leaders by the International Monetary fund and the European Union.

Two things jump out right away:
1. Greece is no longer a sovereign nation if they have do what the IMF and the EU tell them to do.
2. Is this situation a harbinger - a forerunner- of things to come in America?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704608104575217982744706678.html?mod&mg=com-wsj

Friday, April 30, 2010

State legislators and the 10th Amendment

Nullification and Interposition - The powerful 10th amendment:

"the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

State legislators in several states are beginning to rediscover the tremendous clout they could exert on the national government by employing the hammer of the 10th amendment on the onerous laws and mandates that Congress has become accustomed to passing despite their obvious unnconstitutionality!

Obama-Care (the Affordable Healthcare and Patient Protection Act) does not meet the Constitutional requirements and the law is being challenged by Attorneys General from over 1/3 of the States. Court battles are a long process and address very specific aspects of the law. The fact that so many states are challenging Obama-Care via the courts is encouraging.

The 10th amendment can be used by state legislators to nullify Obama-Care and challenge it on constitutional grounds.

When enough states get on board the nullification movement it will be a very powerful voice from the people to force congress to begin the process of repealing this socialistic act.

The 10th amendment has a history of making Congress back down from their passage of bad laws and mandates. Beginning with the Alien and Sedition act, the Fugitive Slave Act of the early Republic to more recent nullification efforts by the states with States' passage of:

  1. Firearm Freedom laws
  2. "opting out" of Real ID (nationalized Identification card)
  3. other states' challenges to federal law

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Illegal Immigration and State Laws

Any law, whatever the motivation, must adhere to the principles protected in the Bill of Rights.
Very few issues are as critical as the illegal immigration problem. I oppose amnesty or support any current bill in congress that uses "comprehensive immigration reform" in its language since "comprehensive" is a dead giveaway for "amnesty." However, regarding the actions by the states to try to control the illegal aliens, State laws must be in harmony with the Constitution particularly amendment Four.

Amendment Four of the "bill of rights" says:

"The right of the people to be secure in their PERSONS, housing, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,shall not be violated,and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." [emphasis added]

In Oklahoma the legislators avoided the constitutional ramifications of expanding police powers to use "reasonable suspicion" on the part of police to stop anyone they suspect of being here illegally.

Oklahoma's House Bill 1804 has caused 30% of the illegal alien population to exist the state. Similarly New Mexico could adapt the "No Gravy Train For Illegal Aliens" law.

A simple statement by the state legislature to city, county and state government officials stating:
"Each state, county and municipality shall pass a law making it illegal to provide anything whatsoever to an illegal alien. (emergency medical care is the exception)
1. It shall be illegal, by state law, to provide anything at all to illegal aliens including, but not limited to: welfare, Medicaid, driver's license, business license, government housing, tax supported education, or any other assistance.

2.There will be no state tax deductions for payments to illegal aliens.

3 All government transactions will be done in English (ie: voter registrations, employment applications, permits, etc)

For the private sector:

It shall be illegal, by state law, to do anything at all for an illegal alien, including but not limited to:

1.rent housing, sell real estate, sell vehicles, sell mobile homes, make loans, sell insurance, provide employment, provide indigent care, cash checks, enroll students, or provide transportation other than back to their country of origin.

Babies Cry out to be Born

Congress is not the sole consciousness or the final and only protector of our God-given rights. The states are sovereign entities that have just as much right to speak up for the rights of the unborn as any other branch of the federal system. In fact the question of overseeing equal protection of the laws belongs to the states.

In 1859 the Wisconsin Supreme Court said:
"Resolved, That the government formed by the Constitution of the United States was not the exclusive or final judge of the extent of the powers delegated to itself; but that, as in all other cases of compact among parties having no common judge, each party has an equal right to judge for itself, as well of infractions as of the mode and measure of redress. That the several states which formed that instrument, being sovereign and independent, have the unquestionable right to judge of its infractions; and that a positive defiance of those sovereignty's, of all unauthorized acts done or attempted to be done under color of that instrument, is the rightful remedy."

50 individual sovereign states share a big stake in protecting and serving to insure that all Americans, including the tiny unborn human beings, have a voice in their legislator. They are not yet born but they deserve a stronger voice than they've been getting from state lawmakers.

When the states joined in convention in 1787 they produced the federal system (central government). Federalism was born when the 9th state ratified the Constitution and this new system was on its way. http://www.usconstitution.net/rat_nh.html in 1789.

Regarding the issue of abortion the states had laws criminalizing it. In 1974 Richard Nixon's nominee ( Harry Blackmun) of the Supreme Court thrust the federal government into this clearly state issue with Roe v.Wade. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Blackmun

What can a state legislature do to remedy this issue and stop the killing of unborn children? And what can Congress do to check the courts?

The state legislatures can petition Congress via a resolution or memorial calling on Congress to use its powers under Article III, section 2 to "regulate" the jurisdiction of the lower courts in the matter of abortion.

Getting Congress's attention is step one and if 30 or more states did so the tide would turn from congressional apathy in using Article III, section 2 to rescue the unborn from abortion labs to action by Congressmen to interpose on behalf of the unborn.

The clause reads: "..the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. In all the other cases before mentioned, the supreme [C]ourt shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make."
{ added emphasis}.

In other words, Congress can take away the lower courts' power to rule on abortion by a simple majority vote in Congress or an override of a presidential veto. The long arduous road of a constitutional amendment would not even be necessary if Congress would just realize the power they have at hand to stop the human death toll in the womb.

As your state legislator I will use the voice of the tenth amendment to the Constitution to be that voice in Santa Fe to champion their God-given rights to live, cry out their joy to be born and to be allowed to grow up as free Americans.

Monday, April 26, 2010

"Anchor babies"

A misreading of, or a deliberate misinterpretation of the 14th amendment, has given rise to the phenomenon called "anchor babies." The children born to non-American parents are seen by and judged to be citizens by liberal judges who have overstepped their authority in reinterpreting the 14th amendment.

Think about the absurdity of this concept of granting automatic citizenship to babies of illegal aliens born in the USA. If an American citizen was on a vacation in some European country and the mother unexpectedly gave birth a month early in Belgium, the fact that her child was born in Belgium territory does not automatically make that child a Belgium citizen. Yet in the USA a mother from a Latin American, Canadian or Middle eastern country who births her child in the United States is granted automatic citizenship.

What is wrong with that picture?

Everything in my opinion.

Congress needs to clarify the intent of the 14th amendment. This one Congressman is doing his best:http://www.jbs.org/news-center/birchtube/924-Bilbray+on+KUSI+Birthright+Citizenship+Bill?userid=79

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Amnesty

If I am elected to represent the 28th House district I will introduce and fight hard to pass a tough Pro-New Mexico, anti-illegal immigration bill similar to the one passed in Oklahoma. The legislators in Oklahoma apprached the issue from the standpoint of cutting off illegal aliens from welfare, food stamps, obtaining driver's licenses, free schooling for their children, non emergency medical care, opening up bank accounts and opening up businessness using matricular consulate cards as their ID document. While the Arizona law may have all the attention I believe that the Oklahoma law is far better in that it doesn't force a "real ID" type card upon all citizens along with the illegal aliens.

Amnesty
is raising its ugly head again with Harry Reid's S 9 bill in the Senate and H.R. 4321 in the House which goes by the ridiculous title of "Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CIR). It has a nauseating tag which makes its full title of CIR for "America's Security and Prosperity" sound like the North American Union.

The Gutierrez/ Ortiz and Reid bills are part of same ole' dog and pony show. Both bills have the smell of the usual promises which seem to be forgottenonce the law passes. Gutierrez and Ortiz's propaganda says that we Americans will be secure from terrorism and the recession will end. "I kid you not", as a famous late night talk show host used to say.

These "liberal" politicians like Luis Gutierrez and Solomon Ortiz, both Texas congressmen, insist that "we can not get on the road to financial recovery and growth without enacting 'comprehensive immigration reform.'"

The absurdity of their claim that legalizing millions of illegal aliens (perhaps as many as 20 million) is said with a straight face before cameras knowing full well that these millions will be competing with the U.S. dwindling jobs market. Are these Congressmen brain dead or do they have an agenda to ruin us economically by using the influx of millions from Mexico and elsewhere as a battering ram on our over-regulated, over-taxed and hard-pressed economy?

Friday, April 23, 2010

Nullification by the states of ObamaCare

What can New Mexico's legislators do to stop ObamaCare? The answer is "A lot!"

The US Constitution
by agreement with the original 13 colonies joined in an honorable contract with the federal government in 1789, (an entirely new system of government that the several states had created), to enumerate the powers the federal system was to have but reserved the balance of power to the states. Amendment 10 clearly states that all powers not "delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." One of those many undefined powers is to have the ability to "nullify" or interpose on behalf of the citizens of the several states anytime the federal system passed an unconstitutional law or act. The states weren't going to just trust congress to behave accordingly and trust that Congress would only pass constitutional laws. The states, if need be, would use their power to tell the federal government "thanks, but no thanks" should congress stupidly or deliberately pass a law contrary to the letter and spirit of the Constitution.

Congress has passed many laws that have caused the states to react with acts of nullification. Historically the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793 was one such law that Congress passed that resulted in the states challenging its constitutionality. Several of the northern states passed nullifying laws such as the "personal liberty laws" to countermand the federal law.

http://www.tenthamendmentcenter.com/2009/03/04/the-states-rights-tradition-nobody-knows/

In Prigg versus Pennsylvania the Supreme court decision weakened the Fugitive slave Act by ruling that states did not have to offer aid in the recapture of runaways. However, the pig-headedness of proponents of the Fugitive Slave Act reacted by making the Act even more onerous, which forced the states to react with court challenges. In 1854 Wisconsin's high court ruled the fugitive Slave Act unconstitutional. The US Supreme Court ruled against the Wisconsin court in 1859. This back and forth battle betwen the states and the Congress and federal courts continued until the end of the war between the states.

Where else has the nullification powers been used? Of recent vintage the states essentially nullified Real ID Act.

Could a resolution be introduced at the next legislative session of the state of New Mexico to block the 25 bureaus, agencies and departments of the federal government from carrying the provisions of the Afforable Healthcare and Patient Protection Act (ObamaCare)? If I am elected as a state Representative for New Mexico district 28 I will introduce such a resolution.

Visit my website at: www.leerichardgonzales.com