Monday, March 12, 2012

JAMES MADISON ON THE STATES AND THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

Mark "Foamer" Levin, the Baggers and all the other so-called "constitutional conservatives" insist upon States Rights as they claim the Founders understood them.  We can't speak for all or even a majority of the Founders but we do know that James Madison, during the debates on the Constitution during the framing convention in Philadelphia, could envision the individual states simple disappearing:
Were it practicable for the general government to extend its care to every requisite object without the coöperation of the state governments, the people would not be less free, as members of one great republic, than as members of thirteen small ones. A citizen of Delaware was not more free than a citizen of Virginia; nor would either be more free than a citizen of America. Supposing, therefore, a tendency in the general government to absorb the state governments, no fatal consequence could result.
Date: Thursday, June 21, 1787
This passage was brought to my attention by Irving Brant's wonderful biography of Madison, The Fourth President: A Life of James Madison (1970), page 162. This is an abridgement of Brant's monumental 6 volume biography.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Wonderful quote.

Steve J. said...

mikeb -
Spread it around!

:-)

steve