1. The enumeracted items in Article I, section 8, are the only things the federal government may do...according to the Constitution.
2. Up until 1937 the Congress of the
United States conducted its business within the boundaries of seventeen enumerated powers granted under Article I Section 8 of the United States Constitution; these powers defined clearly the areas within which Congress could enact legislation including the allocation of funds and levying of taxes. Anything not set down in the enumerated powers was considered
outside the purview of the national government and hence, a matter for the states. There were occasional challenges to the concept but it was not until Franklin Roosevelt's new deal that it was attacked in deadly earnestness.
The General Welfare Clause
a. During the Depression, FDR asked for an receive unprecedented powers. Some poorly crafted legislation went to the courts. The first of the new deal statutes to reach the Supreme Court for review, arrived in January 1935. In the sixteen months following, the court decided ten major cases or groups of cases involving new deal statutes. In eight instances out of ten the decisions went in favor of the United States Constitution and against the new deal. Eight of the ten pieces of "must legislation" were found to be unconstitutional. Op. cit.
b. Under FDRÂ’s threats to pack the court, they threw in the towel. In doing so, they said in effect, Congress would no longer be held to enumerated powers but instead could tax and spend for anything; so long as it was for "general welfare." The supreme court surrendered to the new deal on the most fundamental of constitutional issues. Ibid.
3. The crony capitalism that we see today, whereby the administration gives taxpayer funds to 'promising' companies is just a refined Chicago-thug kick-back system...try to find out how many of the companies that get such funds have Democrat donors on their boards. They launder the funds via the company, then give 'campaign contributions.' Solyndra, LightSquared, etc.
4. One way to provide government aid is through the taxing provisions.
5 "A list of things the government MAY DO, is totally different from one that things it MAY NOT DO."
You misunderstand....the list of enumerated powers is of the ONLY things the government may do.
Possibly you now realize how far off the track government has gone.
Did you see any power to provide houses? Healthcare?
I see, Konny, that you interest is science....perhaps research....but I believe that an understanding of government should be important to you, as well. The following shows a deep, deep misunderstanding:
"As for rights specifically reserved to the people, wouldn't funding research be one of them? We, as a nation, ARE the people and HAVE NOT as a people objected, so I don't see how that violates the amendment you cited."
If you ask a specific question, and I'd be happy to anwer it from my perspective. Then you can check it yourself.
I find your view to be very Leninist, i.e. anything not specifically permitted is prohibited. Democracies usually function under the rule, anything not specifically prohibited is permitted. We're not expected to live our lives the way they did in the 18th century and it wasn't expected we would.
Some men look at constitutions with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the ark of the Covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond amendment... laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind... as that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, institutions must advance also, to keep pace with the times.... We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to remain forever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.
Thomas Jefferson (on reform of the Virginia Constitution)
If you think I'm misinterpreting things, then why wouldn't the USSC say so? I feel that, barring a general repudiation of a particular measure that's not specifically prohibited, the courts are saying those unmentioned powers are those reserved for the people with questions of how and why to be determined by the ballot box.
Trying to help you, konny....as you simply know less than nothing about the Constitution. The enumerated powers are the only powers that the Constitution gives to the federal government. None other.
1. Judge Robert Bork, the intellectual godfather of originalism, explains that the “problem for constitutional law has always been the solution of the Madisonian dilemma, that neither the majority nor the minority can be trusted to define the proper spheres of democratic authority and individual liberty.” Bork states that
the role of a judge is to solve this dilemma by setting the proper ground rules on when the majority and when the minority should rule, and that
following the intentions of the framers and treating the Constitution like law will satisfy the dilemma, and constrain judges.
2. Judge Bork makes the point that Originalists can easily apply timeless
constitutional commands to new technologies, such as wiretapping and television, and to changed circumstances, as suits for libel and slander. All the judge needs is knowledge of the core value that the Framers intended to protect. And, while we may not decide every case in the way the Framers would have, “entire ranges of
problems will be placed off limits to judges, thus preserving democracy in those areas where the framers intended democratic government.”
a. Judges, even Justices, are merely human, and often had used their inclinations to replace those of the Founders.
3. President Reagan, in the September 26, 1986 Speech at the Investiture of Rehnquist and Scalia, advocates
the judicial restraint of Rehnquist and Scalia, as well as the traditions of Holmes and Frankfurther. To be clear, he is not praising a view in which passive judges defer to the political branches, but rather to judges who would be
faithful to the written Constitution.
a. He adds this: “…Justice Felix Frankfurter, who once said, "The highest exercise of
judicial duty is to subordinate one's personal pulls and one's private views to the law.''
4. In fact, the impostition of judges views is so common, it is given a name:
Lochnerization.
a. Lochnerization is a method to examine and strike down economic legislation under the guise of enforcing the Due Process Clause. Lochnerization was first used by the U.S. Supreme Court in the early 20th century. Lochnerization is derived from the decision in Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (U.S. 1905). Lochnerization also describes a method of legal reasoning where
a court substitutes its policy judgment for a legislature in overturning legislation.
Lochnerization Law & Legal Definition
b. This case is often cited as an example of judicial activism in opposition to textualism, that is
finding rights in the Constitution that are not in its wording.
5. Konny, do you think that judges' views should be given more weight than the Constitution?
If you do, then you are a proponent of the idea of a
'living Constitution.'
This, from Justice Rehnquist:
a. ". Once we have abandoned the idea that the authority
of the courts to declare laws unconstitutional is somehow
tied
to the language of the Constitution that the people adopted, a
judiciary exercising the power of judicial review appears in a
quite different light....Judges then are no longer the keepers of
the covenant; instead they are a small group of fortunately
situated people with
a roving commission to second-guess
Congress, state legislatures, and state and federal administrative
officers concerning what is best for the country.
b. [T]he living Constitution, however,
suggests that if the statesÂ’ legislatures and governors, or
Congress and the President, have not solved a particular social
problem, then the federal court may act. I do not believe that
this argument will withstand rational analysis."
Read his entire essay here:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/jlpp/Vol29_No2_Rehnquist.pdf
So, you see, "I find your view to be very Leninist,.." now appears pretty silly...unless
you find Rehnquist, Bork, Reagan, and other originalists to be 'Leninists.'
I suppose you realize that you know very little about either the Constitution, or Lenin.
Rather than sticking such nonsense...pick up a book or two....educate yourself.