24 Oct

Our Constitution is on Life Support



Our Constitution is on Life Support
by Mark Alexander
“Early to bed, early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.” –Benjamin Franklin
That wise old sage, Ben Franklin, was prescient back in 1748, when he issued his simple Rx for success. Unfortunately, the wealth and wisdom of generations of Americans have been progressively supplanted by our central government’s exercise of unconstitutional authority.
In regard to wealth, I refer most directly to our government’s colossal spending and debt accumulation, and unlawful taxation.
As to wisdom, well, there’s not much of that emerging from government-run school systems.
Having already depleted the wealth and wisdom of our great nation, the Obama juggernaut is determined to do likewise to health, that third prong of Franklin’s trident. If successful, then we may rightly fear it as a deathblow to the greatest experiment in human history.
Where is Doctor Franklin when we really need him?
Simpletons across the United States and, indeed, the world, are beguiled by the Democrat health scare cacophony. While so much has been said, so too has so little. And, as we approach the seemingly inevitable passage of some such diabolical legislation, almost to a citizen everyone is screaming, “Stop the world, I want to get off!” Indeed, only elitist Democrats are charging full-steam ahead, constituents be damned.
Intentionally lost in all this noise is the Leftist tactic of drowning its opposition in waves of excessive and ever-changing health care minutia. With the devil being so well hidden in the details, this ensures that we remain distracted while Rule of Law is further usurped by the rule of man.
As Patriots, we are summoned to slice through this diversionary blather. And, to obtain proper analysis of this overarching objective, we must seek guidance from our founding documents, the Constitution of the United States of America and its superordinate document, the Declaration of Independence.
In a search of the Constitution, we find that the words “health,” “medicine” or “medical” are mentioned — drum roll please — not even once: not within the original text, nor within 220 years of amendments. (A search of the Articles of Confederation yields similar results.)
To some, this exclusion indicates that the Founding Fathers were unconcerned about the health of their countrymen. But, supporters of this argument expose their condescension, and it is here mentioned to disabuse them of their disdain. For our Founding Fathers sacrificed so greatly for the birth of our nation — in both blood and treasure — that to posit such indifference does a great and grotesque disservice to their honor and their memory.
To others, this exclusion indicates that health care was mercifully omitted since medical care of the 1700s was so “primitive” that the cure often caused more harm than the ailment. They further argue that, given the foresight of modern medicine, our Founders would have surely incorporated universal health care within the Constitution. But, supporters of this argument expose their arrogance, and it is here mentioned to disabuse them of their haughtiness. For the medicine of our Founding Fathers was actually advanced in its day, just as the U.S. medicine of today is advanced, and just as tomorrow it will be thought primitive. This, of course, assumes that we successfully restore Rule of Law.
Alas, we discern seemingly little counsel from the Constitution.
And, as we turn to the Declaration, a search for the words “health,” “medicine” or “medical” once more yields exactly zero results. Furthermore, the itemized grievances therein make nary a hint concerning health, even considering the “primitive” conditions discussed above.
Alack, we also discern seemingly little counsel from the Declaration.
However, neither do the Constitution nor the Declaration counsel us with direct verbiage concerning agriculture, textiles, construction and the whole raft of goods and services upon which those everyday necessities of food, clothing and shelter are stationed.
But, the Declaration does aver that all men are created equal, not of outcome but of opportunity; that they are endowed with the right to Life, not a guaranteed good life, not a guaranteed healthy life, but life with all of its miraculous potential; that they are endowed with a right to Liberty, the fusion of freedom and personal responsibility; and that they are endowed with a right to the pursuit of Happiness, the eclectic amalgamation of hopes and dreams and desires and necessities as defined by each individual — not by faceless, nameless bureaucrats.
Furthermore, the Constitution’s Preamble declares that its purpose is to establish Justice, the even-handed application of law to all citizens; to insure domestic Tranquility, the exclusion of class warfare; to promote (not provide) the general Welfare; and to secure the blessings of Liberty, there again, the fusion of freedom with personal responsibility.
So, our founding documents do guide us to proper health care legislation: for it is that which encompasses equality and liberty for consumers and providers alike; that which promotes life above death panels; that which encourages the medical hopes and dreams as defined by each individual; that which constrains, not magnifies, class warfare; and that which secures “the blessings of Liberty, to ourselves and our Posterity.”
Anything more than this is an affront to constitutional order and Rule of Law. As Thomas Jefferson so keenly observed: “Were we directed from Washington when to sow, and when to reap, we should soon want bread.” And, it takes little thought, or even imagination, to extend his estimation to the current health care debate.

The bottom line is that Article 1, Section 8 of our Constitution, which addresses powers of the legislature, never endowed Congress with authority to regulate or collect taxes for banking, mortgage or automaker bailouts. Neither does it present authority for them to subsidize production or service sectors such as health care. Indeed, James Madison wrote, “I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents…”

Sadly, not one Democrat bill addresses “health care” so much as it seeks omnipotent centralized government power and control, the currency of the Left. However, the proposals certainly betray the Left’s condescension and contempt for Rule of Law, along with their frontal assault upon our Essential Liberty.
Patriot Readers, the U.S. Constitution is on life support. To prevent it from flat-lining, we must exude high dudgeon, we must slice through the Left’s onslaught of minutia, and we must surgically endeavor with our every thought and deed to restore a healthy Rule of Law.
Semper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus et Fidelis!


Wild Thing’s comment……….
Great column by Mark Alexander. I hope there is some way to stop this madness of this husseincare bill. The courts or someone has got to.

….Thank you Mark for sending this to me.
Mark
3rd Mar.Div. 1st Battalion 9th Marine Regiment
1/9 Marines aka The Walking Dead
VN 66-67

Jim says:

There is no right to healthcare any more than there is a right to legal advice, or car care, or a right to a loaf of bread. Some are called upon to be doctors, some mechanics, some bakers. They all trade and compete in the free market.

Jack says:

We can start by canning RINO’s like Graham, McCain, Snowe and Warner, et al, ad infinitum.

TomR says:

The Constitution is one of the finest documents ever written by mortal man. It’s primary purpose is to provide framework for a very limited government and to give the ctizens of America freedom and rights from a very restrained government. obama and his ilk are bastardizing The Constitution and rapidly making it an irrelevant entity. The citizenery may have to fight for The Constitution again.

Mark says:

And our job is to get the SCOTUS to uphold the Constitution. If they did there would be no worry about the dems screwing up health care or anything else for that matter.

Wild Thing says:

Jim, yes and I sure wish the way they would
do this is just open up the State lines, that
would be so simple. Competition is or used to be
the American way and it would solve a lot of
the problems of those that have not had any too.
But it isn’t about healthcare like all of you on here have said. Your right Jim it is about control
of the masses.

Wild Thing says:

Jack, DITTO that, I pray so much they
get voted out big time.

Wild Thing says:

Tom, I agree so much, I have such
tremendous respect for it and for
our Founding Fathers.

Wild Thing says:

Mark, that is true!!!