The Right Opinion
A Government of Men, Not Laws
"There is no good government but what is republican," John Adams wrote. "(T)he very definition of a republic is 'an empire of laws, and not of men.'" Adams meant that a government in which law is applied at the discretion of powerful people is a bad government. The law must be applied in a straightforward, nonarbitrary fashion or the entire governmental system should be called into question.
This week, the Supreme Court called the entire governmental system into question.
A couple of weeks ago, President Obama unilaterally declared that he would cease to enforce major provisions of federal immigration law. Now he's campaigning on that reckless disregard for the constitutional structure. "You can decide whether it's time to stop denying citizenship to responsible young people just because they were brought here as children of undocumented immigrants," he told an audience in Boston. "I know where I stand on this."
Actually, we can't decide. That's because President Obama decided for us. And when we try to decide for ourselves via state governments, we are told that we're violating the constitutional order.
That's precisely what happened in the Supreme Court's decision about Arizona's SB 1070. Essentially, the Court found that the state of Arizona couldn't enforce immigration law, even if the federal government refused to enforce its own immigration law. By this logic, if the federal government passed a law regarding kidnapping across state lines, then refused to enforce it, a state which decided to arrest people for kidnapping at all would be in violation of the Constitution. As Justice Antonin Scalia put it in dissent, "(T)o say, as the Court does, that Arizona contradicts federal law by enforcing applications of the Immigration Act that the President declines to enforce boggles the mind."
It does boggle the mind. But not the liberal mind, which is far more interested in placing dictatorial power in the hands of a massive federal government than in preserving the constitutional structure. Every time someone has the gall to mention states' rights, liberals imply that America's just a few steps away from reinstituting slavery; each time somebody has the temerity to suggest that states -- which absorb virtually the entire cost of illegal immigration -- ought to be able to police their own borders when not in conflict with federal law, liberals raise the specter of racial profiling and lynch mobs.
It's sheer nonsense, but it plays into the liberal agenda: maximization of federal power, by any means possible. And the easiest means to maximize federal power is to place unlimited power in the hands of the president of the United States.
There is a danger for liberals, however: What happens if a conservative gains the reins of power? If the executive branch can simply ignore implementation of any law a president doesn't like, how about Obamacare? How about the vast and growing entitlement system?
Liberals don't want to think about this possibility, because theirs is a politics of expedience rather than of principle. While conservatives worry about institutional power, liberals flit from position to position on the issue, depending who is in power. That's a recipe for governmental disaster. Because sooner or later, somebody no one likes will be in power -- and armed with a government free of all checks and balances, he or she will do something truly outrageous. That is, if President Obama hasn't already done so.
COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

6 Comments
Ct-Tom in NC
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 9:55 AM
"... he or she will do something truly outrageous. That is, if President Obama hasn't already done so."
Is there any doubt?
wjm in Colorado
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 10:22 AM
It is time that everyone realize the danger posed by the insane liberal agenda. If we can't vote them out, our founding Fathers, the original Right Wing Extremists, had a solution that would work just as well today. Be warned Traitors, your time has come and gone, America is wise to your treason, and November will remove you from power, one way or another.
Tex Horn in Texas
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 11:50 AM
The upcoming election will be one of the deciding factors in whether this country's Constitution remains as the letter of the law. Mr. Shapiro has as much as stated what most conservatives already see, that our country is devolving into a dictatorship. Should Choomboy win the upcoming election, we have, in essence, declared him dictator.
JG in Oklahoma
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 1:06 PM
You are correct on all points Mr. Shapiro... just as the German people discovered to their shock and dismay circa 1933/34.
"We learn from history that we do not learn from history." ~ Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) German Philosopher
BJ in St. Cloud, MN
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 1:27 PM
Liberals agendas can be stopped easily at the ballot box. How about if you don't PAY federal income taxes-you don't get to vote. If you're on the dole-you don't get to vote. If you don't know who your representative is or who the speaker of the house is-you don't get to vote. If you think it's so much trouble and you're afraid of people being "disenfranchised" by an ID being required-then voting must not be very important-so you too don't get to vote. I could go on and on but you get the drift. If you contribute to America, you should have a say. If you don't, then maybe you should. America is being lost to slugs and marxists.
TERM LIMITS-IMPEACH-PROSECUTE
JAC in Texas
Wednesday, June 27, 2012 at 2:10 PM
Using this same logic, if a state's law enforcement agencies arrest someone outside a voting location for voter intimidation, etc., they are in violation of Obozo's constitution because his justice department (deliberately lower case) has apparently said that enforcing those laws will not be done, thereby making them null and void and unconstitutional.