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Judge Hudson Takes a Step for Freedom
· Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Before U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson ruled in Cuccinelli v. Sebelius that Congress does not have the authority to force Americans to buy health insurance, there was the case of Wickard v. Filburn, which decided the question of whether Congress can tell a farmer how much he can farm.
Even after the Supreme Court decides Cuccinelli v. Sebelius, and no matter how it decides, Wickard v. Filburn will stand -- a marker of the incremental erosion of the constitutional limits on federal power.
In the fall of 1940, Roscoe Filburn committed the seemingly innocent act of planting 23 acres of wheat on his Ohio farm, thereby provoking the wrath of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration.
You see, the Roosevelt administration, carrying out the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 (enacted by a Congress boasting a massive Democratic majority), had ordered Filburn to plant no more than 11.1 acres of wheat.
Filburn did not comply. He figured he could grow wheat wherever he wanted on his own farm. He planted 11.9 acres more than the administration gave him permission to plant.
This set in motion a constitutional conflict, and in this particular case, the Constitution lost.
The Department of Agriculture, headed by a man named Claude Wickard, penalized Filburn $117.11 for growing 11.9 acres of unauthorized wheat. Filburn refused to pay. The case went to the Supreme Court.
The issue was simple: Did the Commerce Clause of the Constitution give Congress the power to tell Filburn how much wheat he could grow on his own land? The clause says: "The Congress shall have Power ... To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes."
Congress and FDR claimed they had the authority to tell farmers how much of their own farmland they could use because farm products were traded "among the several States." But Filburn said the extra 11.9 acres of wheat he grew on his farm would never leave his own property, let alone the state of Ohio. He intended to use it himself, feeding some to chickens and livestock, reserving some for seed, and grinding the rest into flour to consume in his home.
Supreme Court decided to use Filburn's case to expand the power of Congress, through an imagined authority of the Commerce Clause, so that the federal government would be able to reach right into Filburn's kitchen and figuratively, if not literally, snatch the homegrown bread from his family table.
The court ruled that Filburn's growing and consuming wheat at home could effectively be construed as an act of interstate commerce -- and thus regulated by Congress -- because it spared Filburn from having to buy someone else's wheat.
"But if we assume that it is never marketed, it supplies a need of a man who grew it which would otherwise be reflected by purchases in the open market," said the court.
If people like Filburn were allowed to grow and consume their own wheat on their own land, Congress might be stifled in its effort to artificially inflate the price of the commodity.
Now, one reason the Founding Fathers decided to break with England was their dismay with England's mercantilist system, which generally required colonists to purchase manufactured goods from, or through, England rather than produce them in the colonies.
Hatred for this system inspired a Virginia farmer named George Washington to try to convert his colonial farm into a self-sufficient unit -- where, like Filburn on a much grander scale, he could produce and consume what he wanted without trading with others, especially those in England.
The Framers, who had not forgotten English mercantilism, wrote the Commerce Clause of the Constitution to create a free-trade zone among the American states. Their aim was to facilitate freedom, not restrict it.
Wickard v. Filburn was a step back toward the sort of government control of our lives the Founding Fathers wanted to deny to the new federal government they created. President Barack Obama's health care law goes a dramatic step beyond FDR's Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938.
If FDR and the Congress of that era usurped for the federal government the power to tell farmers that they could not grow wheat on their own land for their own consumption, Obama and the current Congress (many of whose members were defeated in the November election) are trying to usurp the power to tell all Americans that they must buy someone else's product -- in this case health insurance -- that they do not want to buy.
Hudson, while carefully staying within the Supreme Court precedent of Wickard v. Filburn, correctly understood that the issue raised by Obamacare's individual mandate -- the so-called "Minimum Essential Coverage Provision" -- is freedom itself.
"The unchecked expansion of congressional power to the limits suggested by the Minimum Essential Coverage Provision would invite unbridled exercise of federal police powers," Hudson wrote in his opinion. "At its core, this dispute is not simply about regulating the business of insurance -- or crafting a scheme of universal insurance coverage -- it's about an individual's right to choose to participate."
And you thought liberals believed in freedom of choice?
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Dom
Socialism means unambiguously the nationalization of the means of production and the central economic planning which this makes possible and necessary. Socialism IS the extensive redistribution of incomes through taxation and the institutions of the welfare state. That requires two conditions: replacement of the rule of law by the rule of men and the destruction of the very concept of private property.
We have arrived.
Posted December 15, 2010 at 8:13:32 AM
Brian
Liberals are more than happy to allow you to choose, so long as you choose what they tell you.
Posted December 15, 2010 at 11:47:22 AM
Pamela Heckel
I'd like this Court to overturn Wickard v. Filburn, too.
Posted December 15, 2010 at 11:56:00 AM
TheVonz
So you really think that this Obama-appointed socialist-leaning supreme court will vote against obamacare and for the constitution as-written?... I don't think so.
We better get a plan and unite.
2012 to too late !!!!
Posted December 15, 2010 at 12:30:49 PM
kevin
I'm with Pamela - since my garden gave me fresh vegetables (and canned a lot), by the terms of Wickard v. Filburn, I am breaking the law!
Posted December 15, 2010 at 12:47:31 PM
JAC
johnbaudoin: I hate to say this, but after reading your comments, I understand how idiots like Obozo and his minions were elected.
Posted December 15, 2010 at 1:44:07 PM
Orwell21
First of all, the two Supreme Court Judges that BHO appointed merely replaced other liberal justices so the make up of the court has not changed. Second, this will be declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. The progressives knew this was gonna be a tough sell, but they do not care. They needed to raise it so they could peddle this BS in the lame stream media and soften us for it in another 10-15 years or so. Perfect example...VAT national sales tax. Its coming and talked about more and more. When it was first brought up, everyone said...no, we won't do it. Now, they talk more and more on how we need it. Everything is always orchestrated with these progressives. Pay attention!
Posted December 15, 2010 at 3:02:05 PM
Malcolm
Orwell21 - 18 to 24 months and "obozocare" will come before the supreme court. Given the ages of the justices, not to mention what else could happen, that's a long time to assume the makeup won't change. And you KNOW the balance will shift from 5-4 to 4-5 as long as barry soetoro sits on the oval office throne.
Posted December 15, 2010 at 8:30:56 PM
Just saying
So, the insanity goes waaay back...Now I don't feel so bad. If this country was governed by insanity for such a long time, and survived, there is hope.
Posted December 17, 2010 at 3:23:26 AM
Paul Ashley
"The court ruled that Filburn's growing and consuming wheat at home could effectively be construed as an act of interstate commerce ... because it spared Filburn from having to buy someone else's wheat."
Does this essentially mean that we literally can't make anything for ourselves without the risk of government regulation? Sure seems like it to me. And that sure seems like tyranny.
Posted December 20, 2010 at 11:48:35 AM
Abu Nudnik
Hubris is the goiter of power. All they had to do was listen to the opposition. Tort reform would reduce insurance costs and deregulating insurance companies would help too. To cover the uninsured all they had to do is to raise a health care tax with a full rebate up to the cost of insurance. Hudson's legal decision turned on the difference between a penalty which courts can challenge and a tax which they can not.
But Dems would not have stopped there. How to rebate very poor people who can't afford to float the high premiums required of patients with pre-existing conditions? The court would have a hard time striking down loan guarantees for such insurance. In two clauses: the tax and the loan guarantees they could have addressed the problem of uninsured patients whose care is paid for either by the taxpayer or through rising premiums and people who cannot afford premiums due to pre-existing conditions. But now their majority is gone.
But they were drunk on power. Power is that drug that tells you it is the solution to your problems. Power tells you it is authority. But the Court pointed out, rightly, that they are two different things.
Posted December 20, 2010 at 1:33:28 PM