Poor in the South, may have to choose between heating and eating.
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  Poor in the South, may have to choose between heating and eating.
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Author Topic: Poor in the South, may have to choose between heating and eating.  (Read 1877 times)
John Dibble
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« Reply #25 on: November 27, 2005, 01:46:04 PM »

But now that you bring it up, the Constitution clearly does not authorize the federal government to regulate natural gas prices.

Oh yes it does, by authorizing Congress to protect the general welfare.

And you were just arguing in the video game thread that states have a constitutional right to violate the First Amendment.

1. The general welfare clause isn't a blank check to do anything that isn't forbidden - the means by which the federal government may protect the general welfare is enumerated within the constitution, and is limited to those powers.

2. See the bolded word in Emsworth's quote above.

The federal government explicitly gives corporations a lot of power, through the Santa Clara county vs. Southern Pacific SCOTUS ruling, which claims that the 14th amendment somehow gives corporate personage. It's a very activist ruling, and anyone against activist judges and activist rulings should be against Santa Clara county vs. Southern Pacific.

Since Emsworth has already responded to the content, that just leaves this to be asked - what, if ANYTHING, does that have to do with what I said regarding the general welfare clause?
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Undisguised Sockpuppet
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #26 on: November 28, 2005, 08:41:19 AM »

Corporations being granted personhood IMO was a big mistake. We vneed to stamp out corporate power and influence in the US permanently.
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