Yuratuhl wrote:
It got stuck from 1890 to 1937 because a bunch of conservatives declared any action by the feds that wasn't expressly written into the Constitution as being unconstitutional.
That's because, if you actually read the document as written, any authority/responsibility not specifically delegated to/reserved for the federal government was given to the states and the people. The idea that jurists ruled according to the actual wording of the law because of their political leanings is ridiculous until you get to the court under FDR, when they re-imagined the meanings of words and phrases to justify what should have been accomplished by amendment. The idea that growing wheat in your back yard when you're not even selling it to anyone constitutes commerce, much less interstate commerce, is an incredible stretching of the law to mean things other than what it says.
Yuratuhl wrote:
When FDR rolled into his second term and backed them into a corner (made them realize they were feeding everyone shit when they kept forcing the government to back down on commerce-clause related regulation, which was fucking everyone royal in terms of economy), everything started making sense again. A strong federal government is the only way this country gets anything done, and states' rights has always been used as an excuse to oppose progress.
What "fucks everyone royal" in the economy is Washington picking the winners and losers so that politicians can give their pet lobbies benefits at the expense of the American people. We'll bail out Co. X, but not Co. Y, even though they're in the same line of business with the same problems, it's just that no one at Co. Y donated to the president's campaign but Co. X did. Both companies should have been allowed to fail. It also "fucks everyone royal" when, instead of allowing market adjustments/corrections to take care of price problems with commodities like...just for an example...wheat and housing, the government instead meddles in the market and artificially inflates the prices of those commodities, creating a bubble that does more damage in the long wrong by delaying natural price corrections.
Policing the markets (outside of preventing fraud) is not one among the many roles the government should fill, but if it is, we should amend the Constitution to reflect that, not just ignore the letter of the law (or pretend it says things it doesn't) like children with their hands over their ears yelling "lalalalalalalalalalaIcan'thearyou."
Your Pal,
Jubber