Texas Governor Greg Abbott has sent a
second letter to Vice President Harris requesting
information about what the Biden Administration intends to do to secure the
US-Mexico border. We applaud Gov Abbott for
launching Operation
Lone Star to try to staunch some of the massive
flow of illegal immigrants into Texas, but in reality this will not help all that
much since the illegals they arrest must be handed
over to the Biden Administration (ICE), which has
been all too keen on releasing
them into the States.
It doesn’t take much hard thinking to see that Gov Abbott’s
effort at becoming pen-pals with VP Harris will yield even fewer good results
than Operation Lone Star. His writing to
her is simply an effort to win political points for himself. But we do not have governors so they can
grand-stand; they are elected mainly to enforce laws, to protect their
respective States from law-breakers. Gov
Abbott, per his letter, makes it clear that he is very much aware of the
horrible crimes being committed by the drug cartels, human smugglers, etc., in
his State. If the federal government
does not act to protect the people of Texas from illegal border-crossers, the
responsibility falls on him to do so. If
he lacks the courage to that, let him take heart from an example from one of
the States of greater Yankeedom, Ohio, which, before The War, were just as
quick to invoke States’ rights as were States in the South. Ohio in this instance was responding to the
US Supreme Court’s infamous ruling of McCulloch v Maryland:
. . . Despite the McCulloch opinion, many of
the States continued to resist the bank. Georgia in 1819, and again in 1821,
adopted particularly harassing enactments, designed to bar the bank from suing
in Federal Courts.(63)
It was in Ohio, however, that events came
to a climax. No State had suffered more grievously than Ohio from the
disastrous inflation brought about by the bank’s first years of blundering
mismanagement.(64)
This hatred of the bank was manifested by an act of the Ohio Legislature in
1819—enacted in the teeth of the McCulloch decision—levying a tax of $50,000
per year on each of the bank’s two branches in the State. This tax was to
become due on September 15, 1820, but the bank, having protested vainly against
the levy, refused to pay and instead obtained an injunction from a Federal
judge against its collection.
Before the injunction could be served,
however, State Auditor Osborn ordered one of his deputies, John L. Harper, to
collect the tax by persuasion if he could, but by violence if he must. Entering
the bank’s branch office at Chillicothe, on the morning of September 17, Harper
made one last request for voluntary payment. When this was denied, he leaped
over the counter, strode into the bank vaults, and helped himself to $100,000
in paper and specie.(65)
He then turned this over to a deputy, one H. M. Currie; and Mr. Currie,
stuffing this considerable hoard into a small trunk, with which the party
thoughtfully had come equipped, loaded the trunk into his wagon
and set off down the road to Columbus.
The bank furiously brought suit against
Osborn and Harper for recovery of the money, relying, of course, upon
Marshall’s opinion in the McCulloch case. But Ohio was in no mood to regard the
Supreme Court’s pronouncements as the supreme law of the land. In December of
1820, Ohio’s House of Representatives brought in a blistering report,
substantially concurred in by the Senate on January 3, 1821, condemning the
bank’s suit as a suit against the State itself. “To acquiesce in such an
encroachment upon the privileges and authority of the States, without an effort
to defend them, would be an act of treachery to the State itself, and to all
the States that compose the American Union.”
Particular attention may be directed to the
statement that next follows. Gentlemen, this is Ohio speaking:
The committee are aware of the doctrine,
that the Federal courts are exclusively vested with jurisdiction to declare, in
the last resort, the true interpretation of the Constitution of the United
States. To this doctrine, in the latitude contended for, they never can give
their assent.(66)
--James
Jackson Kilpatrick, The
Sovereign States
There is no clause in the Philadelphia constitution that
requires a State to sit idly by and watch itself be destroyed while the federal
government refuses to perform its duty to guard and protect the international
border. Indeed, the little-noticed Eleventh
Amendment to that agreement proves rather
decisively the primacy of the States in the State-federal relation. Gov Abbott, therefore, . . .
The rest is
at https://thehayride.com/2021/04/garlington-we-dont-need-crybabies-and-do-nothings-gov-abbott/ .
--
Holy Ælfred
the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema to
the Union!
No comments:
Post a Comment