Taking the Tenth
Friday, December 04, 2009
By Rich Tucker
Are you a “Tenther?”
No, that’s not someone who lives in a tent to remain off the grid – although
that may be something we Tenthers will soon consider. No, “the Tenthers are the
ones who keep citing the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution every time there is
a proposed bill they don’t like, claiming the Constitution prohibits it,” as
liberal commentator Alan Colmes explains on his Web site.
Well, get ready, because if the health insurance reform legislation now under
consideration in the Senate passes, the Tenth Amendment could be all that stands
between Americans and the road to socialized medicine.
The amendment is direct and clear. “The powers not delegated to the United
States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
the States respectively, or to the people.”
It defines the entire reason we have a written Constitution. It hammers home the
point that the federal government is one of limited powers. Lawmakers in
Washington may only do what the Constitution specifically gives them the power
to do – everything else is reserved to the states or to the people.
This is crucial, because the pending Senate bill, like the House bill that
passed earlier this year, would compel all Americans to purchase health
insurance or pay a hefty tax. Take a moment to flip through the U.S.
Constitution; it doesn’t take long. The whole thing, along with the Declaration
of Independence, can fit neatly inside your shirt pocket.
Anyway, you won’t find anything about the federal government being empowered to
compel you to buy health insurance. In fact, the Constitution is silent on
health issues in general, presumably leaving those personal decisions in the
hands of “the people.”
Ah, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has anticipated this line of argument.
“The Constitution gives Congress broad power to regulate activities that have an
effect on interstate commerce,” she notes in a news release. “Congress has used
this authority to regulate many aspects of American life, from labor relations
to education to health care to agricultural production. Since virtually every
aspect of the heath care system has an effect on interstate commerce, the power
of Congress to regulate health care is essentially unlimited.”
There are two major objections here. First, health care is obtained, in
virtually every instance, within the borders of a single state. There are cases
where a patient moves from one state to another during treatment, or seeks care
from a specialist in another state, but it’s silly to say that such exceptions
prove that health care is an interstate activity akin to trucking or Internet
scams.
Second, and perhaps more important, is that Congress itself limits the
interstate nature of health insurance. People should be able to buy insurance
across state lines, the same way they can buy canned goods or fresh vegetables.
If you live in New York but want to buy a bare-bones policy sold in Kentucky,
you should be able to do that. The government won’t let you, which is one reason
the cost of health insurance is so high.
So what are the chances a health insurance bill would be shot down on Tenth
Amendment grounds? Who knows? Once things get into the courts, there’s no
telling how they’ll come out. That’s why even the much ballyhooed Supreme Court
nomination hearings are so often pointless.
Recall that during the Alito and Roberts hearings a few years back, Senate
liberals hammered away at the concept of stare decisis. To them the phrase
seemed to mean, “Will you vow to never overturn any decision that’s been made by
Sandra Day O’Connor?”
What stare decisis is supposed to mean is that a judge will respect longstanding
precedent whenever possible. And so, having ascended to the Supreme Court, how
did President Obama’s first nominee deal with stare decisis?
“In her maiden Supreme Court appearance last week, Justice Sonia Sotomayor made
a provocative comment that probed the foundations of corporate law,” wrote Jess
Bravin in the Sept. 17 Wall Street Journal. Judges, she said, “created
corporations as persons, gave birth to corporations as persons.” Thus the
highest court might want to reconsider that legal precedent. Now, that would be
overturning stare decisis.
As economic historian John Steele Gordon has explained, the corporation makes
today’s economy possible.
“Before the corporation, a person who invested, either individually or in a
partnership, was risking his entire fortune,” Gordon wrote in his book “The
Great Game.” But with corporations treated, legally, as an individual, it’s
possible to invest without losing more than you put in. The only difficulty, as
Gordon notes wryly, is we cannot throw a corporation in jail.
So will courts properly apply the Tenth Amendment and protect us from
government-run health care? Let’s hope we don’t have to find out.
* * * * *
If you went to school in the last 50 years or so, you may not know much about the U S Constitution. This is not your fault. It was not a case of your not paying attention, it was not taught to you. As Mister Tucker mentioned above, it's short, straigtforward and not hard to read. I found a website that has several ways of navigating through it. You may want to bookmark it for future reference after you take a look at it.