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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Peter Aitken wrote: "P Fritz" wrote in message ... "Bill McKee" wrote in message ink.net... snipped No, the states could not do as they please. The states were also bound by the US constitution. And it is a good thing. Nope.......the original intent of the US Constitution was to limit federal powers to those proscribed in the Constitution, as well as defining a few certain rights......everything else was left to the states........it has only been through 200 years of perversion that the country has become federalized and thus corrupted. The fact that several states had official state religions is proof of that. The Constitution was intended to be interpreted as it was written......thus no "Federally established religion" not the perverted "separation of church and state" that exists today The idea that "The Constitution was intended to be interpreted as it was written" is pure nonsense. First of all, everyone interprets the consitution, even those who believe we should limit ourselves to its original meaning. When conservatives say "don;t interpret the constitution" they really mean "don;t interpret it differently from the way I interpret it." Secondly, the success of the constitution lies in the fact that it is a flexible document. It is just plain silly to think that the framers expected the document to be adhered to in a literal word-for-word basis for hundreds of years. I must agree with Peter. If the founders thought that there would never be a need to interpret the Constitution or to resolve differences between opposing interpretations the Constitution would not provide for a Supreme Court. Wrong. The primary purpose of the Supreme court is to resolve differences between the states and to ensure that the President and Congress don't do anything to crazy. |
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