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Next entry: Professional right-wing, ex-gay extremist groups band together to form the ‘Freedom Federation’ Previous entry: Lindsey Graham: the new “it” guy of the GOP

States To Exercise Constitutional Rights To Things And Such

Arizona or Oklahoma…Arizona or Oklahoma?  Let’s go Arizona first.

Only the Arizona Legislature introduced an initiative (HCR2014), which if passed, would amend the state constitution to codify that no resident would be required to participate in any public health care option. Arizonans will vote on the initiative in November 2010.

“HCR2014 is proactive and will protect patients’ fundamental rights,” Arizona State Rep. Nancy Barto, a Republican, said in a statement. “We are a front-line battle state to stop the momentum of this powerful government takeover of your health care decisions. Health care by lobbyists thwarts your rights and can be stopped here.”

[...]

Vukmir said that the Obama proposal could be unconstitutional, under the Tenth Amendment, which states, “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.”
                 
“I’m a strong believer in the Constitution and the Tenth Amendment,” Vukmir told CNSNews.com. “The Tenth Amendment has been eroded by Congress and the Supreme Court for decades. We have to ask, does the Tenth Amendment have any meaning? We are supposed to have strong state governments and a weak central government. That has eroded away.”

First, there’s a sublime irony in the idea that “health care by lobbyists” is something that, to this point, has not existed in America.  I’m not entirely sure which thrust of Capitalist Jesus’ loins HMOs sprung from, but I’m guess the honorable Rep. Barto can tell me where to look.  Second, this goes back to Mark Sanford’s attempts to block the stimulus spending for South Carolina - Arizona is in the middle of the pack when it comes to the age of their population, but they still have a substantial elderly population, each and every member of which is already eligible for Medicare.  Having watched the joys of broadly reaching partisan state legislation in action, I can pretty much guarantee you that some bit of the language in the proposed bill will imperil Medicare and Medicaid benefits for Arizona residents, because nobody this dumb couldn’t fuck this up.

Next up, Oklahoma:

Oklahoma Rep. Sally Kern has finally answered that question: our sins. Kern has drafted a resolution that puts the current economic crisis squarely on the backs of libertines and godless people who have produced a moral crisis. This includes Obama’s refusal to “uphold the long held tradition of past presidents in recognition of our National Day of Prayer.”

The full text of this not-at-all-insane document is below the fold.

  OKLAHOMA CITIZEN’S PROCLAMATION FOR MORALITY

We the People of Oklahoma, Invoking the guidance of Almighty God, in order to secure and perpetuate the blessing of Liberty; to secure just and rightful Government; to promote our mutual Welfare and Happiness, do establish this proclamation and call upon the people of the great State of Oklahoma, and our fellow Patriots in these United States of America who look to the Lord for guidance, to acknowledge the need for a national awakening of righteousness in our land.

WHEREAS, “It is Religion and Morality alone, which can establish the Principles upon which Freedom can securely stand” (John Adams); and

WHEREAS, “We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by Religion and Morality” (John Adams); and

WHEREAS, “Our Constitution was made only for a Moral and Religious people” (John Adams); and

WHEREAS, “We have staked the whole future of American civilization, not upon the power of government…but upon the capacity of mankind for self-government, upon the capacity of each and all of us to govern ourselves, to control ourselves, to sustain ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God” (James Madison); and

WHEREAS, “Freedom is not a gift bestowed upon us by other men, but a right that belongs to us by the laws of God (Benjamin Franklin); and

WHEREAS, “God who gave us life gave us liberty and can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are of the Gift of God” (Thomas Jefferson); and

WHEREAS, “Whether any free government can be permanent, where the public worship of God, and the support of Religion, constitute no part of the policy or duty of the state” (Joseph Story); and

WHEREAS, “We hold sacred the rights of conscience, and promise to the people…the free and undisturbed exercise of their religion” (Roger Sherman); and

WHEREAS, “This great nation was founded, not by religionists, but by Christians” (Patrick Henry); and

WHEREAS, “When you…exercise the right of voting for public officers, let it be impressed upon your mind that God commands you to choose just men who will rule in the fear of God” (Noah Webster); and

WHEREAS, “The principles of genuine Liberty and of wise laws and administrations are to be drawn from the Bible” (Noah Webster); and

WHEREAS, the people of Oklahoma have a strong tradition of reliance upon the Creator of the Universe; and thought secure when we have removed

WHEREAS, we believe our economic woes are consequences of our greater national moral crisis; and

WHEREAS, this nation has become a world leader in promoting abortion, pornography, same sex marriage, sex trafficking, divorce, illegitimate births, child abuse, and many other forms of debauchery; and

WHEREAS, alarmed that the Government of the United States of America is forsaking the rich Christian heritage upon which this nation was built; and

WHEREAS, grieved that the Office of the President of these United States has refused to uphold the long held tradition of past presidents in giving recognition to our National Day of Prayer; and

WHEREAS, deeply disturbed that the Office of the President of these United States disregards the biblical admonitions to live clean and pure lives by proclaiming an entire month to an immoral behavior;

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that we the undersigned elected officials of the people of Oklahoma, religious leaders and citizens of the State of Oklahoma, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world, solemnly declare that the HOPE of the great State of Oklahoma and of these United States, rests upon the Principles of Religion and Morality as put forth in the HOLY BIBLE; and

BE IT RESOLVED that we, the undersigned, believers in the One True God and His only Son, call upon all to join with us in recognizing that “Blessed is the Nation whose God is the Lord,” and humbly implore all who love Truth and Virtue to live above reproach in the sight of God and man with a firm reliance on the leadership and protection of Almighty God; and

BE IT RESOLVED that we, the undersigned, humbly call upon Holy God, our Creator, Sustainer, and Redeemer, to have mercy on this nation, to stay His hand of judgment, and grant a national awakening of righteousness and Christian renewal as we repent of our great sin.

Signed on the second day of July in the year of our Lord Christ Two Thousand and Nine.

Now, the first thing I noticed about this was how much it reminded me of an e-mail forward.  Which, of course, it is.  The Patrick Henry quote is fake. So is the James Madison one.  Besides my personal predilection that nothing in this country should ever become an official statement of government when its original source includes the words “Do You Yahoo!?”, isn’t one of the big things that God hates, you know, lying?

Anyway, rest easy.  Between Arizona and Oklahoma, your right to purchase whatever shitty insurance you want while cheating on your wife with someone who looks disturbingly like Rahm Emmanuel will remain unviolated by Barack Obama.

 

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Posted by Jesse Taylor on 01:11 PM • (24) Comments

The purpose of the Constitution was to replace the weak central government created by the Articles of Confederation with a strong one capable of managing the nation’s affairs.

Comment #1: Punditus Maximus  on  06/30  at  01:29 PM

As I read the Gospel according to Matthew 6, a National Day of Prayer would be unChristian:

1 “Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven.
...
5 “When you pray, you are not to be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the street corners so that they may be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. 6 “But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, close your door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you.

Comment #2: Hector B.  on  06/30  at  01:30 PM

isn’t one of the big things that God hates, you know, lying?

Not when it’s done in a good cause, silly. You can hand out Bibles with all the pages stuck together by the effluent spewed by your fapping over it and Jesus will still love you if you’re doing it with a good intention.

Comment #3: Incertus, Nacho Daddy  on  06/30  at  01:36 PM

Wasn’t there something about paving stones and good intentions?

Comment #4: cynickal  on  06/30  at  01:53 PM

do they want to invoke known Unitarian John Adams? http://is.gd/1jha4

Comment #5: yEvb0  on  06/30  at  01:53 PM

Was there some sort of brain devouring parasite going around at the RNC these past few years, or have the Republicans always been this forget-to-breathe stupid?  Maybe it’s the Internet that removed the rock these morons were hiding under, but holy fuck how can anyone be so stupid and still keep a job that doesn’t come with mittens pinned to your sleeves?

Comment #6: stogoe  on  06/30  at  01:55 PM

All possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship. It is now no more that toleration is spoken of, as if it were by the indulgence of one class of people, that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights. For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.

  –George Washington to the Jews of Newport (1st US Synagogue)

Gives one some thought today as to whether you can legislate rights or whether the ought to exist a priori.

Comment #7: Magis  on  06/30  at  02:15 PM

Not only HMOs, I wonder where Yukmir thinks the medicare nursing home bias came from. The one that imprisons thousands of (elderly AND nonelderly) disabled people in nursing homes rather than getting care in their own homes (at one third of the cost of a nursing home bed on average) because the shitty, rotten nursing home lobby has the feds in their pocket to grant medicare money to nursing homes rather than to individuals to use as they choose (home care or institutional care). There are a million examples of how the medical/insurance establishment has set standards of care and policy on a national level. Funny, Obama…all he wants the fed gov to do is insure everyone. No state could possibly want more of its citizens insured so that the medicaid burden wouldn’t be so…burdensome.

Comment #8: Lexie  on  06/30  at  02:15 PM

cynickal—yes, the road to somewhere is paved with good intentions. Heaven, I think it was.

Comment #9: Redshift  on  06/30  at  02:25 PM

How early on in the game did the FFs jettison the Divine Right of Kings, and why is it that only the left remembers?

Was that rejection so widespread as to cause modern wingnuts to have to invent every single “quote” about the colonials using the word “Christian” and “government” in a sentence?

Comment #10: ThresherK  on  06/30  at  02:26 PM

stogoe—it’s not that Repubs were always this stupid; cultural conservatives, however, were.  There’s an element of corruption at work here as well.  First rate people hire first rate people.  Second rate people hire third rate people.  The 11th Commandment (“Thou Shalt Not Criticize Another Republican”) works for media management but leads to a culture of incompetent politically astute people getting promoted.

Comment #11: Punditus Maximus  on  06/30  at  02:27 PM

Arizona is trying to become a Republican dystopia, and its Republican dominated legislature is succeeding. Whether Republicans will retain their majority after 2010, though, is another question. They are doing their best to ruin as mush as possible before their eventual electoral defeat.

Comment #12: mnsr  on  06/30  at  02:38 PM

What we have is “health care by lobbyists,” the lobbyists paid for with the m(b)illions of dollars of insurance company profits used to pay off members of Congress and besiege them with lobbyist visits.

Comment #13: Orange  on  06/30  at  03:00 PM

One more little one….

“When church and state are separate, the effects are happy, and they do not at all interfere with each other: but where they have been confounded together, no tongue nor pen can fully describe the mischiefs that have ensued.”

Rev. Isaac Backus
prominent Baptist minister in New England   1773

Comment #14: Magis  on  06/30  at  03:13 PM

Poor research methods on your part, Rep. Kern. Don’t they have, you know, aides?

Comment #15: RMJ  on  06/30  at  04:46 PM

It’s almost like the last election cycle washed out all of the halfway sane-and-in-touch-with-reality Republicans and left the bitter looney-tune dregs behind in the lint trap.

Comment #16: tannenburg  on  06/30  at  04:57 PM

Help me, I’m trapped in Arizona!

Comment #17: lonespark  on  06/30  at  05:24 PM

We should wrap copper wire around Thomas Jefferson’s skeleton. At the rate he must be turning over in his grave, we could probably power a small city.

Comment #18: Samantha Vimes  on  06/30  at  06:46 PM

I am confused.  What did that rambling batshittery from Oklahoma have to do with the 10th amendment?  I’m sorry, I’ll have to read it again . . . Oh wait, two different states, one acting more sane than the other.

I’m actually a strong proponent of the 10th Amendment.  I really do wish we could advance the public health care agenda by letting citizens decide for themselves the extent to which they’d like their state taxes to go toward socialized health care.  I think that approach would be more Constitutional, (potentially) more efficient, than another huge Federal behemoth and Federal income tax burden that we cannot afford (especially given our present economy). States could tailor their healthcare programs to their constituents medical needs, and change things every X years at election time if need be, instead of having the Feds dictate what they think is good for us.

I also believe every social program should allow people to opt out if they wish.  A Go Galt option if you will.  Few would take it, so it wouldn’t matter, and all it would take is a few Lord of the Flies stories to make the Collective think twice about Going Galt.  That said, the Amish don’t pay into Social Security and they seem to be managing alright. Social Security seems to have done OK without their participation.

Comment #19: The Hedonistic Pleasureseeker  on  06/30  at  07:22 PM

The AZ state government is about to shut down at midnight because the brain trust of GOP legislators and the Governor can’t agree over which horrible version of a budget they want to pass.

Comment #20: DonnaDiva  on  06/30  at  08:32 PM

...isn’t one of the big things that God hates, you know, lying?

But Jesse, it’s not lying if you believe it’s true. Belief, as we know, trumps everything, including science, facts, logic, decency and consideration for one’s fellow human beings.

Comment #21: Bitter Scribe  on  06/30  at  08:45 PM

How does the bullshit legislation in Arizona affect me?

Hell, how does it hurt my stepdaughter’s father in Phoenix? On the infinitessimal chance public healthcare becomes available to everyone, he can still enroll in it, yesno? I’m just not getting how this is bad for adults who didn’t bring it on themselves.

Comment #22: Hershele Ostropoler  on  06/30  at  10:07 PM

Arizona is hard at work on the budget now that pesky important things are out of the way, such as your cited example and the House bill to allow for guns in bars.  Meanwhile, some Arizona Nazis just got arraigned on a double murder (a father and his nine-year-old died, the mother survived) that was intended to steal drugs and cash to finance a revolution.  And oh yes, there are Minutemen links.

The GOP in Arizona has decided that it would rather teabag a beartrap than even give the citizens the option of a referendum to raise taxes, the new Republican governor is almost sounding realistic compared to the legislature, and the Democrats in Phoenix are glad as hell to not have to even pretend to have to come up with a reasonable plan.  I may or may not have work tomorrow, depending on the outcome of this childish pissing match they call budget negotiations.  But I do know for a fact that the next time some coworker at my state job complains about taxes, I’ll be sure to write down his name and suggest to his supervisor that he be fired to help balance our budget.

And yes, I do actually have coworkers at my state job who complain about taxes, are against the idea of government healthcare, and consider themselves above politics while spouting Fox News Special Report talking points verbatim.  And I used to think the inmates were the only ones who lacked self-awareness….

Comment #23: 3letterjon  on  07/01  at  12:48 AM

HP0-A01:


I also think that there too many extra burden of taxes on the citizens of Arizona and Government should reduce the tax rate to insure a high investment in the state.

Comment #24: HP0-A01  on  07/07  at  08:56 AM
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