by RichardAHamblen » Sun Aug 16, 2009 10:32 am
As Joe Sobran famously said "The Constitution poses no threat to our present form of government".
A few points: once someone applies for and accepts an FFL, he agrees to dance to the BATFE's tune, which means accepting their regulations as well as surrendering basic Constitutional rights such as the Fourth Amendment. An FFL is a contract in other words.
The larger question is where do the Feds get the authority to regulate firearms in the first place? US Attorney General Cummings claimed, in hearings on the NFA of 1934 before the House Ways and Means Committee (remember the NFA is a tax statute), authority based on the model of the Harrison Act which started the notably successful and neverending War on Drugs. This act introduced the novel idea of using the Commerce Clause and the taxing power as the controlling authority. Prior to this, it was generally thought that the Constitution had to be amended to grant authority prior to such actions such as Alcohol Prohibition. But drugs, unlike firearms, are not protected by their own constitutional amendment. Read the preamble to the Bill of Rights, (something you were probably never taught in school, on purpose of course):
THE Conventions of a number of the States having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added
The Bill of Rights was adopted after the Commerce Clause, so that its language is controlling, which explicitly says that the right to keep and bear arms "shall not be infringed", period. If a poll tax is now, by constitutional amendment, an infringement on the right to vote, then how can a firearms tax not be an infringement on the right to keep and bear arms? By the same logic which is self evident from the language of the Bill of Rights, the 9th and 10th Amendment trump any authority claimed by anything in the body of the original Constitution unless it has been superseded by later amendment (such as Alcohol Prohibition). Since the language is fairly clear, we are reduced to quibbling over the meaning of individual words, words which were apparently clear to enough to everyone prior to the passage of the Volstead Act, but suddenly became clouded by the time of the FDR administration and have been ever since.
As a practical matter, the Federal Government feels itself bound to the Constitution as a matter of convenience only. When the Constitution cuts in the Feds' favor they obey it; when not they ignore it or put some arcane interpretation on it and then make it practically impossible to challenge that interpretation. When things get really at an impasse, they call out the troops, as did Mr. Lincoln. So much for the Tenth Amendment. The last time Tennessee challenged the Federal Government, she was invaded and conquered. Might makes right, at least according to the Feds' practice if not their words.
A constitutional convention? First, you have to have 2/3 of the states to call one. And then what are you going to do to enforce the changes once 3/4 agrees, assuming we don't end up with something worse. Remember, only the deficiencies in the Articles of Confederation were to be remedied by the convention called in 1787. We ended up with a whole new system, written in secret, which broke down in 1861. The States effectively have no power, and no one in office has indicated they are willing to take the necessary steps to enforce the Tenth Amendment. Will the governor instruct federal agents that they are not to operate in Tennessee with out the express approval of him through his AG, and then only if accompanied by a Tennessee official? And will he back it up with force, if necessary? Does the state even have a Militia? (Don't fool yourself about the National Guard. The Supreme Court considers them part of the US Army. See Perpich v. DOD). There are no indications that anyone in the government has thought this out, not even the backers of the Tenth Amendment resolutions. I have asked.
And then there is the question of the loss of federal money. Most federal requirements are riders to appropriations bills, and the state has to comply or lose the funding. We have become wage slaves to the Federal master.
Don't expect the Courts to come to our aid. Roosevelt put the fear of God into them in 1937 and they have been compliant ever since. They know where their career advancement lies.
If you are going to challenge the Feds and the BATFE, do it on the proper authority, the Second Amendment. The Tenth is for other issues and is only secondarily controlling here. This is not an academic exercise. Real planning and organization is required.