Thomas Jefferson and Defiance to Tyrants: An Anniversary worth Celebrating

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by Michael Boldin

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following is Michael Boldin’s “Tenther Rant” at the end of Episode 21 of TRX: Tenther Radio, which airs live online every Wednesday at 5pm Pacific Time here.
Find the show on iTunes at this link.
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213 years ago, on November 10th, something really important happened.  In fact, it was so important that if there ARE going to be federal holidays at all, this should definitely be one.  But it’s not.

We’ve already got loads of federal holidays to choose from.  Some of them are worthy of our attention, and some of them not.  On July 4th, there’s independence from King George’s England.  On the first Monday in September, there’s a holiday that was dedicated to the “social and economic achievements of American workers.”  We celebrate all American presidents, give thanks for the autumn harvest, and more.

When there’s no federally-sanctioned holiday to call upon, people around the country celebrate all kinds of other stuff.  And activists across the political spectrum often pick “important” dates to schedule events to bring attention to their cause.  We’ve seen protests on Tax Day, May Day, Earth Day, the 5th of November, and more.

But nowhere to be found on these great lists of “federal holidays” or “protest days” is a celebration of one of the greatest political maxims in American history – that when the federal government does things it’s not supposed to do, you are not bound to obey them.

JEFFERSON, KENTUCKY-STYLE

Most Americans know that Thomas Jefferson was the principal author of “The Declaration of Independence.”  Yet few of them have ever even heard of another document that I would say might be the second most important one he ever wrote – The Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, which were adopted by the Kentucky General Assembly on November 10, 1798.

Jefferson drafted these resolutions – in secret – while he was serving as vice president. It was written in response to the hated Alien and Sedition Acts which were passed under the John Adams administration.

The acts authorized the president to deport any resident alien considered “dangerous to the peace and safety” of the United States, to apprehend and deport resident aliens if their home countries were at war with the United States, and criminalized any speech which might “defame” Congress, the President, or bring either of them into “contempt or disrepute.”

Interestingly enough, while it was illegal to, in essence, speak out against the president, congress and the federal government in general, it was not illegal to do so towards the opposition, in this case the sitting vice-president, a Mr. Thomas Jefferson.

In response, Jefferson invoked what he considered the bedrock of the constitution, the 10th Amendment – and its strict rule that the federal government was one of limited, delegated powers – and nothing more.  Essentially, he argued that by passing and enforcing the Alien and Sedition Acts, the federal government had overstepped its bounds and was exercising powers which were never delegated to it in the Constitution.

In other words, he considered the Alien and Sedition Acts to be acts of usurpation.

VOID AND OF NO FORCE

What did Jefferson have to say?  Here’s a few snippets that, in my opinion, sum up his views quite well:

the several states composing the United States of America, are not united on the principle of unlimited submission to their General Government

the Government created by this compact was not made the exclusive or final judge of the extent of the powers delegated to itself; since that would have made its discretion, and not the constitution, the measure of its powers

whensoever the General Government assumes undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative, void, and of no force

Jefferson argued that if the federal government were allowed to hold a monopoly on determining what its own powers were, we would have no right to be surprised when it kept discovering new ones – as it does so often today.

USURPATION!

Want to know where the feds get the power they do?  They get it from themselves, not the Constitution.  And they’ve been doing this for a long long time.

When FDR told starving farmers they couldn’t grow more wheat to consume on their own property, the federal government was assuming undelegated powers. When Richard Nixon founded the EPA with an unconstitutional executive order, he was doing the same.  When Ronald Reagan ramped up the war on drugs, this was also an exercise of powers that didn’t belong in Washington DC – they are powers that, according to the 10th Amendment, belong to the states.

George Bush gave us the biggest increase of federal control over healthcare in decades, no child left behind, the patriot act, and more.  Barack Obama has given us an extension of the Patriot Act, a nationwide health insurance mandate, raids on milk producers – and he has continued the Bush foreign policy agenda, waging war on his own decision, without a congressional declaration of war.

None of these things – none of them – are powers that have been delegated to the federal government in the constitution.  That means every single one of these acts should be “unauthoritative, void, and of no force.”

NO MEANS NO!

If Congress passes a law and no one obeys it, it is really a law at all?

These politicians only get away with this stuff as long as people let them, and they will continue to get away with it as long as people don’t say NO.  But when enough individual people take a stand and say no, there’s not much that the federal government can do to force their unconstitutional acts, regulations and mandates down our throats.

So today, in celebration of the adoption of the Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, I rise in solidarity with all you brave individuals who quietly, or publicly, refuse to comply – with something, with anything.  In this time of massive federal power, it takes courage and I honor your courage to resist.  Whether you know it or not, you are our generation’s greatest heroes of liberty.

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Whether it’s the person who transports and consumes raw milk in defiance of the FDA, or the cancer patient who uses marijuana in defiance of the DEA, I salute you.  Whether you say no to federally-mandated lightbulbs or health insurance plans, whether you grow hemp without permission from DC or refuse to serve in an unconstitutional war – you are doing what’s right.

You are carrying out Jefferson’s advice and standing up for liberty by refusing in your own way.  Your acts of defiance to tyrants are the core of what will someday reduce these many unconstitutional federal acts to what they must become - “unauthoritative, void, and of no force.”

About Michael Boldin

Michael Boldin [send him email] is the founder of the Tenth Amendment Center. He was raised in Milwaukee, WI, and currently resides in Los Angeles, CA. Follow him on twitter - @michaelboldin, on LinkedIn, and on Facebook.

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17 comments
Shill
Shill

I agree. Unfortunately, however, the government still has the power to enforce the laws it makes, whether these laws are given to them under the Constitution or not. If you get caught breaking one, you pay.

EdWilliams
EdWilliams

Same as when a cop or any public official does illegal stuff "under color of authority". Or someone in the military issuing illegal orders. Using one's perceived authority to do or to order bad stuff is a big no-no, and the courts have (sometimes) held that there is no obligation to comply with such. This seems like a good place to repeat Ben Franklin's definitions of Democracy and Liberty: "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote."

INCUMBENTS: THE "POLITICALLY CORRECT" ENDANGERED SPECIES!

johnturmel
johnturmel like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Michael Boldin: When FDR told starving farmers they couldn’t grow more wheat to consume on their own property, the federal government was assuming undelegated powers.Jct: After he'd shut down their thousands of community scrip currencies and condemned the extra jobless to an extra 7 million deaths! By my count, no one's killed more Americans than Roosevelt, not counting the 3,000 sailors he didn't warn at Pearl Harbor to get them into the war.

bowmeris
bowmeris

Happy Nov 10th, glad to celebrate with thenther radio

Sully Ricker
Sully Ricker

When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty. -Jefferson

Ann L. Lowenstein
Ann L. Lowenstein

Travis - approximately everything passed in the last 25 years.

Travis Allen
Travis Allen

so by this definition we should be able to void out HOW many pages of laws and regulations?

jefferson
jefferson

Greetings -

Here's more on Thomas Jefferson! He now BLOGS! Thrice-weekly, he posts briefly on a variety of topics, including constitutional issues. Read it at www.JeffersonLeadership.com/?page_id=68

I remain

Patrick Lee

rochnowski
rochnowski

Absolutely well spoken,
from the heart, Mr. Boldin! My personal answer to the mantra, "God bless America", has been, for a long time..."NO, God FORGIVE America"! - rochnowski

WilliamSchooler
WilliamSchooler

No Kidding Michael,

But look how he communicated these, by observations of truths seen by the results that were before him.

Thomas Jefferson knew full well we are capable of acts, of opposition, of defiance of acts against us by our standing, our understanding and the skills from such acts of such and defiance.

Thanks for the truth of such a genuine value so few really get at all.

We stand in the direction we learn to know or no standing shall take place. Learn the foundation and become capable of great decision making, a Skill learned to do well.

WilliamSchooler
WilliamSchooler

No Kidding Michael,

But look how he communicated these, by observations of truths seen by the results that were before him.

Thomas Jefferson new full well we are capable of acts, of opposition, of denial of acts against us by our standing, our understanding and the skills from such acts of such a defiance.

Thanks for the truth of such a genuine value so few really get at all.

We stand in the direction we learn to know and no standing shall take place. Learn the foundation and become capable of great decision making, a Skill learned to do well.

StoptheFed
StoptheFed like.author.displayName 1 Like

Finally- a voicing of the true spirit of this generation! How many of us will be courageous enough to put these words into action? I will NOT live in fear of a tyranny & I will not allow that tyranny to intimidate me & influence my life. I have not forgotten the men & women who have given their lives so that I may retain NY freedoms. Lastly, I will not forsake my Constitutional rights to a power hungry few

Michael Boldin
Michael Boldin moderator

@StoptheFed I know it's hard to have courage. I often talk more on principle than I actually take action. But all these other people saying no are the strong ones, and I can only hope to rise to their level more and more each year.

WilliamSchooler
WilliamSchooler

@Michael Boldin@StoptheFed

Michael I have realized courage is something we build by the certainties of all things around us and knowing well our Foundation and its principals by which to determine.

Thank you for all your contributions, something realized and shared if far better than something realized and forgotten.

StoptheFed
StoptheFed

That's "my" freedoms...

Also I wanted to share one more thing with whoever reads this: the framers of our Constitution gave us the greatest gift in the history of mankind, they trusted us as a nation to carry on that legacy, to extend the spirit of liberty to our children. Will we give up & abandon this great trust without even a fight? Freedom & liberty stands a good chance of of dying, my fellow citizens, unless we can stand strong. What will be your choice? I think everyone should ponder this question.

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  1. [...] Thomas Jefferson and Defiance to Tyrants: An Anniversary worth Celebrating [...]

  2. [...] Thomas Jefferson and Defiance to Tyrants: An Anniversary worth Celebrating [...]

  3. [...] week, we celebrated the anniversary of the adoption of the Kentucky Resolutions of 1798.  In these resolutions, Thomas Jefferson laid the groundwork for the principle nullification, [...]

  4. [...] week, we celebrated the anniversary of the adoption of the Kentucky Resolutions of 1798.  In these resolutions, Thomas Jefferson laid the groundwork for the principle nullification, [...]

  5. [...] Jefferson argued vehemently that states had the right and the duty not to obey unconstitutional law, even if passed by the federal government. “whensoever the General Government assumes undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative, void, and of no force” He further argued that if the federal government was to decide the limits of its own power, no limits would ever be discovered and the government would grow increasingly powerful. [...]