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BY WALTER WILLIAMS
JULY 1, 2009
Why did the founders of our nation give us the Bill of Rights? The
answer is easy. They knew Congress could not be trusted with our
God-given rights. Think about it. Why in the world would they have
written the First Amendment prohibiting Congress from enacting any
law that abridges freedom of speech and the press? The answer is
that in the absence of such a limitation Congress would abridge free
speech and free press. That same distrust of Congress explains the
other amendments found in our Bill of Rights protecting rights such
as our rights to property, fair trial and to bear arms. The Bill of
Rights should serve as a constant reminder of the deep distrust that
our founders had of government. They knew that some government was
necessary but they rightfully saw government as the enemy of the
people and they sought to limit government and provide us with
protections.
After the 1787 Constitutional Convention, there were intense
ratification debates about the proposed Constitution. Both James
Madison and Alexander Hamilton expressed grave reservations about
Thomas Jefferson's, George Mason's and others' insistence that the
Constitution be amended by the Bill of Rights. Those reservations
weren't the result of a lack of concern for liberty. To the
contrary, they were concerned about the loss of liberties.
Alexander Hamilton expressed his reservation in Federalist Paper No.
84, "(B)ills of rights ... are not only unnecessary in the proposed
Constitution, but would even be dangerous." Hamilton asks, "For why
declare that things shall not be done (by Congress) which there is
no power to do? Why, for instance, should it be said that the
liberty of the press shall not be restrained, when no power is given
(to Congress) by which restrictions may be imposed?" Hamilton's
argument was that Congress can only do what the Constitution
specifically gave it authority to do. Powers not granted belong to
the people and the states. Another way of examining Hamilton's
concern: Why have an amendment prohibiting Congress from infringing
on our right to picnic on our back porch when the Constitution gives
Congress no authority to infringe upon that right in the first
place?
Alexander Hamilton added that a Bill of Rights would "contain
various exceptions to powers not granted; and, on this very account,
would afford a colorable pretext to claim more (powers) than were
granted. ... (it) would furnish, to men disposed to usurp, a
plausible pretense for claiming that power." Going back to our
picnic example, those who would usurp our God-given liberties might
enact a law banning our right to have a picnic. They'd justify their
actions by claiming that nowhere in the Constitution is there a
guaranteed right to have a picnic.
To mollify Alexander Hamilton's and James Madison's fears about how
a Bill of Rights might be used as a pretext to infringe on human
rights, the Ninth Amendment was added that reads: "The enumeration
in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny
or disparage others retained by the people." In essence, the Ninth
Amendment says it's impossible to list all of our God-given or
natural rights. Just because a right is not listed doesn't mean it
can be infringed upon or disparaged by the U.S. Congress. The Tenth
Amendment is a reinforcement of the Ninth saying, "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." That means if a power is not delegated to Congress, it
belongs to the states of the people.
The Ninth and Tenth Amendments mean absolutely nothing today as
Americans have developed a level of naive trust for Congress, the
White House and the U.S. Supreme Court that would have astonished
the founders, a trust that will lead to our undoing as a great
nation.
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