On Federalism
July 28, 2007 · Print This Article
The term Federalism hasn’t been in the news much the last fifty years or so, at least not until recently where Fred Thompson has brought the term back to the news again. Below I am re-posting Fred’s post on Federalism, I know it’s long but the words are very important.
On Federalism
Posted on July 27th, 2007
By Fred in FederalismThe Framers drew their design for our Constitution from a basic understanding of human nature. From the wisdom of the ages and from fresh experience, they understood the better angels of our nature, and the less admirable qualities of human beings entrusted with power.
The Framers believed in free markets, rights of property and the rule of law, and they set these principles firmly in the Constitution. Above all, the Framers enshrined in our founding documents, and left to our care, the principle that rights come from our Creator and not from our government.
We developed institutions that allowed these principles to take root and flourish: a government of limited powers derived from, and assigned to, first the people, then the states, and finally the national government. A government strong enough to protect us and do its job competently, but modest and humane enough to let the people govern themselves. Centralized government is not the solution to all of our problems and – with too much power – such centralization has a way of compounding our problems. This was among the great insights of 1787, and it is just as vital in 2007.





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