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Yes, it did. There was a mechanism for change.
And yet, people didn't use it for hundreds of years. There was no *failsafe* in effect, in the event that the majority misused their powers and instituted discrimination upon the minority. There needs to be a way to protect the minority's inalienable from the majority --- you say "the constitution does this," but the constitution is just a document. It is the people who interpret it who put policies into place, and if those people misuse their power, then the constitution isn't going to jump up and say, "you guys stop it!"
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How is your bigger government making things better for the thousands of women being trafficked here today?
The first real attempt to combat the crime of human trafficking across state boundaries (something that states had a difficult time doing properly given technical concerns regarding jurisdiction) when the FBI was formed in 1909, and the next year, the Mann Act was passed:
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The first major expansion in Bureau jurisdiction came in June 1910 when the Mann ("White Slave") Act was passed, making it a crime to transport women over state lines for immoral purposes. It also provided a tool by which the federal government could investigate criminals who evaded state laws but had no other federal violations. Finch became Commissioner of White Slavery Act violations in 1912, and former Special Examiner A. Bruce Bielaski became the new Bureau of Investigation chief.
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Big government has stepped on our liberties with the war on drugs, how's that war going? (mind you, I'm not necessarily for drug legalization)
I agree that the federal government shouldn't be prosecuting states for legalizing certain drugs. I also disagree with my city's decision to spend over $10,000 raising city employees' salaries, but I don't jump from that to "let's abolish the city government."
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On the contrary, I do believe that history repeats itself, and historically speaking, we on on track to a dictatorship, as you continue to consolidate power in a stronger and stronger central government, and weaken the States.
That's what I can never get libertarians to understand; you guys seem to think that any power granted to the federal government is automatically an endorsement of federal absolutism/tyranny. I believe the federal government should have some jurisdiction over states to help combat certain crimes that are difficult and time-consuming for states to handle on their own (among other things). That doesn't mean I support forfeiting our civil rights (as much as you guys keep trying to tell me that the two are synonymous --- they aren't). We can argue on a case-by-case basis which federal actions are permissible and which ones aren't, but to make a sweeping judgment like "federalism = tyranny" is pretty much cause for me to disregard your argument out of hand.
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"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."
Yes. The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution. That implies that some powers are delegated to the states (and if you would read the main articles of the Constitution, you would realize that the powers of the federal government to do things like collect taxes and maintain a standing military are indeed outlined in the Constitution).
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and how much they have overstepped their bounds.
So you acknowledge that they have bounds? And thus that they are justified to exist?
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big government fixed racism? wow! glad that's fixed!
I'll take what we have today over restaurants that won't serve blacks and segregated schools and water fountains any day of the week. In today's world, you actually have recourse if someone discriminates against you in an important way. Unlike the libertarian '50s, where most white-owned businesses (read: most businesses) were "whites-only," and blacks were casually told by libertarian whites to "just go somewhere where blacks are allowed to serve, you have the right to choose where you eat," etc.
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so you concede the money paid in is gone right?
If you stole $50 from me, I would agree that the money is "gone" in the sense that it is no longer with me. However, that does not imply that I am accepting or condoning your theft of my money.
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Meaning the money paid out, comes directly from those paying in now.
No. Please go look this up on the official SS website. I've provided you with some links for your reading pleasure, so you can educate yourself better. I've already explained it once or twice, and I really don't have time to do it again.
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Not being invested, not locked away in some little magical box, with my name on it.
Actually, it's supposed to be.
What you're saying here is akin to, if I had $500 in a savings account, and someone broke in and stole the $500; you're saying we should just close my savings account and forget the whole thing, instead of trying to find out what happened to my $500. I don't feel that this is the most reasonable course of action.
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And yes, fundamentally, it is the way it is being run, as a legal ponzi scheme, that is it's fatal flaw.
SS is paid into by workers throughout their entire working lives, and those same workers collect those same benefits they paid in when they retire. That is not how a ponzi scheme works; the only reason there is a hole in the fund is because that money was taken away to provide for things that it was not intended to provide for. SS works. We just need to actually leave that money to be spent for its intended purpose.
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It relied on the fact that we'd have a constantly growing base of "investors", which we dont, and it FAILED to take into account inflation.
It doesn't matter if there is only one worker and five people receiving benefits; that one worker is paying for *his or her* SS benefits for when he/she retires, and those receiving benefits are receiving the benefits that they paid in during their working lives.
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Thanks for the civics lesson, but that ISN'T the only thing it does with a tax. 60%+ of taxes collected dont go for services we all use. I am speaking of transfer payments, do you understand that term. it is where government doesn't levy a tax to pay for services we all use, rather takes money from person A, to give to person B, because for whatever reason, person B doesn't have what the government has decided was enough.
You're going to have to be more specific. I'm not aware of any government program that operates in this way.
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Do we need to help the poor, and elderly, of course. is that a role for the federal government, not according to the constitution. It is the perversion of a phrase, "provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare", that is new.
What do you think the government is supposed to do to "promote the general welfare," if not help ensure that people who cannot provide for themselves are given the most basic means to survive? And if the government shouldn't be doing that, then how do you suppose we make sure those people aren't left out on the street by their families to die?
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But regardless, taking 1 dollar from one person, and giving it to another is no more beneficial to the economy.
Even in the event of taxation, you are not "taking 1 dollar from one person and giving it to another." You are offering a service in return. Not everyone will utilize that service; that is their right and their decision to make.
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WOW!
How about freedom, liberty, equal protection under the law?
If "freedom, liberty and equal protection" don't encompass a basic right to survival, then what good are they? Liberty doesn't do me any good if I'm starving to death. Lofty ideals are nice, but they're best kept in line with reality, not used as a substitute for it.
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The new deal did not get us out of the depression. That is a fallacy, we were firmly in a depression until WW2.
I said it helped. And it did; the WPA and CCC weren't disbanded until 1943.
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And you socialists/communists like to say you read it differently.
Yes. I do read it differently than you, obviously.
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ALL of the new powers the federal government have taken, come from the new definition of what was meant by "general welfare" and "interstate commerce". Otherwise why wasn't a SS-like program started from the beginning?
So are you saying that we should go back to operating like we were in the Colonial days? Slavery included? Women not being able to vote or own property? Any other gems from those days we should reinstate?