Colorado's wind energy: neither free nor clean
- August 5, 2011
The Constitution tells us that the president’s most important tasks are enforcing federal laws, nominating and appointing federal officers and judges, signing and vetoing bills, recommending measures to Congress, commanding the military, and . . . conducting foreign affairs. There is nothing in the job description about health care or pandemics, ending pollution, or fighting “institutional racism.”
READ MORE[T]he “progressives” have lost the argument over constitutional meaning. And that is why they have pivoted to assail the document itself.
READ MOREIf we were to cut the presidency down to constitutional size, it wouldn’t matter so much that on rare occasions the position’s occupant was not the popular vote winner.
READ MOREMost people would recognize the right to travel as an inherent, natural right of free people, and the courts say that it is the Constitution. But is it really there?
READ MORE“Here’s an important, but widely overlooked, feature: The document doesn’t grant power only to federal officials. It also confers power on persons and entities who are not part of the U.S. government at all.”
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