Sunday, July 02, 2017

Historian Tom Woods: How The Fourteenth Amendment Became The Most Important Amendment in The U.S. Constitution.


The Mises Institute has one of the most important lectures ever given on the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution by historian Tom Woods. Click on the link to listen to the lecture : YOU'LL WANT TO LISTEN TO THE ENTIRE LECTURE, IF NOT ONCE MAYBE 10 TIMES. Here's a major contribution to your education. Whether you flunked out of high school or have a Ph.D. in political science few will know what's in this entire lecture. We suspect many, many educated lawyers don't know all the information in this lecture.:
If the Fourteenth Amendment was in fact intended to bind the states to the Bill of Rights that the federal government could enforce, then it dramatically increases the police power of the federal government.

Woods’ instinct is that Berger, not Curtis, is right. Perhaps the 14th Amendment is merely codifying the Civil Rights Act of 1866, e.g. about contracts, travel, property, etc. This would have protected the Amendment from legal challenge. It was interpreted relatively conservatively until the Incorporation Doctrine in 1925. But, the Supreme Court does not have angels on it.

Was the Fourteenth Amendment really ratified? Its passage was blemished. Forrest McDonald has concluded that the Fourteenth Amendment was not constitutionally ratified. Woods agrees. The amendment has actually been used for a federal judge to order an increase in property taxes twice. Free services were extended to illegals in California. A racial quota system was called for in universities. In the name of protecting rights, enormous discretionary power has been given to the federal government.
This is one of the most important things we've ever posted at Newsalert.