
“Aware of the tendency of power to degenerate into
abuse,
the worthies of our country have secured its
independence
by the establishment of a Constitution and form of
government
for our nation, calculated to prevent as well as to correct abuse.”
—–Thomas
Jefferson to the Washington Tammany Society, 1809
At a time when the
Founding Fathers of this country, and the Constitution they established, are
continually being denigrated and “mean mouthed” by educators, the mass media
and others, it cannot be repeated TOO OFTEN that the Constitution is a
limitation on the GOVERNMENT, and NOT on individuals. It does NOT, and was not
intended to prescribe the conduct of private citizens, but only the CONDUCT of
government and those to whom governmental power had been granted. In its most
basic aspects, it is NOT a charter for government, but rather a charter of
PROTECTION of citizens FROM their government.
The basic
Constitution, itself, was a statement of strictly limited governmental powers.
Then the great Bill of Rights was added to even further define what the
government COULD NOT DO!!! Amendments 1 through 9 specify certain things which
the government was NOT allowed to do and then the incredible Tenth Amendment
which says, in effect, “If we forgot anything else, you CAN’T do that
EITHER!” They did everything they could to protect future generations.
Unfortunately, as
always throughout human history, there arose those who were determined to gain
more and more centralized power. At the end of the Civil War (the War Between The States for you Southerners) the time was ripe for a
major move in that direction. In 1865, the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments to
the Constitution were introduced in Congress by the Republican Party. The 13th
Amendment which abolished slavery was immediately ratified by the required
three quarters of the States including all the southern States except
Mississippi and Texas.
The 14th Amendment
was never legal nor Constitutional from its very inception. The Constitution
mandates that proposed amendments must be approved by two thirds of both houses
of Congress. In December of 1865, the radicals in control of Congress refused
to allow the legally elected Representatives and Senators from the southern
States to be seated. Hence, at that point, Congress itself was
unconstitutional. However, even disregarding that technicality, when the vote
of those who WERE seated as part of the House was taken, out of 184
Representatives, only 120 voted in favor of the resolution. Two thirds of the
184 would have required 123 to vote in favor. In spite of the failure to get
sufficient votes to constitutionally pass the resolution, the leadership of
Congress arbitrarily declared the Resolution passed. Congress then submitted
the 14th Amendment to all the states for ratification, INCLUDING the States
which had already been DENIED representation in the Congress!
The 14th Amendment
was soundly defeated when it was rejected by all but one of the southern States
and all of the so-called “border” States. Iowa and Massachusetts had also
failed to ratify it by the beginning of March, 1867. The radicals had only 21
ratifications of the 28 needed. What to do?
Those in power in
the Republican Party which controlled the Congress at that time rammed through
the Reconstruction Act of 1867. This incredible abuse of Congressional power
simply abolished the legal governments of all ten of the southern States which
had refused to ratify the 14th Amendment and placed all of them under military
dictatorship. The generals placed in command of these dictatorships were
required by the Reconstruction Act to prepare the “rolls of voters” for
conventions which would formulate governments acceptable to Congress.
Anyone who had served in the Confederate Army was denied the right to vote or
to hold office – in spite of presidential proclamations by both Lincoln and
Johnson granting amnesty to southern veterans who would swear allegiance to the
U.S. The Reconstruction Act provided that when these “new” legislatures
ratified the 14th Amendment they would be admitted to the union.
In other words,
this illegal Congress – for purposes of excluding Representatives and
Senators from southern states – considered those states OUT of the
union. For purposes of getting the 14th Amendment ratified, this Congress
considered the states IN the union. When they refused to ratify the
amendment, the Congress simply abolished their governments and set up
“reconstruction” legislatures, controlled by northern military power. Now these
states were again treated as OUT of the union until they ratified the
14th Amendment – although the Constitution clearly requires that only states
which are IN the union may act on amendments.
By July, 1868,
Iowa and Massachusetts and six of the “reconstructed” states had ratified this
14th Amendment which would have added 8 states to the original 21 states for a
total of 29 ratifications. HOWEVER, the legislators of two northern states had
been so incensed by the whole outrageous manner in which this amendment was
being forced through that they had RESCINDED their previous ratifications.
(Illinois rescinded on January 15, 1868 and New Jersey on March 24, 1868.)
Therefore, there were only 27 ratifications when 28 were required.
On July 20, 1868,
then Secretary of State William Seward proclaimed that 3/4 of the states had
ratified the 14th Amendment IF the legislatures in the six former
confederate states were authentically organized and IF
Illinois and New Jersey were NOT allowed to rescind
their ratifications. The radical Congress did not like this equivocation and on
July 21, 1868, Congress passed a joint resolution simply DECLARING that
the 14th Amendment was a part of the Constitution and directing Seward to
declare it legally ratified.
Such is a small
part of the sordid history of the 14th Amendment as researched by
constitutional scholar, Dan Smoot. In our next column, we will examine WHY the
radicals of the time (and since) were so dead set on getting this change
introduced into our Constitution and WHY it is essential that we recognize the
consequences to all of us.
“Published
originally at EtherZone.com : republication allowed with this notice and
hyperlink intact.”