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July 9, 2011 ObamaCare and the King's Royal DeerBy Jon N. HallLong ago in jolly old England it was a crime to hunt deer. Deer in England, you see, belonged to the crown. Poaching "the King's royal deer" might get you hanged, and with a silken rope. So Englishmen sailed across the stormy Atlantic to the New World for a little game. And they found it, in mind-boggling abundance. And with all the free animal protein they grew taller and stronger. Deer. It's what's for dinner. We're the descendants of deer slayers. But, for the last 69 years Americans have lived under a dispensation reminiscent of that under English kings: the Supreme Court ruling in Wickard v. Filburn (1942). With this decision, it became illegal in America to cultivate one's own land for the purpose of feeding oneself and one's family. (What? You thought you were free?) Wickard is worse than the situation in old England because it regulates what one can do with one's own property, not the king's land nor even public lands, but one's own land. What's the use of owning land if you can't farm it? In the recently concluded Thomas More Law Center, et al. v. Obama, et al., the Sixth Circuit found that the "individual mandate" in ObamaCare is constitutional. In the ruling there were 20 iterations of the word "Wickard," including this one on page 20:
"Stabilize prices"? Everything Congress touches suffers from raging price inflation, from healthcare to higher education to what have you. If Congress wants to lower prices, then Congress should get out of their so-called "market," and let the real market emerge. Though the Sixth Circuit's decision certainly disappoints any red-blooded meat-eating American, they may have redeemed themselves in the last three paragraphs of the ruling, opening up the way for further clarification from the Supreme Court:
If Wickard is constitutional, then, just as the above suggests, Congress can regulate victory gardens, tomatoes cultivated on backyard patios, whatever it chooses. Congress can tell the fat man to eat less, the smoker and drinker to abstain, and the indolent to start jogging, just so that Congress can "stabilize prices" and make its feeble healthcare system feasible. And all justified by that tiny little Commerce Clause. Wickard is especially vile in that it happened in the Depression era, when farmers had suffered devastating droughts that wiped out their crops. Folks were having a hard time feeding themselves; some even resorted to hunting game. Coon and possum appeared on the plates of country folk. Nonetheless, the Roosevelt administration actually destroyed food and livestock. (Shades of King John?) And why were the feds destroying food? Why, to prop up farm prices, of course. Wickard is a profoundly un-American ruling that is being used to justify a profoundly un-American law: ObamaCare. It tells the man who just wants to be let alone on his own land that that's impossible. It is a scandal that in nearly 70 years Congress has not overridden this vile decision. (But then Congress does enjoy its power.) Whether or not the federales are still inspecting small farms to make sure no one is cultivating contraband grain is beside the point: It is an affront to American values and is being used to justify every bad idea imaginable -- Wickard must be nullified. For a hundred years, America has been drifting more and more leftward, until now we're getting fascistic readings of the Commerce Clause and Congress sees fit to require as a condition of citizenship something the Founders never intended. From bans on hunting to bans on farming to mandates to buy a product, Freedom is always under siege. So I leave you with this ditty:
... from the traditional ballad "Geordie," sung here by Joan Baez. Jon N. Hall is a programmer/analyst from Kansas City. |
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