Who's the Boss, the States or the Federal Government?
Who's the Boss, the States or the Federal Government?
The Federal Government Exists Because Representatives of the States Created ItBy Henry Lamb
March 4, 2010
Is the federal government sovereign, with authority over state governments? Or, are individual state governments sovereign, with authority over the federal government? It's a simple question; it's the answer that's a problem.
The federal government exists because representatives of the states created it. This fact should provide a clue. The   federal government was designed by representatives from the states in a   document called the Constitution of the United States. The federal government became a reality when the Constitution was ratified by the 9th state, New Hampshire, on June 21, 1788. This infant government, created by the states, began operation March 4, 1789. From   that day until this, people have been arguing over whether the federal   government or the states possess the supreme authority.
It is quite clear that the people who designed the federal government intended it to be limited in its power. Article 1, Section 8 sets forth 17 enumerated powers of the federal government. The   first clause empowers the new government to "lay and collect taxes,"  to  provide for the "defense and general welfare" of the United States. Here's where the argument gets nasty.
One group of people argues that the phrase "general welfare" means whatever Congress wants it to mean with no limitations. Another   group of people argues that if this is what the designers intended,  why  on earth would they have bothered to enumerate the remaining 16   specific powers? It's a reasonable question that the first group prefers to ignore rather than answer.
To   be sure that the federal government's authority stayed limited, the   primary architect of the Constitution, James Madison, introduced the   Bill of Rights in the very first Congress in 1789. These first ten Amendments further clarify the authority and limitations of the federal government. The   10th Amendment in particular, limits the federal government to those   powers enumerated in the Constitution and explicitly reserves all other   powers to the states and to the people.
Among   the powers granted to the federal government is what is known as the   "Enclave Clause," which happens to be the 17th enumerated power. This   clause provides authority for the federal government to exercise   supreme authority over an area "ten miles square" ceded by the states to   be the Capitol of the new government, and over any lands purchased  from  the states with the approval of the state legislature for "…the   erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, and other needful   buildings."
This is where it really gets sticky. Clearly,   the designers intended for the federal government to purchase "with  the  approval of the legislature" any land to be owned by the federal   government within any state. The Constitution empowers the   federal government, however, to exercise sovereign authority over its   territories, and the authority to add states which are carved out of  the  territories.
It is reasonable to conclude that when a state is carved out of a territory, it becomes a state subject to the powers and limitations of all the other states within the jurisdiction of the Constitution, and no longer subject to the federal authority suffered by the people when the land area was a territory.
This is pretty much the way it went when Texas was admitted to the Union in 1845. What was called "public land" was shifted to the state of Texas. Today, only 1.9 percent of Texas is owned by the federal government.
In   Utah, however, the federal government required, as a condition of   statehood, to "disclaim all right to title" of public land, and the feds   retained nearly 60 percent of all the land in the state. In Nevada, the feds retained 85 percent of the land.
How   can it be legal for the federal government to own land in a state that   it did not purchase with the consent of the state legislature?   How can it be legal for the federal government to exercise sovereignty   over land within a sovereign state? Why were the eleven Western states   and Alaska treated differently upon admission to the Union than were  the  other 26 states that joined the Union – when all states were  supposed  to be admitted on an "equal footing"?
There   is only one logical conclusion: the federal government should not own   the land it now claims within any state unless it is purchased with the   approval of the state legislature for the purposes set forth in  Article  1, Section 8, Clause 17.
There is a growing  effort in  Western states to force the federal government to honor its   Constitutional limitation on land ownership and return to the states   that which is rightfully theirs. 
 
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