Recent financial crises and economic stagnation are symptoms of constitutional failure
Published in The Tennessean , Sunday, November 27, 2011 by Richard J. Grant The progressives among us often insist that we need stronger laws and greater regulation. But they don't really mean it – at least not in any consistent sense. While happy to load us up with regulations at all levels of government, they do so only by either ignoring or defining away any limitations on government at the constitutional level. If we are now dogged by a flourishing pack of sharp-toothed regulators, it is because the constitutional leash intended to limit the range of politicians’ powers has been loosened from its anchor. The U.S. Constitution was intended as a conservative document that would give the national government a few defined powers and no more. Government was constitutionally limited to protect citizens from the whim of the aspiring oligarch and the appetites of the mob. The Orwellian phrase, “living constitution,” really describes a constitution that is moribund. Any constitution tha...