Dear SteveSy:
Statements like your statement that “The 10th [Amendment] has FAR more power over things not explicitly delegated to congress” are difficult to parse, because of your syntax. The 10th Amendment does not have “power” over anything. (More on this in a moment.)
Article VI, clause 2 (the Supremacy Clause):
This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof, and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.
In other words, in a state court, where Federal law and state law are contrary, the rule of decision shall be the FEDERAL law.
The 10th Amendment states:
The powers NOT delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
[emphasis added]
Steve, the power to regulate interstate commerce is not a power delegated to the states. Assuming arguendo that the power to regulate intrastate commerce is a state power (a fairly safe assumption), what should a state court do if asked to decide a case where Federal law and state law conflict? Answer: Supremacy clause: Follow Federal law. Does the Tenth Amendment reserve any power to a state where that power has been delegated to the United States? Answer: NO. Read the amendment. The Tenth Amendment refers only to powers NOT delegated to the United States.
SteveSy wrote:
You always avoid questions that require your opinion or require you to admit you have personal rights. There is a good reason for this because if you answered them truthfully we would soon discover you at some point would defy and ignore what a court says also.
Whaaatttt? What is this, the ninth grade, Steve? What are you talking about? Stop whining and make a lucid point. I have stated my opinions in Quatloos -- but when I do so, I try to make clear that it is indeed MY OPINION, and not a statement of "what the law is." You, by contrast, do not seem to be able to readily distinguish between YOUR OPINION about what the law SHOULD be and "what the law is." I have always gotten the distinct impression from you that you have pretty much believed, delusionally, that the two are one and the same. More recently you appear to be backing off from that just a bit, perhaps -- which is of course a good sign, Steve.
Steve, What is this about "personal rights"?? Something about me "admitting" something about "personal rights"? What are you trying to say? Steve, maybe it's just me, but sometimes I have a hard time following your thought process.
SteveSy wrote:
For instance if the Supreme Court were to say elections were optional what would you do? Would you go along with this and keep with your position that what the courts say is law or what?
Please answer the question above, don't avoid it. Don't say they wouldn't do that.
Steve, are you just deliberately not listening? Please answer the question? What do you mean, don’t avoid it??? How many times do you need to hear it? Under the U.S. legal system, in an actual case or controversy litigated in a court of law, THE LAW IS WHAT THE COURT RULES THE LAW IS, by definition. If a court were to rule that, as a matter of law, “elections were optional,” that would BE THE LAW. If a court were to rule that, as a matter of law, all citizens of Albany, New York were also citizens of the Planet Neptune, that would be the law, too. Do you want to compete with me over who can come up with the more ridiculous scenario?
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet