Federal Law is not “Always Supreme”

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Even though most people seem to believe it – and the government definitely acts as if it were true, federal law is not “always supreme” – all the time. Arguing in support of that requires ignoring the words of the supremacy clause – and the history of the American Revolution, which was a rejection of this kind of unlimited, centralized power.

Path to Liberty: March 20, 2023

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James Otis – Speech Against the Writs of Assistance (1761)

Episode – The Real Revolution: James Otis vs the Writs of Assistance

George Mason (Apr 1775)

Patrick Henry – Virginia Resolves (1765)

Episode – The Peoples’ Nullification of the Stamp Act

Mark Boonshoft – New York Public Library

Declaratory Act (18 Mar 1766)

Britannica.com

John Hancock – Massacre Day Oration (1774)

Thomas Paine – the Crisis (1776)

William Davie – North Carolina Ratifying Convention (29 July 1788)

James Madison – Federalist 45

St. George Tucker – View of the Constitution of the United States

Thomas Jefferson, Kentucky Resolutions (10 Nov 1798)

Centinel No. V (4 Dec 1787)

Alexander Hamilton – Federalist 33

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