http://virginiafreecitizen.com/2013/11/27/curb-feds-via-convention-states/


Curb the Feds Via Convention of States

*November 27, 2013*

[image: Convention of
States]<http://www.conventionofstates.com/news/handbook-version-20-here>The
federal government eavesdrops on our private phone calls and e-mail
communications. It targets individuals and organizations for tax scrutiny
and penalties based on their political positions. It imposes
government-directed healthcare insurance on individual American citizens
and redistributes insurance costs to achieve planned goals. It levies
thousands of environmental and other restrictive, economy choking
regulations on businesses.  In short, over the past 100 years, the federal
government has evolved into a multi-tentacle leviathan that dominates
American lives in ways never envisioned, and even strictly prohibited, by
the Constitution.

The good news is that Fairfax County residents will have the opportunity
over the next couple of years to curb the federal government’s power.

A grassroots movement to subdue federal government overreach continues to
gather support and build momentum. The movement focuses on states, not
Congress, organizing a Convention of States for the purpose of limiting the
powers of the federal government and strengthening the powers of state
governments consistent with the stated intent and provisions of the
Constitution.

The Commonwealth of Virginia has already pre-filed an application calling
for a Convention of States (the first state to do so), and the state
legislature will likely consider the application during the 2014
legislative session. As representatives of the most populous county in the
state, state legislators from Fairfax County will play a significant role
in determining whether the state will or will not support calling a
Convention of States to craft one or more amendments to the Constitution
that curb the power of the federal government.
Convention of States Primer

At this early stage, most people are unaware of this Convention of States
movement. Here is a brief primer:

*Key Grievances.* Over the past 100 years the federal government has
amassed power and jurisdiction that far exceed those delegated to it in the
Constitution by the states and people. Citizens for
Self-Governance<http://selfgovern.com/>,
one of the organizations vigorously promoting a Convention of States,
identifies four major abuses of the federal
government<http://www.conventionofstates.com/news/handbook-version-20-here>:
1) excessive spending and the debt crisis it has spawned, 2) crushing
regulations levied on businesses, 3) Congressional attacks on state
sovereignty, and 4) federal takeover of the decision-making process
reserved to the states and people in the 10th Amendment to the Constitution.

*Grassroots Opposition.* As the federal government in the hands of the
Obama Administration has accelerated its power grab at the expense of state
authority and individual liberties, grassroots movements organized by
ordinary American citizens have sprouted in opposition. The decentralized
tea party movement advocating limited, Constitutional government and a free
market economy is the best known of these movements. While the tea party
and other like-minded grassroots organizations have achieved some electoral
and legislative successes, they have not been able to staunch the
burgeoning growth of federal government spending, regulations, and
intrusions into individual liberties.

*Convention of States Concept.* Faced with the major challenge of
preserving the Constitution from federal government overreach,
Constitutional scholars and grassroots organizers have turned to the
Constitution itself to find a way to reverse this trend. A Convention of
States offers such a way. The origins of a Convention of States date back
to the Constitution Convention of 1787, where the founders, specifically
George Mason – an anti-Federalist from Fairfax County who drafted
Virginia’s Declaration of Rights, raised the question about the federal
government arrogating power to itself and Congress being unwilling to limit
this Constitution defying aggrandizement. To ensure the people and states
had a Constitutional means of opposing federal government oppression, the
founders included in Article V of the Constitution a process empowering 2/3
of the states to call for a convention to propose Constitutional
amendments. In the current environment, the subject of the amendments would
be restricted to limiting the power of the federal government.

*Leading Advocates for Convention of States.* Over the past couple of
years, individuals and organizations have advocated more aggressively and
effectively for states to call for a Convention of States aimed at
proposing amendments, for ultimate state ratification, that restrict the
power of the federal government. *Mark Levin*, senior Department of Justice
official in the Reagan Administration and popular radio talk show host, has
written an insightful and highly readable book, entitled *Liberty
Amendments,* which makes a strong case for such a convention. It identifies
and explains 11 potential amendments that a convention should consider,
including ones to limit Congressional terms, federal spending and taxing,
and the federal bureaucracy. *Citizens for Self-Governance*, a grassroots
organization focused on restoring self-governance in America, has
established a Convention of States Project that outlines a plan for how
citizens can work with their state legislators to call for a Convention of
States. *The Madison Coalition* <http://www.madisoncoalition.org/>, another
grassroots organization, advocates both re-balancing state and federal
power through an Article V Convention of States and restricting the
convention’s scope only to limits on federal power as a means of preventing
“convention runaway” abuse.

*Mobilization for a Convention of States.* Under the loose guidance of the
organizations listed above, Tea Party, other grassroots organizations, and
individual state legislators across the country are beginning to mobilize
support for state legislatures to pass calls for a Convention of States.
Buoyed by the widespread success of Mark Levin’s well-reasoned book
advocating a convention, it is possible that the required 34 state
applications required for a Convention of States could be submitted to
Congress as early as 2015. Within the Commonwealth of Virginia, Delegate
Scott Lingamfelter (R-31) will sponsor the application during the 2014
legislative session. Delegate Jim LeMunyon (R-67) is working closely with
Delegate Lingamfelter. Both will need the support of grassroots activists
to make the case within Fairfax County and across Virginia that a
Convention of States is the most viable, and maybe the only, way to curb
the power of the federal government, restore the balance of federal and
state authority, and preserve individual liberties.
Fairfax Resident Support for Convention of States

Fairfax residents who oppose the federal government’s flagrant abuse of
power should pursue the following initial actions in support of a possible
Convention of States that would end this abuse:

Raise your awareness and understanding of how a Convention of States could
restore the balance of power between the federal and state governments,
preserve individual liberty for Americans, and reestablish the Constitution
as the guiding framework for government within America. To do so, read Mark
Levin’s book, *Liberty Amendments*, for a thorough assessment of the
federal government’s overreach and an explanation of 11 potential
amendments to the Constitution that would curb this overreach. Read *Convention
of States:  A Handbook for Legislators and Citizens
<http://www.conventionofstates.com/news/handbook-version-20-here>, *prepared
by Citizens for Self-Governance, which outlines the background and need for
a Convention of States and offers a plan for legislative and citizen action
to convoke a convention. Follow discussions and analysis of a possible
Convention of States in the media and on the Internet.

Encourage your state delegate and senator to support a Convention of
States, seek guidance from Delegates Lingamfelter and LeMunyon about how
best to support their legislative efforts to pass a state application for a
convention, and advocate for a convention within your neighborhood and
local grassroots political organization(s). The Fairfax Free Citizen will
provide periodic updates about the progress of the Convention of States
movement and recommend concrete actions for Fairfax residents to take to
support it.

The time has come for America to recalibrate the balance of federal and
state power and jurisdiction. Fairfax’s very own George Mason provided us
the constitutional means to do so. Fairfax residents can, and should, take
the lead in pressing the state legislature to approve a state application
for a Convention of States that reins in the power of the federal
government and recommits our nation to the representative, federal republic
form of government defined in the Constitution.

Managing Editor

The Fairfax Free Citizen <http://fairfaxfreecitizen.com/> (FxFC), an online
newspaper started in January 2013, provides news and commentary of direct
interest to residents of Fairfax County and surrounding environs.




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