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Raising The Debt Ceiling Is Constitutional

todayOctober 30, 2015

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What Is Flawed Is Congress’s Constitutional Power To Make More Debt

For more on James Madison & The Constitution's writing, pick up your copy of The Spirit of 76 right here!
For more on James Madison & The Constitution’s writing, pick up your copy of The Spirit of 76 right here!

Mandeville, LA – Exclusive Transcript“Patrick Henry, Colonel William Grayson, James Monroe, many, many anti-federalists, as they were called, that opposed ratification kept asking why the borrowing power was put in there, and why it was the first one.”  Check out today’s transcript for the rest….

Begin Mike Church Show Transcript

Mike:  Jeff in West Virginia is first up here today on the telephones.  Hello, Jeff.  How you doing?

Caller Jeff:  Hey, Mike.  How are you doing this morning?

Mike:  I’m well, sir.  Thank you.

Caller Jeff:  Great.  I was just curious, I’m wanting to hear your thoughts on which candidate from either party, from any corner of the universe, is actually going to lead the country based on our constitutional principles and not all of this hot button topic crap.

Mike: “Zero point zero.”  None of the above.  Do you have write-in candidates in West Virginia?

Caller Jeff:  We do.

Mike:  Write in someone.

Caller Jeff:  You know –

Mike:  Find someone that you think will do it and write them in, Jeff.

Caller Jeff:  I was afraid you were going to say that.  I was just hoping, in your crystal ball, that you might have some insight.

Mike:  It’s funny that I might actually have a crystal ball.  I don’t have a crystal ball.  Many of these events in our public lives and in the politics of the day that we see and we talk about, because we have been trained to think about them as ribald, red v. blue, Yankees v. Red Sox, left v. right, conservative v. liberal, existential enemies, you are blinded to the actual logic of some of the affairs and the easy-to-reach conclusions as to what might happen in most of them.

For example, this imbroglio that’s coming up over the raising or lowering or not raising of the debt ceiling, which should the Vegas morning line odds be that the debt ceiling – we say debt ceiling –

[private FP-Monthly|FP-Yearly|FP-Yearly-WLK|FP-Yearly-So76]

the borrowing limit, how much cash from the future, from my children and your children, can these prideful, diabolical, sinful souls in Mordor mortgage against our children’s future earnings, if they have any earnings?  What should the morning line Vegas, the morning odds, the morning line Vegas odds be that it is not – in other words, that there is no increase in the borrowing limit?  What do you think?

Caller Jeff:  I don’t think you’d find somebody to take that bet.  I think the amount that we borrow is going to increase, and it’s going to increase based on exactly what the folks in power feel that they need to accomplish their agenda, with no regard to how that, what the constitutional process is for increasing that debt.  If that were the case, then we may be able to lay odds.

John AdamsMike:  Now we’ve got to go back to the drawing board.  We’ve got to go back to the chalkboard.  We must now interject some truth into this.  It is a fact – and I’ll read it to you so that we’re all on the same page here.  From time to time I happen to stray from the talk radio mafia hymnal.  This will be one of the days.  Wait a minute, that’s every day.  Future news will make that quite clear, my friends.  Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution – by the way, I might have made a movie about this.  You might be interested to watch it.  It’s called Spirit of ’76.  Get it on DVD in the Founders Tradin’ Post or on Amazon.com or on the CD set and listen to it while you’re tooling around about the countryside.  Article I, Section 8, “The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States.”  Jeff, I’m going to give you a pop quiz, hotshot.  What’s the first power that Congress was accorded under Article I, Section 8, the first one after the preamble that I just read you?

Caller Jeff:  The power to levy taxes.

Mike:  “To borrow money on the credit of the United States.”  Is that accidental that the first granted power is to borrow money?

Caller Jeff:  No.

Mike:  There you go.  Now, you said we must proceed, we must follow a constitutional process to raise the debt ceiling.  Well, the Constitution says that they can raise the debt ceiling.  If the Constitution says they can create on, which if they can borrow money they can, then the Constitution also says that they can increase that amount or decrease that amount.  It is up to the discretion of Congress.  Therefore, the flaw is not in the flawed, fallible, nitwits that are in Congress today.  The flaw is in the actual document itself.

If we go all the way back to 1788 – Jeff, thank you very much for the call – when the Constitution was being debated for the ratification in the State of Virginia, we can find mention of this over and over and over and over and over again.  Patrick Henry, Colonel William Grayson, James Monroe, many, many anti-federalists, as they were called, that opposed ratification kept asking why the borrowing power was put in there, and why it was the first one.  [mocking Patrick Henry] “Mr. Madison, are you saying that the borrowing power of this new consolidated government of yours is to be the chief supreme power upon which – and what will that do to the states?”

You can blame Boehner and company all you want.  The fact of the matter is, you ought to be blaming the founders.  They’re the ones that put the borrowing power in there to start with.  Answer the second question: Why is the borrowing power in there?  Gee, let’s go back to Spirit of ’76 movie research.  Borrowing power was put in there because during the American Revolutionary War, the Articles of Confederation did not provide the central government – that would have been the Continental Congress – with the authority to borrow money.  There’s a nifty little scene in the HBO miniseries John Adams that perfectly illustrates – I couldn’t say it any better.  This is from a movie and it’s entertaining to listen to.

Let me play you this clip.  This will explain why the borrowing clause was put in there.  Let there be no doubt, the central bankers, the New World Orderists were alive and well in 1788.  They saw to it that this power was put in.  Those that knew of the New World Orderists – and they would ultimately see them manifested in all their lethal, disgusting, diabolical infamy during the French Revolution – men like Henry and others that opposed ratification, they opposed it because they knew what this new central power meant.

[start audio file]

Alexander Hamilton: The future prosperity of this nation rests chiefly in trade. Trade depends, among other things, on the willingness of other nations to lend us money.

Thomas Jefferson: And how would you propose to establish international credit?

Hamilton:  Our first step would be to incur a national debt. The greater the debt, the greater the credit . . .

Jefferson: If the states are indebted to a central authority, it increases the power of the central government.

Hamilton: There you have it exactly. The greater the government’s responsibility, the greater its authority.

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Jefferson:  The moneyed interest in this country is all in the north, so the wealth and power would inevitably be concentrated there in a federal government. To the expense of the south.

Hamilton: If that is the case, it is unavoidable if the Union is to be preserved.

FOLKS, a message from Mike – The Project 76 features, Church Doctrine videos and everything else on this site are supported by YOU. We have over 70, of my personally designed, written, produced and directed products for sale in the Founders Tradin’ Post, 24/7,  here. You can also support our efforts with a Founders Pass membership granting total access to years of My work for just .17 cents per day. Thanks for 17 years of mike church.com! – Mike

Jefferson: I fear our revolution will have been in vain if a Virginia farmer is to be held in hock to a New York stock jobber, who in turn is in hock to a London banker.

[end audio file]

Mike:  ‘Murica, dude.  Game, set, match.  [mocking] “Come on, Mike, that’s fiction.  That’s a fictionalized account.”  It’s actually taken from Adams’s book, from Adams’s notes and his diary.  David McCullough went through those diaries.  If you read John Adams the book, something similar to that scene is actually in there.  This is how I believe Joseph Ellis in his book about the founding brothers writes in his chapter called “The Dinner,” about how this alleged deal was struck.

End Mike Church Show Transcript

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AbbyMcGinnis

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