enterstageright.com — Every Congressman swears an oath to "?preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States." To a casual observer, these words could be interpreted to mean that laws enacted by Congress should be consistent with the requirements of the Constitution. To the majority of Congress, these words mean something else, or have no meaning...
Apr 30, 2009 View in Crawl 4
shauncorleoneApr 30, 2009
Unfortunately, "promote the general Welfare" has now been determined to mean "ensure the general Welfare" at any cost.
Closed AccountApr 30, 2009
How the f**k is running up increasing trillions of dollars in debt SLAVERY in any way justified as "promoting the general welfare"?More like s**tting on people and asking them to thank you for it.
kurttrailApr 30, 2009
How is that a direct response to what I wrote?I agree with the Marbury v. Madison decision.
angeladtaoMay 1, 2009
ROFLMAO! I should have known.
freeforall232May 2, 2009
Good - Passing a law which requires congressmen and congresswomen to follow through on their oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution.Sad - Having to pass a law which requires congressmen and congresswomen to follow through on their oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution.