Isn't what was said here in the thread is that the major states-rights pusher (Paul, iirc) is trying to use 'state's rights' as code for 'let's ignore the Constitution on a state level'?
S'one of those things I get a bit jittery about. There's states in the US that could definitely drum up a voting majority that would remove minimum wage (Leading to a permanent underclass and millions more starving and homeless), compulsory/free education (ditto), criminalize stuff like homosexuality, atheism, probably practicing Islam, the list goes on.
Then there's money, from what I understand. Florida, at least, can't even keep its schools from degenerating in quality with federal funding; I can only imagine what sort of nightmare would ensue if fed money drew out -- which would be the case if federal power was reduced and more power was allocated on the state level.
There's definitely reasons for more local control (Tends to be more efficient, if nothing else), but I'm not entirely convinced upping the power of state's rights is something that would work, from both a logistical standpoint and a humanist one.
Well one of the major problems with state's rights arises when you're dealing with the legal status of a person being different in different states. This is a large part of what led to the Civil War: certain people could be considered free citizens in one state and
property in another. Now we face potential situations where two people are a married couple in some states, an unmarried couple in others (and if some had their way, a pair of criminals in yet other states). Or if states somehow try to ignore
jus soli in their interpretation of the law, you could have people who are natural-born citizens in some states and illegal immigrants in others. Which leads to real antebellum-style conflicts: if you're a legal citizen of New Mexico, drive across Arizona, get stopped for a busted taillight and wind up being deported out of the United States....that's the kind of shit that gets people ANGRY.
Back more on topic, I'm kinda boggling at how quickly Gingrich and Perry are becoming anti-capitalist populists. How dare a venture capital company buy a troubled firm and raid its assets?! Romney is evil
for making money and laying people off. And several thousand Occupiers say "Uhhh, yeah. We've been trying to tell you that for how many months now?"
Curiously, Ron Paul--the candidate who seems most tailored to a populist, anti-Wall Street tirade--has yet to jump on Comrade Gingrich's Glorious Attack of Opportunity Front, and has defended both Romney and Bain Capital and even venture capitalism as a concept. On a deeper level, it is very much in line with Randian beliefs (Ayn Rand would have seen venture capital firms as the epitome of Objectivism -- picking and choosing the best and brightest to survive and helping slaughter the "unfit" companies). Just curious to see how that plays out among his base.
Oh and incidentally, *love* the Daily Show's title for their SC primary coverage: "In The South of Madness"