Unfortunately, your "word" is inaccurate and misleading, and shows serious misunderstandings about constitutional law. In the real world, the Constutition means what the Supreme Court says it means (see, i.e., Marbury v. Madison), not what you or I "feel" it should mean.
Reconcile "the law is what the SC sez it is" (I understand that is the case in the reality-based world) with all the original intent who-hah Republicans stir up, because you can't have it both ways.
In any case, Kelo still does not help your assertion that a private hog farmer can constitutionally take the land of another private party.
Courts could have just as easily, and just as constitutionally, ruled against the hog farmer. Courts have systemically placed business property rights over private property rights. I'm not saying it isn't that way: I'm saying it is not necessarily constitutional or inevitable.
So again, what Congressional law forbids union members from peaceably assembling? (Maybe it is simpler if you just give me a cite from the U.S. Code.)
Not forbids,but makes much more difficult than forming other organizations. At one time or the other, I have been in on the founding of a church and a business, and I did not have to jump thru these hoops.
http://www.nmb.gov/documents/rla.html
http://www.nlrb.gov/nlrb/legal/manuals/rules/act.asp
I find it of interest I can excercise my religious or business rights with such ease, yet am so hampered to excercise the same rights in the labor arena. I just can't find the reason why in the Constitution. Can you?
(And BTW, the preamble to Section 8 does not mention "in the public interest." But maybe you are referring to something else.)
The Constitution of the United States of America
"We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."
The Founders had just won a revolution against the notion that the citizen served the state when they wrote and installed the Constitution. They created a system where the citizen, not the monarch or the government, is sovereign; that is to say, the state was to serve the citizen. The notion the Founders would have countenanced anything like a corporation to trump citizen sovereignity is laughable.
According to my reading of the Constitution, you cannot separate business activities from the right of the citizens, via their elected officials, to regulate them.
Now if you are saying citizens have done a slacka$$ job regarding their civic duties, then we are in accord.
Reconcile "the law is what the SC sez it is" (I understand that is the case in the reality-based world) with all the original intent who-hah Republicans stir up, because you can't have it both ways.
In any case, Kelo still does not help your assertion that a private hog farmer can constitutionally take the land of another private party.
Courts could have just as easily, and just as constitutionally, ruled against the hog farmer. Courts have systemically placed business property rights over private property rights. I'm not saying it isn't that way: I'm saying it is not necessarily constitutional or inevitable.
So again, what Congressional law forbids union members from peaceably assembling? (Maybe it is simpler if you just give me a cite from the U.S. Code.)
Not forbids,but makes much more difficult than forming other organizations. At one time or the other, I have been in on the founding of a church and a business, and I did not have to jump thru these hoops.
http://www.nmb.gov/documents/rla.html
http://www.nlrb.gov/nlrb/legal/manuals/rules/act.asp
I find it of interest I can excercise my religious or business rights with such ease, yet am so hampered to excercise the same rights in the labor arena. I just can't find the reason why in the Constitution. Can you?
(And BTW, the preamble to Section 8 does not mention "in the public interest." But maybe you are referring to something else.)
The Constitution of the United States of America
"We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."
The Founders had just won a revolution against the notion that the citizen served the state when they wrote and installed the Constitution. They created a system where the citizen, not the monarch or the government, is sovereign; that is to say, the state was to serve the citizen. The notion the Founders would have countenanced anything like a corporation to trump citizen sovereignity is laughable.
According to my reading of the Constitution, you cannot separate business activities from the right of the citizens, via their elected officials, to regulate them.
Now if you are saying citizens have done a slacka$$ job regarding their civic duties, then we are in accord.