Slipping the
constitutional leash
In May 1918, with
America embroiled in the First World War, Iowa Gov. William Lloyd
Harding dealt a blow against
Germany. His Babel Proclamation — that was
its title; you cannot make this stuff up — decreed: “Conversation
in public places, on trains and over the telephone should be in the English
language.” The proscription included church services, funerals
and pretty much everything else.
Iowa’s immigrant
communities that spoke Danish, Dutch, Norwegian and French objected to this
censorship of languages of America’s wartime allies. Harding, however, said speaking any foreign
language was an “opportunity [for] the enemy to scatter propaganda.” Conversations
on street corners and over telephone party lines — Iowa telephone operators did
the metadata-gathering that
today’s National Security Agency does — resulted
in arrests. Harding was ridiculed but Germany lost the war, so there.
The war validated Randolph Bourne’s axiom that “war is
the health of the state,” but it killed Bourne, who died in December 1918 from
the influenza epidemic it unleashed. Today, as
another war is enlarging government’s intrusiveness and energizing debate about
intrusiveness, it is timely to remember that war is not the only, or even
primary, cause of this.
Or, more
precisely, actual war is not the only cause. Ersatz “wars” — domestic wars on
various real or imagined vices — also wound the defense of limited government.
So argue David B. Kopel and Trevor Burrusin their essay “Sex, Drugs, Alcohol,
Gambling and Guns: The Synergistic Constitutional Effects.”
Kopel and Burrus,
both associated with Washington’s libertarian Cato Institute, cite the 1914 Harrison Narcotics
Act, which taxed dealings involving opium or coca leaves,
as an early example of morals legislation passed using Congress’s enumerated
taxing power as a pretext. In 1919, the Supreme Court held that
the law “may not be declared unconstitutional because its effect may be to
accomplish another purpose as well as the raising of revenue.”
Its “effect”? The
effect of suppressing the drug business obviously was its
purpose. Nevertheless, the court held that even if “motives” other than raising
revenue really explained Congress’s exercise of its enumerated power, the law
still could not be invalidated “because of the supposed motives which induced
it.”
“Supposed”? The
court’s refusal to reach a reasonable conclusion about the pretext Congress
used in this case for trespassing on territory reserved to the states enabled
the federal government to begin slipping its constitutional leash. In 1922, Chief Justice William
Howard Taft warned that Congress could seize control of “the
great number of subjects” reserved to the states by the 10th Amendment by
imposing a “so-called tax” on any behavior it disapproved of: “To give such
magic to the word ‘tax’ would be to break down all constitutional limitation of
the powers of Congress and completely wipe out the sovereignty of the states.”
So, a
1934 law imposed a $200 tax on the making and transfer of certain guns. Supreme Court Justice
Harlan Fiske Stone complacently said that any act
of Congress “which, on its face, purports to be an exercise of the taxing
power” should be treated as such, without judicial inquiring into any “hidden
motives” Congress had. “Hidden”?
Congress responded
to this “abdication of judicial scrutiny” (Kopel’s and Burrus’s correct
characterization) with the 1937 Marihuana Tax
Act, another supposed tax law actually designed not to
raise revenue but to legislate morality by changing behavior. The 1951 Revenue Act
taxed “persons engaged in the business of accepting wagers” and required
them “to register with the Collector of Internal Revenue.” The IRS was becoming
the enforcer of laws to make Americans better behaved, as judged by their
betters in the federal government.
There have been
equally spurious uses of Congress’s enumerated power to regulate interstate
commerce. In 1903, the court upheld, as a valid
exercise of that power, a law suppressing lotteries by banning the interstate
transportation of lottery tickets. Dissenting, Chief Justice Melville
Fuller argued that the power to regulate persons and property
in order to promote “the public health” and “good order” belongs to the states.
Seven years later,
the Constitution’s commerce clause was the rationale for the Mann Act banning
the transportation of females for the purpose of “prostitution or debauchery,
or for any other immoral purpose.” Including, it turned out, noncommercial,
consensual sex involving no unhappy victim.
Today, Congress
exercises police powers never granted by the Constitution. Conservatives who
favor federal “wars” on drugs, gambling and other behaviors should understand
the damage they have done to the constitutional underpinnings of limited
government.
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