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Last night Michael, John, and I got together on the podcast to talk about President Obama’s State of the Union Address and Governor Haley’s State of the State Address.
We had a great time and it was a pretty good show. Check it out:
Join us tonight as we welcome special guest John Morlan on our weekly podcast and discuss the State of the Union and State of the State addresses!
We’ll start at 8:00 PM Eastern tonight (Sunday). Click on the link above, or on our widget on the right hand side, or use the call in info below:
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See you there!
Nikki Haley has been in the news a good bit lately and has garnered the adoration of nationally syndicated talk show host Sean Hannity for standing up to President Obama. Here is an interview from the Hannity show:
She was also “On the Record” with Greta Van Susteren:
I see this as good news. South Carolina is again leading the way in confronting the president on abuses of federal power. While Obamacare is only one drop in the ocean of such abuses, I’m glad that our governor has at least started pushing back. Maybe one day we can convince her to really push back, and to nullify such atrocities as legal tender laws, the income tax, the department of education, etc.
Some folks aren’t so optimistic, and they bring up some good points. Over at the Tenth Amendment Center, Rich Hand writes:
News for both the president and governor elect; read the Tenth Amendment of the Constitution. “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people”
And while you’re at it, find the enumeration that gives the Federal government the authority to force Americans to carry health insurance.
There is no need to ask the President to “allow” South Carolina to opt out of healthcare. Has he become King Obama? What is this? I had higher hopes for our new Tea Party candidates.
link: Advice to the Governor-Elect in South Carolina: Read the 10th Amendment
Indeed, the TEA party candidates, including Nikki Haley, do have a long way to go when it comes to realizing the principle of natural law, and our right to self government.
Russel Longcore of DumpDC.com goes a bit further:
While Nikki Haley is a superior choice to the idiot pussy-chaser Mark Sanford, she still has a long way to go to be a true stateswoman. On the issue of the Healthcare legislation, the best response would have been to tell Mr. Obama to expect a formal letter on his desk on her inaugural day informing him of South Carolina’s refusal to be subject to the Act. On the issue of nuclear waste, she could have informed him that South Carolina would simply withhold $1 billion…plus interest…from any tax money that SC would normally send to Washington.
Nikki Haley is a modern-day Carpetbagger. Even though she hails from Bamberg, SC, she is taking her place as a Governor who does Washington’s bidding. South Carolina deserves better.
link: Nikki Haley Pushes Back Against the Feds – DumpDC
Now, while I understand Mr. Longcore’s frustration – after all, Mark Sanford had to know he was going to be under scrutiny while standing up to the Feds on the bailout, yet he still went after Miss Argentina – I also understand that most people don’t see things our way, and Nikki Haley has probably never been advised by or even spoken to someone with such a strong passion for Independence.
Hopefully we can do our part and we can get the subjects of Independence, Nullification, and Secession to the forefront of politics in South Carolina. Maybe if she sees enough of the public demanding that she stand up for our sovereignty, Nikki Haley will show some gumption, stiffen her back, and tell the Federal government “We refuse!”
A couple of days ago Nikki Haley, the governor elect of South Carolina, was in Washington, D.C. attending a luncheon where the president of the United States was speaking to the newly elected governors of several states. This event didn’t garner many headlines as it is basically a “pity” meeting where the all powerful president hosts the powerless governors, basically to give us the illusion of a federal government that gives a damn about the formerly sovereign governments of the several states.
This event would have been non-news if all had gone as planned, but apparently Haley wasn’t satisfied with the dog and pony show so she decided to press Mr. Obama on a couple of key issues. First, she questioned him about the healthcare legislation:
Haley says she told Obama that South Carolina could not afford the health care mandate, and that it would cripple small businesses.
“I respectfully asked him to consider repealing the bill,” she said, to which he clearly stated he would not. “I pushed him further and said if that’s the case, because of states’ rights, would you at least consider South Carolina opting out of the program?”
Obama told her he would consider letting South Carolina opt out, she said, if the state could find its own solution that included a state exchange, preventing companies from bumping people for preexisting conditions and allowing insurance pooling.
“I think it’s something we go back to South Carolina and start crunching,” she said. “This is not about expecting what’s given. This is about saying we’re going to fight this every step of the way and use every option possible.”
link: Haley: Obama might let S.C. opt out of health care | The Post and Courier, Charleston SC
There are several things that we should examine here: first, this is good news, and it is a good sign. This shows that Nikki Haley shares Mark Sanford’s “South Carolina first” attitude.
Second, while we should applaud Haley for asserting states’ rights, we must also point out that she does not fully understand the concept: we have a right to govern ourselves. If we are governed by Washington, D.C., then we are serfs and not free people. When you have a right to something, you don’t ask permission, you simply assert your right. Haley would have been better served to say something like this: “… because of states’ rights, South Carolina will be opting out of this legislation.”
Finally, Obama’s response gives us some insight into the mindset of a dictator, of an imperial master who rules over his slaves. He said he would consider letting South Carolina opt out, if the state could create it’s “own” solution, so long as that solution was based on the same premise as his solution. In other words, if we totally disagree with his premise and we think free enterprise and voluntary exchange are the proper solution, then he won’t “let” us opt out. This is what we’re up against, and it perfectly illustrates the illegitimacy of the federal government, and the reason we need Independence.
The next issue that Haley brought up with Obama was the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository:
Haley said she also asked the president if he would honor the federal government’s commitment on developing a nuclear waste repository. When he said he would not revisit opening Nevada’s Yucca Mountain, “I said, ‘Then give us our money back.’”
The site 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas was proposed to house more than 4,000 metric tons of high-level nuclear waste from South Carolina’s Savannah River Site. The state and Washington have sued over Obama’s attempt to kill plans for the storage site after decades of study.
“SRS has done a good job, but that was a temporary solution. It was never meant to be a permanent solution,” Haley said she told him. “The federal government has reneged on its promise, and the people of South Carolina want their money back.”
South Carolina’s power plants and its customers have contributed more than $1 billion over nearly 30 years to a permanent repository.
She says Obama pledged that he would have Energy secretary Steven Chu call her promptly.
Now this is a smaller issue, but I think Nikki actually took a better approach on this one. Here she asserted the people of South Carolina’s sovereignty, as she demanded our money back from a federal program that had (as per usual) failed to live up to its end of the bargain. Unfortunately, the article doesn’t mention the wording of Obama’s response, though it does say that Obama promised to have Steven Chu call Haley about the issue. I sure would have liked to have seen his face though.
The important thing here is that Haley demanded our money back, and rightfully so. The people of this state funded a program to house nuclear waste and that program has been essentially cancelled. If any nation did the same thing to the United States federal government, they’d probably be accused of harboring WMD and an invasion would follow. In demanding our money back, Haley basically said that we have a right to be respected as a state and that our contracts should be honored. Now she just needs to demand our independence by pushing the General Assembly nullify any and all federal legislation that controls the lives of the individuals in our state, and assert that we retain the right of secession should the federal government not respect our rights.
I don’t think that Nikki Haley was thinking about that when she confronted the president. I don’t think that she’s a staunch supporter of political independence for South Carolina. However, she hasn’t even started serving her first term as governor yet, and she’s already picked up the torch of fighting back against the federal government from Mark Sanford. Hopefully we, the people of South Carolina, can influence her to join our cause.
It’s the ladies versus the Establishment in the South Carolina race for governor.
A rock star sisterhood of sorts is forming around a back-of-the-pack GOP candidate…. State Rep. Nikki Haley is getting an in-person endorsement from Sarah Palin on Friday and support from Sanford’s hugely popular ex-wife, Jenny. The former first lady who moved out of the governor’s mansion with the help of her girlfriends last summer now is doing all she can to help Haley move in…. Haley has some backing from tea party activists but also faces three better-known — and better-funded — opponents in a June 8 GOP primary.
How will these ladies’ effort fare against the more well-known statist men in the race for governor? We’ll find out in June. Though she is rising in the polls, Haley still has a long ways to go to catch the front-runners. Her political ally, Mark Sanford, frequently found himself at odds with his own party – he wanted to cut spending and the size of State Government while the General Assembly wanted to expand taxes, spending and government in general. Haley hopes she will benefit in June from the rise of the Tea Party movement and an anti-Big Government wave that is moving across the United States from Utah to Kentucky.