I have held
commitment to each of the following principles, values and issues for
many years. Long before it was either fashionable or popular. In
1992, I first suggeted the need for a tea party. In 1998, I used the
quote from the movie "Network",
"I'M
AS
MAD
AS
HELL, AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE THIS ANYMORE!"
and
gave
up
on
the Republican Party as the vehicle of change for our
nation. I have been and contiune to be criticized for this
opinion. Even today's tea party movement still holds allegaince to the
republican party. Please read the following statements that I
agree with and have committed too. If you agree with me on these
statements I would encourage you to stand with me and say:
|
"'I'M AS MAD
AS HELL, AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE THIS ANYMORE!'
I want you to get up
right now, sit up, go to your windows, open them and stick your head
out and yell - 'I'm as mad as hell and I'm not going to take this
anymore!' Things have got to change. But first, you've gotta get
mad!... You've got to say, 'I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to
take this anymore!' Then we'll figure out what to do about the
depression and the inflation and the oil crisis. But first get up out
of your chairs, open the window, stick your head out, and yell, and say
it:
I'M AS MAD AS HELL,
AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE THIS ANYMORE!"
|
|
I pledge my sacred honor to representing my constituents by upholding
these principles and values.
9
Principles
-
America Is Good.
-
I believe in God and He is the Center of
my Life.
-
I must always try to be a more honest
person than I was yesterday.
-
The family is sacred. My spouse and I are
the ultimate authority, not the government.
-
If you break the law you pay the penalty.
Justice is blind and no one is above it.
-
I have a right to life, liberty and
pursuit of happiness, but there is no guarantee of equal results.
-
I work hard for what I have and I will
share it with who I want to. Government cannot force me to be
charitable.
-
It is not un-American for me to disagree
with authority or to share my personal opinion.
-
The government works for the people. The
people do not answer to the government, the government answers to the
people.
12
Values
-
Honesty
-
Reverence
-
Hope
-
Thrift
-
Humility
-
Charity
-
Sincerity
-
Moderation
-
Hard
Work
-
Courage
-
Personal
Responsibility
-
Gratitude
Thank You to Mr. Glenn Beck for articulating the values
America might have otherwise forgotten.
|
From the Independence Caucus. I answered yes
to all 80 of the candidate vetting questions. The Independence Caucus
will only endorse main party (Democrat or Republican) candidates, even
if a better independent candidate is running.
Section 1: Proper Role of Government and National Sovereignty
1. Yes
Do you fully understand and agree that the 10th amendment limits the
Federal Government to the *30 enumerated powers that are specified in
the Constitution? (* Note: Twenty specific powers are enumerated in
Article I, section 8 and the balance are found listed in various
sections throughout the rest of the Constitution.)
2. Yes
With blatant disregard for the 10th Amendment; Congress has used the
68-year-old Supreme Court decision in Wickard v Filburn 317 U.S. 111
(1942) as justification to regulate and otherwise interfere with
numerous areas of American business and American personal lives that
were never granted or authorized by the Constitution.
However, just because Congress has been allowed to do so doesn’t mean
they should do so, therefore despite Wickard v Filburn and in
compliance with the 10th amendment do you commit to oppose and vote
against any PROPOSED legislation that purports to regulate or otherwise
involve the Federal Government in any areas that are not specifically
and expressly enumerated in the Constitution and are therefore reserved
as the exclusive province of the states; such as Education, Energy,
Welfare, Labor issues, Non-Interstate roads, farm subsidies, etc?
3. Yes
Despite Wickard v Filburn and in compliance with the 10th amendment ,
do you commit to oppose the expansion and/or the perpetuation of any
and all EXISTING federal legislation and regulations in areas that are
not constitutionally enumerated; and are therefore reserved as the
exclusive province of the states; such as Education, Energy, Welfare,
Labor issues, Non-Interstate roads, farm subsidies, etc; and do you
also commit to support all efforts to return control over these areas
back to the states?
4. Yes
Do you commit to vote in favor of “The Enumerated Powers Act H.R. 450”
which requires each and every Act of Congress to contain a concise and
definite statement of the constitutional authority relied upon for the
enactment of each portion of that proposed Act?
5. Yes
Because Federal grants are unconstitutional unless directly related to
some power specifically delegated to the Federal Government, and
because a strict interpretation of the Constitution would eliminate
upwards of 90% of the Federal-aid programs presently plaguing the
nation; do you commit to oppose the granting of any Federal Grants that
are not directly related to some power specifically delegated to the
Federal Government?
6. Yes
Do you fully understand that the creation of fiat money at a rate
faster than economic growth always and inevitably leads to inflation
and a devaluation of our currency; and that allowing this to happen is
the same as imposing a hidden tax on Americans; and do you further
commit to oppose any legislation that would allow this to occur; and do
you further commit to work towards repeal of any legislation that has
allowed this to occur?
7. Yes
The Federal Reserve can currently enter into agreements with foreign
central banks and foreign governments, yet the GAO is prohibited from
auditing or even seeing these agreements. In addition, the Treasury’s
supplementary financing accounts that fund Fed facilities allow the
Treasury to funnel money to Wall Street without GAO or Congressional
oversight. Therefore, do you commit to support the elimination of
restrictions on GAO audits of the Federal Reserve; and to mandate
ongoing annual audits of the Federal Reserve?
8. Yes
Do you agree that the Federal government should not own any portion of
private enterprise; nor should it compete with private enterprise in
any areas not specifically enumerated in the Constitution; and do you
commit to repeal any legislation that has allowed government to own
portions of private enterprises?
9. Yes
Do you fully understand that the Federal Government’s creation of
“Government Sponsored Enterprises (“GSE”) and the 70 years of
government crafted rules, regulations, and edicts concerning GSE’s have
allowed the GSE’s to create Moral Hazard incentives for financial
institutions to lower their underwriting standards and issue risky
sub-prime loans, and by so doing these GSE’s allowed financial
institutions to secure all of the profits on sub-prime loans while
transferring all of the inherent risks onto the backs of American
taxpayers?
10. Yes
Do you commit to support legislation to eliminate all GSEs; and will
you commit to support legislation that would establish a date beyond
which no further loan guarantees will be issued or honored by GSE’s;
effectively allowing the “secondary mortgage” market to go fully
private?
11. Yes
The financial damage of GSE’s was exacerbated by subsequent Federal
Government edicts such as the “Community Reinvestment Act of 1977”
(CRA) that have been used to create further Moral hazards for otherwise
responsible financial institutions to issue mortgages to low-income
credit risky individuals on homes they could not afford.
Therefore, do you commit to vote for legislation that would repeal the
CRA and any other legislation with similar design or purpose?
12. Yes
Do you agree that the free market should be allowed to operate
unencumbered by US government intervention; including any and all
import/export tariffs or quotas; and do you commit to oppose any
legislation, authority, or edicts that would give any US or foreign
citizens or corporations an advantage against competitors or potential
competitors regardless of where that competitor’s business may be based?
13. Yes
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) was designed to license and
allocate the traffic on the air waves but in direct violation of the
First Amendment the FCC has often used its licensing power to control
or attempt to control the editorial content of programs. Do you commit
to oppose any legislation that would allow the FCC to violate the 1st
amendment rights of any
American individuals and/or businesses via any attempts to control or
mandate the editorial content of radio and television programs?
14. Yes
The Constitution makes no specific provision for the federal government
to hold any lands other than a federal reserve for the capital (the
District of Columbia); therefore do you commit to support legislation
requiring the Federal Government to transfer ownership of all Federal
Lands back to the individual states that they are located within; with
the exceptions of the District of Columbia, and existing military bases
and military ranges?
15. Yes
The Constitution places restraints on Congress and the executive
branch, so as not to wage war casually and without proper declaration,
yet presidents from Truman to the current day have used the United
Nations Security Council as a substitute for congressional
authorization of the deployment of United States Armed Forces. Do you
commit to a strict adherence to the rule of law and the Constitution in
regards to any potential declaration of any war; and do you commit to
using your constitutional legislative authority to hold the executive
branch accountable to the same Constitutional standards?
16. Yes
In direct violation of national sovereignty, some factions have
encouraged the U.S. Executive Branch to use the United Nations and it’s
agencies to implement domestic policy in pursuit of international,
environmental, economic, education, social welfare and human rights
policy, both in derogation of the legislative prerogatives of Congress
and of the 50 State legislatures, and further in derogation of the
rights of the American people to constitute their own civil order. Do
you commit to oppose and vote against any legislation and/or oppose any
efforts by the executive or judicial branches to recognize or implement
any United Nations actions, decrees, or programs that would interfere
with or supersede our sovereign national government and/or the
sovereignty of any of our 50 state governments?
17. Yes
In direct violation of national sovereignty, some factions have
advocated the implementation of a global tax (“The Tobin Tax”) on
international currency transactions to be collected by the United
Nations for funding of U.N. programs. Do you fully understand that the
United Nations possesses no legitimate taxing authority; and do you
commit to oppose and vote against any legislation and/or oppose any
efforts by the executive branch to recognize or implement any taxation
of American Citizens for any United Nations programs or purposes;
and/or the programs and purposes of any entity outside of the United
States?
18. Yes
Do you commit to oppose any legislation or treaties which would do one
or more of the following: Limit the sovereignty of the United States,
Violate the rights of the People as spelled out in the Bill of Rights,
and/or any treaties that would have the effect of creating laws which
are applied to the people directly instead of to the government?
19. Yes
Do you commit to support legislation that would require the re-approval
of any existing or new treaty or agreement entered into by the US every
10 years, starting from the date of signage?
20. Yes
The 2nd point in the “Code of Ethics for U.S. Government Service”,
adopted on July 11th, 1958 by the U.S. House of Representatives with
the Senate concurring; stipulates that any person in government service
should “Uphold the Constitution, laws, and legal regulations of the
United States and of all governments therein and never be a party to
their evasion.”
Therefore, in regards specifically to all existing Federal Immigration
laws, do you commit to uphold the Constitution, laws, and legal
regulations of the United States and of all governments therein and
never be a party to their evasion; including full funding and
completion of all legislated border security measures?
21. Yes
Do you commit to oppose any and all bills, regardless of their merit,
if those bills are not posted on a publicly accessible website for a
minimum of 72 hours, while Congress is in session, before either House
of Congress is asked to vote on it?
22. Yes
Do you agree that when any amendment to a bill is passed which adds to
or takes away from the original text of that bill, the 72 hour period
must begin anew before either House of Congress can vote on it?
23. Yes
Do you commit to support legislation that would require all members of
Congress to certify that they have read all bills that they vote upon
in their entirety?
24. Yes
Do you commit to oppose and vote against any proposed legislation that
contains “both good and bad portions” and do you agree that it would be
an indefensible position to vote for legislation that you knew
incorporated unconstitutional government authority just because there
were other portions of that legislation “that were good”?
25. Yes
It is inconceivable that any Congressman could read and understand this
years 1,100 page “Cap & Trade” bill in 72 or hours or less. It is
self evident and common sense that it would take at least 15 minutes to
truly read, absorb, investigate, and understand each page of complex
legislation. Therefore, do you commit to support legislation requiring
that any proposed legislation that exceeds 288 pages in length would
require that legislation to be posted on a publicly accessible website
for a minimum of 15
additional minutes beyond the 72 hour minimum time for each additional
page beyond the 72nd page, while Congress is in session, before either
House of Congress votes on it? In other words, a 1,100 page bill such
as this year’s “Cap & Trade” bill would require a minimum public
posting of 275 hours for Congressional Review before it could be voted
on.
26. Yes
It is at best irresponsible and at worst deceptive to produce
legislation that is 1,100 pages long in the first place. Therefore, do
you commit to support legislation requiring that any proposed
legislation contain a ONE PAGE summary of every action and effect of
that legislation; and that if the summary of actions and effects can
not be contained on one single page that the proposed legislation must
be declared too cumbersome and rejected?
27. Yes
Do you commit to vote against any budget that proposes to increase
overall spending if a budget deficit was incurred the previous year?
28. Yes
Existing “5 year baseline budgeting” formulas contain an inherent bias
towards budget expansion, result in misleading measurements of the
budgetary effects of proposed legislation in future years; are often
used to falsely claim that there will be a balanced budget in future
years; and are often used to falsely claim that “spending cuts are
being made” even though total dollars spent are actually being
increased. Therefore, in order to reduce political posturing and
accounting manipulations of the Federal Budget process; do you agree
that our Federal Budget should begin each year with a “Zero-Baseline”
that will allow Congress to
revisit the validity and effectiveness of all budget items each and
every year?
29. Yes
Accounting manipulations and “projections” are often used to claim that
a budget is “balanced” or will result in surplus over a given period of
time. However, the only accurate way to define if a surplus or deficit
is occurring is to ask two simple questions;
namely a) “How much revenue did you collect last year regardless of
source?” and B) “How much money did you spend last year regardless of
purpose?” and then subtract B from A. In order to reduce political
posturing and accounting manipulations of the Federal Budget process;
do you fully agree that this is the only acceptable way to determine if
the previous years budget was “in deficit”?
30. Yes
Do you agree that the overall Federal Budget must be a “fixed pie” that
has a preset spending limit in place, and that those spending limits
should be established by a set formula which Congress must adhere to
each year?
31. Yes
Do you agree that if the previous years’ budget resulted in a DEFICIT,
then all federal budgets and programs must begin the following years
appropriation process frozen at the exact level of the previous year’s
outlay?
32. Yes
Because it would be irresponsible to increase spending in a deficit
year, do you agree that if the previous years’ budget resulted in a
DEFICIT, then overall spending at the federal level must not increase?
33. Yes
Do you agree that if the previous years’ budget resulted in a DEFICIT,
then any new spending items or increase in existing spending items that
a Congressman would want to propose must be proposed and voted on in
tandem with 102% corresponding budget cuts of existing item(s) that are
already in the budget?
34. Yes
Do you agree that if the previous year budget resulted in a SURPLUS,
then the actual surplus dollars from the previous year can only be
applied first to the national debt, or if and when the national debt
has been retired the surplus can then only be set aside for future
unfunded liabilities?
35. Yes
Do you agree that if the previous year budget resulted in a SURPLUS,
then the new federal budget can increase by no more than 50% of the
previous year’s surplus? (For example, if the surplus the previous year
turns out to be $20 billion, Congress can increase the federal budget
by $10 billion. This allows for natural growth but gives Congress a
prudent and sensible cap on that growth, because we may not have as
much growth or surplus the following year.)
36. Yes
Do you agree that if the previous year budget resulted in a SURPLUS,
then after the new federal budget has increased by 50% of the previous
year’s surplus, any further spending proposals must be proposed and
voted on in tandem with 100% corresponding budget cuts of an existing
item or items that are already in the budget?
37. Yes
Do you agree that if the previous year budget resulted in a SURPLUS,
and if and when the national debt is retired and no unfunded
liabilities remain (if ever), then the current tax rates must be
decreased by a percentage equal to 50% of the previous year’s surplus?
(For example; if the surplus equals 2% of the total revenues received,
then taxes should be reduced by 1%).
38. Yes
Our Federal Budget includes a $28 million annual subsidy for mohair
subsidies which were originally authorized to hold down the cost of
military uniforms, but the military has not used mohair in uniforms
since the Korean War. This is just one example of federal programs that
continue perpetually with no annual review. With the federal government
operating more than 240 education programs, 342 economic development
programs and 71 business support programs, there is no question that
many of these are wasteful and duplicative programs that government has
no business spending taxpayer dollars on. Therefore, do you commit to
support legislation establishing a mandatory Sunset Clause in all
spending legislation that provides for its expiration on a specified
date unless it is deliberately renewed?
39. Yes
Do you agree that the annual Federal Budget must include and present a
full picture of all future Federal obligations and promised benefits,
with payments set aside each year in order to plan for any and all
future obligations and promised benefits when they come due?
40. Yes
Do you agree that the annual Federal Budget must be contained on one
and only one set of books; i.e. all items that are currently “off
budget” such as Social Security and Medicare must be returned back to
the “on budget” set of books?
41. Yes
The current budget process does not adequately account ahead of time
for emergencies that inevitably arise, such as Hurricanes, Earthquakes,
the war on terror, etc. and as a result an annual “un-funded liability”
is created that Congress needs to keep addressing with additional
spending after the budget has been finalized and approved. Therefore,
do you agree that the annual budget must responsibly plan better for
emergencies, and eliminate these recurring “un-funded liabilities”, by
requiring the inclusion of a projected “Emergency Spending Reserve”
into the current budget process that equals a minimum of 110% of the
average annual amount of “emergency spending” over the previous 5 years?
42. Yes
Do you agree that all budget rules and processes established to cap
spending and deficit limits should only be set aside in times of
national emergency if approved by a 2/3 supermajority of both house of
Congress?
43. Yes
Do you agree that if any budget rules or processes are set aside in
time of emergency by a 2/3 supermajority of both house of Congress,
that the “setting aside” expires at the end of the current budget year?
44. Yes
Do you agree that both houses of Congress and the President should work
with and on only one budget (The “Unified Fixed Pie Budget”) for the
entire annual budgeting process, and that we should no longer have
separate Presidential, House and Senate Budgets?
45. Yes
Do you agree that all spending bills for the Unified Fixed-Pie Budget
should originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may
propose or concur with Amendments as on other bills?
46. Yes
In 30 of the past 31 years, Congress has failed to complete the budget
process on time. As a result, a “continuing resolution” is passed that
allegedly “provides funding for existing federal programs at current or
reduced levels” until the new budget is completed. However, in practice
these “continuing resolutions” almost always end up with additional
spending and earmark
items quietly added in by Congress with no vetting, no debate, and no
cost-benefit analysis. Therefore, in order to stop this misuse of the
budgeting process and to hold Congress accountable for meeting their
legislated budget deadlines; do you commit to work towards passing
legislation to mandate that failure to complete and institute a new
budget on time would automatically make the previous year’s budget the
de facto budget for the current year with no additional spending items
allowed?
47. Yes
Do you agree that all earmark requests must have an established federal
nexus, e.g., interstate commerce, aid in compliance with federal
mandates, or other projects for which a defensible purpose exists for
requesting federal government funding under the U.S. Constitution?
48. Yes
Do you agree that all earmark requests must receive proper vetting and
debate by the appropriate subcommittee, which should compare and
prioritize the requests with other spending items?
49. Yes
Do you agree that all earmark requests must be submitted to the
Appropriations Subcommittee of jurisdiction prior to the committee
deadline, and that no earmark request should be approved that bypassed
these important Subcommittee reviews?
50. Yes
Do you agree that all earmark requests must allow for the appropriate
Executive Branch agency to have a reasonable period in which to review
the project to ensure it is eligible to receive funds and meets goals
established in law and official policies, BEFORE it is approved?
51. Yes
Do you agree that any Public entities that receive earmarks which
require the hiring of private vendors may only award contracts to
for-profit private entities through a transparent competitive bidding
processes?
52. Yes
Do you agree that Congressional members should post all earmark
requests prominently on an official government website (earmarks.gov)
along with all information about all projects for which they submit
requests, including the proposed recipient, the recipient’s address,
the amount, and an explanation of the purpose and federal nexus of the
request?
53. Yes
Do you agree that once (and if) the earmarked project is funded,
Congressional members must submit into an official government website
(earmarks.gov) a detailed finance plan showing how the federal monies
will be spent and justifying the use of taxpayers’ resources?
54. Yes
Do you agree that once the earmarked project is completed, the earmark
recipients must submit into an official government website
(earmarks.gov) a “project summary” that shows an “actual vs. budgeted
accounting” of how taxpayers’ resources were used?
55. Yes
Do you agree that Congressional members should certify that neither
they nor their spouse, nor any of their staff members, nor their staff
members’ families will benefit financially from approval of the earmark
request?
56. Yes
Do you agree that all earmark requestors from public agencies must sign
a financial certification stating that neither the requesting official
nor anyone within the agency has any direct or foreseeable pecuniary
interest in the project?
57. Yes
Do you agree that each appropriations bill should be available for
public scrutiny on the day its subcommittee reports the bill, and that
a list detailing each earmark request in the bill and the name of the
Member who made the request should accompany the bill?
58. Yes
Do you commit to support legislation that would prohibit the awarding
of earmarks in exchange for campaign contributions?
59. Yes
Do you commit to support legislation that would require recipients of
earmarked funding to disclose the amount of money that they spent on
registered lobbyists to obtain the earmark and to identify their
lobbyists?
60. Yes
Do you commit to support legislation that would require disclosure of
fundraisers hosted, co-hosted, or otherwise sponsored by earmark
beneficiaries and their lobbyists and require disclosure of their
contributions for other events involving legislative and executive
branch officials?
61. Yes
Do you fully understand that the 17,000 plus pages of the current U.S.
Tax Code consist of endless “loopholes” that are manipulated by
lobbyists and lawyers for the benefit of their clients and by other
special interests; and that this is why there are more lobbyists
registered in Washington, D.C. for “taxes” than for any other issue,
and that for this reason we must ensure that our tax system treats all
individuals and groups exactly equally?
62. Yes
Under the current tax system, the annual writing of “new tax code”
places Congress in the role of picking economic winners and losers;
i.e. “This group gets a tax break, but this group does not”. Do you
commit to oppose and vote against any tax legislation that treats one
or more group of taxpayers differently than other groups of tax payers?
63. Yes
Do you agree that it is far wiser and more equitable to stop taxing
production, and to tax ONLY consumption instead?
64. Yes
Do you commit to support and work for the passage of a National Sales
Tax (“NST”) with no exemptions or exclusions, plus an attached
“pre-bate” feature; which is the only tax system that eliminates
favorable tax treatment of one group over another; while simultaneously
creating numerous incentives and benefits for the growth of the
national economy?
65. Yes
Do you commit to oppose and vote against any new tax legislation that
taxes or continues to tax production?
66. Yes
Do you commit to oppose and vote against any new tax legislation that
does not subject all Americans to the same consumption tax rate with no
exceptions and no exclusions?
67. Yes
Do you commit to oppose and vote against any new tax legislation that
does not have a “pre-bate” feature, as currently included and written
in the proposed ‘Fair Tax” legislation in the 111th Congress, and as
explained and outlined in the 7th Article of the Independence Caucus?
68. Yes
Do you agree that when money is being transferred out of the country
for any reason, it should correctly be considered to be “consumed”; and
that money should be taxed (at the current NST rate) as it leaves the
country?
69. Yes
Do you agree that under a National Sales tax; businesses must be
protected against Un-Funded Mandates by providing those business
retailers with a percentage of the revenues collected and remitted to
the federal government to compensate them for administration costs?
70. Yes
Do you agree that because individual states have the most experience
administering sales taxes and because of the principles of federalism,
that the 50 individual states would bear the primary responsibility for
administering the national sales tax; and that those states must be
protected against Un-Funded Mandates by providing those states with a
percentage of the revenues collected and remitted to the federal
government to compensate them for administration costs?
71. Yes
Do you agree that a properly implemented NST plan would avoid
“cascading” to ensure the same effective tax rate across all types of
property and services (horizontal equality), irrespective of the number
of companies or stages of production that were necessary to bring the
good or service to market (vertical equality); and that to protect
against "cascading" effects—imposing multiple levels of taxation on the
same product--the sales tax must be exempt from tax inputs at each
intermediate stage of production and should only be calculated and
levied at the end point at which it is consumed?
72. Yes
To avoid an incentive to consume through the medium of “tax free”
government; and to avoid an incentive to consume through the medium of
government versus the private sector, do you agree that under a
properly implemented NST that government output and purchases would NOT
be exempted from the sales tax, and that a sales tax should also be
imposed on government purchases from the private sector?
73. Yes
Do you commit to support and follow the Rule of Law; specifically:
A. Laws must be
applied equally to all, including all government officials.
B. No “Ex Post facto” Laws - Laws must be prospective in nature so that
the effect of the law may only take place after the law has been
passed. (For example, the court cannot convict a person of a crime
committed before a criminal statute prohibiting the conduct was passed)
C. No “Ex Post Facto” penalties – The penalty for violating a law must
be prospective in nature so that the effect of the penalties may only
take place after the law has been passed. (For example, the penalty for
entering the country illegally cannot be reduced or changed for those
who illegally entered the country before the change in penalty was
passed.)
D. Executive orders and policies written by Government agencies should
not have the force of law - Citizens should not answer to arbitrary and
discretionary edicts and decisions of governmental officials; instead,
they should answer only to a well-defined, previously established laws
that are passed ONLY by Congress.
74. Yes
Do you commit to uphold the people's right to enter into a contract for
employment between themselves and the employer, as well as their right
to join or form an union if they deem it necessary or desirable?
75. Yes
Do you commit to uphold the people’s right to own property; and to
oppose any efforts by government to exercise eminent domain and take
such property without just compensation?
76. Yes
Do you commit to allow eminent domain only for the use of government
for the common good, and not for transfer to a third party under any
circumstances?
77. Yes
Do you commit to support the right of two parties to enter into a
contract and that the government has no power to change the terms of
the contract, except the judicial branch and then only to settle
dispute about those terms?
78. Yes
Do you certify to your constituents and/or intended constituents that
you have not committed a felony crime, or have committed any act which
would raise a reasonable question as to your individual moral
character; including breaking marital vows or any other contractual
obligations or oaths of office, within the past 10 years
79. Yes
Do you pledge to your constituents and/or intended constituents that
you will not commit a felony crime, or commit any act which would raise
a reasonable question as to your individual moral character; including
breaking marital vows and any other contractual obligations or oaths of
office, from this point forward?
80. Yes
Do you pledge to your constituents and/or intended constituents that if
you are elected and do commit a felony crime, or commit any act which
would raise a reasonable question as to your individual moral
character; including breaking marital vows and any other contractual
obligations or oaths of office, from this point forward, that you would
resign immediately from your elected position?
|

I ascribe to
the following pledge posted by at Tenth Amendment Center:
As a public office holder, or a candidate
for public office, I affirm that:
1. All just political authority is derived
from the People, and government may only be established and maintained
with their consent.
2. The People of each State have the sole
and exclusive right and power to govern themselves in all areas not
delegated to their government.
3. A government without limits is a tyranny.
4. The Tenth Amendment defines the total
scope of federal power as being that which has been delegated by the
people to the federal government in the Constitution, and also that
which is necessary and proper to advancing those powers specifically
enumerated in the Constitution of the United States. The rest is
to be handled by the state governments, or by the people themselves, as
they determine.
5. In order for a federally-exercised power to be
“necessary and proper” it must be a) something that, without which,
would make the enumerated power impossible to exercise, and b) a lesser
power than that which has been enumerated
6. The “Interstate Commerce Clause” in Article I,
Section 8 of the Constitution, does not permit Congress to regulate
matters that merely affect commerce among the States. It only
permits Congress to regulate trade among the States.
7. The phrase, “general Welfare,” in Article I,
Section 8 does not authorize Congress to enact any laws it claims are
in the “general Welfare” of the United States. The phrase sets
forth the requirement that all laws passed by Congress in Pursuance of
the enumerated powers of the Constitution shall also be in the general
Welfare of the United States. This was affirmed by James Madison
when he wrote: “With respect to the words “general welfare,” I have
always regarded them as qualified by the detail of powers connected
with them. To take them in a literal and unlimited sense would be a
metamorphosis of the Constitution into a character which there is a
host of proofs was not contemplated by its creators.”
8. The federal government is not authorized to tax
the People to raise monies for unconstitutional purposes.
Likewise, the federal government is not authorized to condition funding
to State or local governments on compliance with mandates which require
them to do what the federal government is not authorized to do directly.
9. When Congress enacts laws and regulations that
are not made in Pursuance of the powers enumerated in the Constitution,
the People are not bound to obey them.
10. When the federal government exceeds its
Constitutional authority, a nullification of the act is the rightful
remedy. Without that remedy, the People would be living in a
tyranny, under the unlawful and excessive control of one or more
branches of the federal government.
As a public office holder, or a candidate
for public office, I promise that, as long as I hold office:
1. My votes will always be in favor of the
Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of this
State. Every issue. Every time. No exceptions.
No excuses.
2. I do, and will continue to, oppose any and all
efforts by the federal government to act beyond its Constitutional
authority.
3. I will proactively introduce and support
measures designed to adhere to the Tenth Amendment and preserve, to
their fullest extent, the powers of the People in my district, and of
the legislators and administrations of my State.
4. I will introduce, sponsor and support a
resolution affirming the sovereignty of the People of each State under
the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
5. I will introduce, sponsor, and support
legislation that seeks to repeal laws and regulations that are outside
the scope of the powers delegated by the people to the federal
government.
6. I will introduce, sponsor and support
legislation that provides such relief as is necessary and proper to
provide fair redress to the citizens of my State in response to actions
by the federal government which exceeds its Constitutional authority.
7. Whenever I vote in favor of a new federal
power, I will always make public my justification for it within the
confines of the enumerated powers of the Constitution.
8. I will only vote in favor of a bill that I have
thoroughly read, considered and understood.
9. I will be accountable to voters. Upon
request, I will make public every vote I cast while in office.
10. I will keep this pledge public, and will
provide a link on my website which directs constituents to the text of
this pledge.
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Click here to see my detailed stand on the
issues
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