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The Range
Law & Order
NRA sits out gunfight with feds
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<blockquote data-quote="henschman" data-source="post: 1167744" data-attributes="member: 4235"><p>Nullification is as strong as the will of the States (and their citizens) to employ it and see it through. I strongly support the increasing willingness to do this that we are currently seeing, and I would like to see a lot more of it.</p><p></p><p>As far as Madison and the rest of the Federalists go, the label "strong central government" is highly relative. They might more accurately be described "strongER central government guys." Though they wanted a stronger central government than the one under the Articles, they still created a national government of limited, enumerated powers and reserved all other power to the states and the people. And their most outspoken advocate unequivocally supported nullification, both before and after the Constitution was written.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="henschman, post: 1167744, member: 4235"] Nullification is as strong as the will of the States (and their citizens) to employ it and see it through. I strongly support the increasing willingness to do this that we are currently seeing, and I would like to see a lot more of it. As far as Madison and the rest of the Federalists go, the label "strong central government" is highly relative. They might more accurately be described "strongER central government guys." Though they wanted a stronger central government than the one under the Articles, they still created a national government of limited, enumerated powers and reserved all other power to the states and the people. And their most outspoken advocate unequivocally supported nullification, both before and after the Constitution was written. [/QUOTE]
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