Originally posted by Aeson
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If there is no sound in space, how come you can hear the lasers?
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Originally posted by Hauldren Collider View PostDon't be obtuse. He's referring to the "bill of rights" part and not the "literal functioning of the government" part, which is present in all constitutions and generally followed regardless of the nature of the regime. There are two parts to most constitutions--the definition of the way the government works, and then the limitations on it/definition of rights. Reg is only referring to the latter.
Just because we choose to put "do this" in one part of our Constitution and "don't do this" in another doesn't mean it has to be that way. Not to mention that most "do this" can be reworded to "don't do this" and vice versa.
That said, reg clearly was trying to say that "do this" shouldn't be in the Constitution, as exhibited in his reply to BlackCat:
"The constitution has a list of powers that the federal government may exercise, and a list of things it's forbidden from doing" - reg
He fails to understand that the Constitution also has at least a few things that the government must do.
If a nation wanted to add "provide universal healthcare" to their "must do" list that is perfectly acceptable. It is far more acceptable than having some idiots of another nation tell them they can't do it for semantic or clause organization purposes.
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HC has it exactly right. The "Basic Law" aspect of the constitution, stating how the government functions and elections are held, is separate from the enumeration of powers and the bill of rights. Article 1 Section 8 which lists the powers of the federal government forms a "whitelist" of things the government can do, while stating that anything necessary and proper to carry out such functions may also be done. The Bill of Rights forms a "blacklist" of what the government cannot do, ever, under any circumstances, even indirectly. It does not say that you have the "right" to "fair and just" working conditions by your employer. That's not a right. That's a constitutionally mandated regulatory scheme on private economic activity. The CFREU has that, which is ridiculous.
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Ah goalposts. So movable and inconsistent with past statements.“As a lifelong member of the Columbia Business School community, I adhere to the principles of truth, integrity, and respect. I will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.”
"Capitalism ho!"
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Originally posted by regexcellent View PostHC has it exactly right. The "Basic Law" aspect of the constitution, stating how the government functions and elections are held, is separate from the enumeration of powers and the bill of rights. Article 1 Section 8 which lists the powers of the federal government forms a "whitelist" of things the government can do, while stating that anything necessary and proper to carry out such functions may also be done. The Bill of Rights forms a "blacklist" of what the government cannot do, ever, under any circumstances, even indirectly. It does not say that you have the "right" to "fair and just" working conditions by your employer. That's not a right. That's a constitutionally mandated regulatory scheme on private economic activity. The CFREU has that, which is ridiculous.With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.
Steven Weinberg
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Originally posted by regexcellent View PostHC has it exactly right. The "Basic Law" aspect of the constitution, stating how the government functions and elections are held, is separate from the enumeration of powers and the bill of rights. Article 1 Section 8 which lists the powers of the federal government forms a "whitelist" of things the government can do, while stating that anything necessary and proper to carry out such functions may also be done. The Bill of Rights forms a "blacklist" of what the government cannot do, ever, under any circumstances, even indirectly. It does not say that you have the "right" to "fair and just" working conditions by your employer. That's not a right. That's a constitutionally mandated regulatory scheme on private economic activity. The CFREU has that, which is ridiculous.
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What I'm articulating is that our constitution does not do something that many European constitutions or enumerations of rights do. I'm also saying that this particular thing they do, dictate policy, is something that they should not do. In particular, they should not conflate the proper notion of a right, which is something the government can't do to you, with economic regulation on what kind of agreements you can come to with your business partners (working in unsafe environments for low wages).
Yes, the American constitution could require the government to require employers to provide some kind of minimum wage or safe working environment. It doesn't, and it shouldn't, and moreover that would go entirely against the philosophy around which the document was written.
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Originally posted by regexcellent View PostThe Bill of Rights forms a "blacklist" of what the government cannot do, ever, under any circumstances, even indirectly. It does not say that you have the "right" to "fair and just" working conditions by your employer. That's not a right. That's a constitutionally mandated regulatory scheme on private economic activity. The CFREU has that, which is ridiculous.
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Maybe it goes contrary to the rights of big corporations to exploit their workers and save money by letting them work under unsafe working conditions (after all it is the big corporations who give all the money for the big parties and who therefore can expect that their interests are protected by politicians)Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"
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Originally posted by regexcellent View PostYes because that's not a limitation on government and therefore doesn't belong in a bill of rights. It's a legislative matter, not a constitutional matter.
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