Changes

Administrative State

185 bytes added, 08:38, December 11, 2020
/* Modern */
==Modern==
While the early progressives set their sites on regulating trusts and corporations, this has evolved. [[ObamaCare]], for example, does include loose definitions which allow for the regulation of corporations, but it also aims toward regulating individuals as well. The expansion of government bureaucracies to create regulations that govern the everyday lives of citizens is what Democrat [[Speaker nancy PeopliNancy Pelosi]] meant by "we have to pass it [the Obamacare bill] to see what's in it." In other words, all the Obamacare bill did was create large bureaucracies in the [[Executive branch]] and granted unelected bureaucrats the power to make regulations with the force of law. The growth of the administrative state can generally be observed in direct correlation as bureaucracies and judges adhering to a [[Living Constitution]] move us further and further away from what is actually in the [[Constitution]].<ref>[http://www.constitution.org/ad_state/ad_state.htm Nondelegation and the Administrative State]</ref><ref>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/battling-the-modern-administrative-state/2015/11/27/a1c639ba-9392-11e5-8aa0-5d0946560a97_story.html Battling the modern American administrative state]</ref>
In the [[2020 presidential election]], administrative bureaucracies in several states seized the law making function allotted solely to the state legislatures by the [[U.S. Constitution]], to write election law and stuffed stuff ballot boxes with illegal ballots for [[Democratic party]] candidate [[Joe Biden]]. This improper and illegal action was heard before the [[United States Supreme Court]] in the case of ''[[Texas v. Pennsylvania]]''.
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