From: survival@charter.net (The Patriot)
Date: Sun, 3 Mar 2002
The Disturbing Trend Toward Federal Police
By: Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) - Texas Straight Talk
The House of Representatives recently approved a massive appropriations bill
that will fund various Treasury Department agencies at record spending levels.
The bill appropriates nearly 30 billion dollars, an increase over last year's
already huge Treasury budget. More disturbing, however, is the whopping 23%
increase in funding for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms [ATF] contained
in the Treasury bill.
ATF gets more than $730 million dollars for fiscal year 2001, an increase of
$166 million over its 2000 budget. Why the increase? The administration wants
the agency to hire 600 new federal police officers to enforce ever-expanding
gun laws. Never mind the obvious failures of gun control legislation and the
clear Second Amendment prohibition against such laws. The politicians in Washington
are determined to slowly abolish gun rights, and they are determined to use
federal police to accomplish the task.
The American public gradually has become aware of the disturbing trend toward
federal policing of our nation. Many Americans do not support ATF, especially
after the disastrous events at Waco. I was widely attacked in the media and
by members of Congress for questioning the government's actions at Waco, and
for merely suggesting that many Americans were concerned by the possibility
of federal agents taking violent action against American citizens. Now we have
Congress spending more money to increase the budget for ATF, despite its highly
questionable actions and the resulting public mistrust of the agency.
It is important to recognize that our federal constitution lists only three
federal crimes, namely counterfeiting, treason, and piracy on the high seas.
The founding fathers never envisioned a federal police force, knowing that such
a force would trample on the right of each state to enact and enforce its own
criminal laws. Hence there is no provision for the creation of a general federal
police force in the enumeration of congressional powers. Furthermore, the 10th
Amendment explicitly reserves the general police power to the states individually.
Washington politicians, however, have no interest in constitutional limitations
when they seek to expand and consolidate their power by federalizing whole areas
of criminal activity. They have consistently expanded federal criminal laws,
particularly in the areas of drugs and firearms. The result of this expansion
is the inevitable call for more federal police to enforce the new laws. We are
told we need more ATF agents to monitor firearms, and more DEA agents to wage
the "war on drugs." Congress is not concerned with its lack of constitutional
authority to create, much less expand a national police force.
Washington politicians have successfully used recent excessive-force allegations
against local police to further their goals. It is convenient to portray local
police as violent or racist, and therefore in need of federal oversight and
restraint. The question, however, is whether we should trust a federal police
force more than we trust our own local authorities. I believe there is a growing
recognition that our founding fathers were correct when they prohibited federal
government involvement in law enforcement. In Waco, Americans had a vivid example
of the impact of the growing police state. With the veneer being stripped from
the myth of federal law enforcement, our citizens are beginning to realize that
it is both unconstitutional and untenable.
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