Page:Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1st ed, 1833, vol I).djvu/312

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CONSTITUTION OF THE U. STATES.
[BOOK III.

the legislative, executive, and judicial functions in the senate was a mischievous departure from all ideas of regular government; with others the non-participation of the house of representatives in the same functions was the alarming evil. With some the powers of the president were alarming and dangerous to liberty; with others the participation of the senate in some of those powers. With some the powers of the judiciary were far too extensive; with others the power to make treaties even with the consent of two thirds of the senate. With some the power to keep up a standing army was a sure introduction to despotism; with others the power over the militia.[1] With some the paramount authority of the constitution, treaties, and laws of the United States was a dangerous feature; with others the small number composing the senate and the house of representatives was an alarming and corrupting evil.[2]

§ 298. In the glowing language of those times the people were told, "that the new government will not be a confederacy of states, as it ought, but one consolidated government, founded upon the destruction of the several governments of the states. The powers of congress, under the new constitution, are complete and unlimited over the purse and the sword, and are perfectly independent of, and supreme over the state governments, whose intervention in these great points is entirely destroyed. By virtue of their power of taxation, congress may command the whole, or any part of the properties of the people. They may impose what
  1. See 2 Amer. Museum, 422, &c.; Id. 435; Id. 534; Id. 540, &c. 543, &c.; Id. 553: 3 Amer. Museum, 62; Id. 157; Id. 419, 420, &c.
  2. Many of the objections are summed up in the Federalist, No. 38, with great force and ability.