Subject: Re: USDollar
Albaby:
but the general principle is known as "Anti-Commandeering." Basically, the Supremacy Clause requires everyone (including state officials) to obey federal law, but the Tenth Amendment prohibits the federal government from requiring state officials to implement or enforce federal law, or to be "dragooned" into service to help the federal government enforce federal law. They can't make state officials administer background checks.
Dope:That's an entirely different matter to immigration enforcement!
Dope, Constitutional Law is taught in two courses in the first year of law school. This is basic stuff that every first year law student runs into. You do not have the legal understanding of Constitutional Law that you think you do. You've never take a course in Constitution Law, have you? It shows. It's time you unrubed yourself and took a course (or two), your arguments would be so much better. As it is, Albaby continually has to explain the Constitution to you and you seem to just not get it, and disbelieve what any first year law student has been taught, and which is historically true.