Also, no, citizens do not have the right to operate their own military vehicles. This strict constitutionalist approach is unrealistic, and cannot be operated by today's standards.
Do citizens of a nation have a right to overthrow a government they find to by tyrannical?
It is a foundational question in regards to the United States.
I disagree, a strict constitutional interpretation can operate in the modern world.
If we operated more strictly in line with the constitution, Congress may actually have to take on responsibility for national actions, such as declarations of war. Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq are all examples of Congress not following its constitutional responsibility and instead passing the responsibility to the executive branch.
Another the example I have already provided. The United States Army and United States Air Forces as they are currently established are unconstitutional.
For the sack of this discussion, the Air Force will be rolled into the Army (my fellow Blue suits can pound sand). The constitution grants Congress the right to maintain a Navy and raise an Army. The Navy is to act as an expeditionary force and protect US interest abroad, while an Army is raised in defense of the nation or for very large scale conflicts.
As a check against the abuse of Congress granting the President excessive powers, the majority of the nation's military was intended to be controlled at the State level. In order to raise sufficient forces for a prolonged war in a foreign land, the national government would be required to get not only the buy-in of Congress, but also all the State's such that they release their forces to the national government.
That's too extreme. You're essentially calling for a hardcore form of libertarianism. I find that not having a unified federal government leads to each state acting as its own little "empire", with confusing differences between each state's laws.
I am calling for governance to be pushed down to the lowest level practical.A Federal Senator from Massachusetts does not understand the educational, transportation, or medical needs of a resident of Mobile, Alabama. The resident and his neighbors understand their needs and what they are willing to pay to have those needs met.
Citizens in Montana, Nebraska, Delaware, and Hawaii do not have a need or desire to pay for local route 565 repairs in west Texas, nor do the roads in west Texas need to be repaired on the same schedule as those in Montana, Nebraska, Delaware, and Hawaii. Or, famously, a bridge in Alaska for maybe a few hundred people was paid for by 350 million.
There are excellent examples of a
good federal program and these tend to be constitutional. Both the Postal System and Interstate System can be found in the Constitution (Congress shall have the right to establish post offices and post roads).
Most importantly the Tenth Amendment reserves to the states or the people any powers the Constitution did not delegate to the United States or prohibit the states from exercising.
There is nothing to stop towns, cities, counties, or states from setting for themselves a standard "higher" than that established by the Federal government.
For the Europeans, consider how the EU is growing and look at the United States today, 200 years after a group of 13 States united in common cause. The demands of the Union, of Paris or Berlin, may cause other member states to find themselves unable to fulfill obligations to its citizens.