bassist_25 wrote:Ah damn it, another mix up between the constitution and Declaration of Independence. The logic still stands, though.
And only my Bachelor's is in psychology, and my background is in I/O, not clinical/counseling psychology.

No, the logic does not stand. The Declaration of Independence was a bitch-out and secession letter for King George. Aside from secession, it contains no governmental laws of any kind. It is also a "dead" document from a legal standpoint, as it was recognized and superceded by the Treaty of Paris 1783/1784.
On the other hand, the US Constitution is a legal document that is comprised of the specific by-laws for the federal government of the United States. The Bill Of Rights is nothing more than a set of laws within the Constitution that limit the power of federal government by specifically prohibiting legislation that would abridge human rights.
The US Constitution is very specific about the scope of the federal government and the feds adhered to it until an underhanded extortion maneuver by the father of US socialism, Franklin Roosevelt. The "Revolution of 1937" resulted from a court ruling made under judicial duress that opened the floodgates for the "general welfare clause". This essentially granted Congress unlimited spending power--not legislative power, mind you--just spending power. This is probably the most significant judicial decision in US history, yet almost nobody has even heard of it. Here, read about it, especially the memoirs from the Justices that were involved:
http://constitutionalawareness.org/genwelf.html
Here's the really screwed up part: Congress can spend money on things like education, public assistance, healthcare, etc., but they are prohibited from making any
laws governing these topics...they can only refuse funding for any state or other entity that doesn't do what they want. The exception to this is any legislation that passes the muster of
interstate commerce, or some other specific enumerated power.
This is why most people born after 1945 have a distorted perception of the US Constitution.
...Oh, the freedom of the day that yielded to no rule or time...