4. The Fourteenth Amendment The Truth About American History: An Austro-Jeffersonian Perspective

    • Podcasts

This is a difficult issue. Most of the controversy is from Section One. What exactly does the first sentence mean? If the Fourteenth Amendment was in fact intended to bind the states to the Bill of Rights that the federal government could enforce, then it dramatically increases the police power of the federal government.

This is a difficult issue. Most of the controversy is from Section One. What exactly does the first sentence mean? If the Fourteenth Amendment was in fact intended to bind the states to the Bill of Rights that the federal government could enforce, then it dramatically increases the police power of the federal government.

More by Mises Institute

The History of Economic Thought: From Marx to Hayek
Murray N. Rothbard
The Private Production of Defense
Hans-Hermann Hoppe
The Mises Reader Unabridged
Ludwig von Mises
Audio Mises Wire
Mises Institute
Radio Rothbard
Mises Institute
Human Action: A Treatise on Economics
Ludwig von Mises