The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations are infinite, and for this reason no constitutional shackles can wisely be imposed on the power to which the care of it is committed. This power ought to be co-extensive with all the possible combinations... Emergency Price Control Act - Página 219por United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Banking and Currency - 1941 - 560 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Edward Millican - 292 páginas
...exigencies, or the correspondent extent & variety of the means which may be necessary to satisfy them. The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations...on the power to which the care of it is committed." The misuse of national power is to be guarded against by the "internal structure" of the new regime,... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1991 - 1358 páginas
...nation and call for the use or the threat to use the national force are infinitely varied, so that "no constitutional shackles can wisely be imposed...the power to which the care of it is committed."** Since the early seventies, there have been a number of serious and well considered scholarly studies... | |
| Williamson Murray - 1996 - 702 páginas
...government a theoretically unlimited power to raise armies and to tax, but how could it be otherwise? The "circumstances that endanger the safety of nations...on the power to which the care of it is committed." "The means," argued Hamilton, "ought to be proportioned to the end; the persons, from whose agency... | |
| Richard Sherlock, Richard Kent Sherlock, Kent E. Robson, Charles Wayne Johnson - 1995 - 188 páginas
...be necessary to satisfy them." "The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations," he argues, "are infinite, and for this reason no constitutional...shackles can wisely be imposed on the power to which care of it is committed." Hamilton bases his argument on the self-evident truth that "the means ought... | |
| Ralph A. Rossum - 2001 - 324 páginas
...to define "the correspondent extent and variety of the means which may be necessary to satisfy them. The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations...coextensive with all the possible combinations of such circumstances."10 The framers agreed and refused to shackle the new government with restrictions that... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 2002 - 658 páginas
...exigencies, or the correspondent extent & variety of the means which may be necessary to satisfy them. The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations...are appointed to preside over the common defense. This "truth," according to Hamilton, rests upon axioms as simple as they are universal. The means ought... | |
| Edwin J. Delattre - 2002 - 498 páginas
...becoming less free.54 Twenty-eight days later, Hamilton wrote the people again, this time warning, "The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations...be imposed on the power to which the care of it is committed."55 1n both instances Hamilton was writing about the establishment of military forces; but... | |
| Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay - 2003 - 692 páginas
...exigencies, and the correspondent extent and variety of the means which may be necessary to satisfy them. The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations...are appointed to preside over the common defense. This is one of those truths which to a correct and unprejudiced mind carries its own evidence along... | |
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