New England was a Jeffersonian region of independent-minded yeoman farmers and freethinking independents before the Civil War. We lost that earthy colloquialism to the abstraction of federalism after teaming up for the conquest of the West and the South in 1857 and 1865, and again to globalism after the conquest of Europe and Asia in 1946. But today New England begins to find its yeoman soul again. We have always been Jeffersonian. We just forgot. When it starts to catch on, any step outside the prescribed constitutional reservation by the feds will be considered overreach, domination, totalitarianism. And it is starting to catch on. The National Defense Authorization Act is a giant step in the direction of the benign American police state.



Provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act could allow for the indefinite detention of U.S. citizens, but the feds could find they get no cooperation from some state and local officials.



Virginia Del. Bob Marshall (R-Manassas) introduced H.B. 1660, which would “Prevent any agency, political subdivision, employee or member of the military of Virginia from assisting an agency or the armed forces of the United States in the investigation, prosecution or detainment of a United States citizen in violation of the Constitution of Virginia.”



On Wednesday, a subcommittee passed the bill 6-3, moving it closer to a full vote.



And the Tenth Amendment Center reports that as many as 10 states will consider legislation or resolutions in response to the detention provisions in sections 1021 and 1022 of the NDAA.



We read today that liberal iconoclast Oliver Stone begins to look to Ron Paul. My kids, reared on Kurt Cobain and Flogging Molly, tend to as well, and the Pauls have become big hits on college campus. A new generation is rising to the idea of states rights as a defense against the hovering domination of the federal government.



Lawmakers in Rhode Island and Washington will likely introduce resolutions authored by the Rhode Island Liberty Coalition within the next week, writes Mike Maharrey of the Tenth Amendment Center. Additionally, local governments, including Fremont County, Colo., and El Paso County, Colo., have passed resolution condemning the detention provisions.



"Federal politicians never seem to repeal federal law. It's going to take ‘We the People’ in our states to stand up and say, ‘No!’ to this unconstitutional monster," Tenth Amendment Center executive director Michael Boldin said.



The Rhode Island Liberty Coalition, “a grassroots organization dedicated to the preservation of Civil Liberties, Economic Liberties and the inherent autonomy of the individual,” is especially interesting. I’d like to see it expand to The New England Liberty Coalition.



“We drafted nullification legislation that can double as a draft state-wide act as well as a local ordinance — in any state, county or municipality in the country — that denounces Section 1021 of the NDAA and prevents local officials from cooperating with military investigations and detainments of United States Citizens and legal resident aliens,” their website states. “The Act goes one step further and attempts to outlaw military investigations and detentions of citizens and resident legal aliens within those states, counties or municipalities. Did we mention this legislation can be used as a template in jurisdictions ALL ACROSS THE COUNTRY?”

