did what homework I could find, it is evidently the Wickard case which did the most damage, that being the case where the Scotus said that a lack of an interstate transaction therefore creates an interstate transaction owing to the presumption there would have been a transaction, which is simply an outright lie.Soccerdad1995 wrote: ↑Mon May 24, 2021 9:46 amIf we can get this issue revisited by the current SCOTUS, that in itself would be a win. The past case made a complete mockery of the commerce clause and basically said that the federal government can regulate all commerce, not just inter-state commerce.wil wrote: ↑Mon May 24, 2021 9:08 am under a truthful reading of the commerce clause, this is entirely legal. The battle is likely going to be over the federal court case which said that if a given item doesn't cross state lines, it by default effects commerce within another state owing to it not being available. Which is completely non-logical in the face of what the commerce clause says.
I don't remember what court case it was, I think it was two brothers, farmers of some sort, who brought the case all the way to SCOTUS and they reaffirmed the original ruling.
I suspect fedgov will use this as an excuse to try to shut it down should this go through the legal system.
That will likely be the supposed pretext the feds will use to try to stop this. It is long past time for this lie of a decision to face genuine scrutiny.
I spoke to some attorney friends and they said that there is a reasonably good chance of this happening, subsequent court cases have pretty much overturned that ruling however it's a question of nobody has ever really made a coordinated effort to force the issue in court via subsequent rulings. Perhaps our state AG has chosen to force the issue finally.