Skip to content
natelsonrob.com
  • Home
  • Bio
  • Bibliography – Books and Articles
  • Adoption of the Montana Constitution
  • Blog
  • Contact
natelsonrob.com
  • Home
  • Bio
  • Bibliography – Books and Articles
  • Adoption of the Montana Constitution
  • Blog
  • Contact

Treatise on Amendments Conventions Updated to Include Rules for Congress’s “Call”

Article V, CONSTITUTION | November 6, 2014

Some people claim the rules pertaining to the Constitution’s “Convention for Proposing Amendments” are largely unknown, but there actually is […]

Treatise on Amendments Conventions Updated to Include Rules for Congress’s “Call” Read More »

The Washington Post Picks Up the Flag from the Convention Alarmists

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Supreme Court, Uncategorized | October 27, 2014

The past week saw yet another assault on those reformers who seek to cure federal dysfunction by promoting a “Convention

The Washington Post Picks Up the Flag from the Convention Alarmists Read More »

The Famous Case of Coleman v. Miller—and, No, It Doesn't Give Congress Total Control Over the Amendment Process

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Supreme Court | September 1, 2014

Not long ago, I was listening to a radio talk show and was assured by a caller that the Supreme

The Famous Case of Coleman v. Miller—and, No, It Doesn't Give Congress Total Control Over the Amendment Process Read More »

No, the Necessary and Proper Clause Does NOT Empower Congress to Control an Amendments Convention

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Uncategorized | August 23, 2014

A few days ago I heard a presentation by a spokesman for a group that claims to defend the Constitution

No, the Necessary and Proper Clause Does NOT Empower Congress to Control an Amendments Convention Read More »

Failure to Call Amendments Conventions Helps Explain Modern Federal Overreaching

Article V, CONSTITUTION | August 18, 2014

This Article is a modified version of one appearing in the American Thinker. If President after President failed to veto

Failure to Call Amendments Conventions Helps Explain Modern Federal Overreaching Read More »

How Much Authority Does Congress Have Under the Treaty Power? The Question the Supreme Court Dodged in Bond v. U.S.

CONSTITUTION, Supreme Court, Uncategorized | July 20, 2014

In its recent decision in Bond v. United States, the Supreme Court avoided deciding whether Congress, in executing a treaty,

How Much Authority Does Congress Have Under the Treaty Power? The Question the Supreme Court Dodged in Bond v. U.S. Read More »

Momentum for an Amendments Convention Accelerates Even More

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Uncategorized | June 15, 2014

Well over a hundred state lawmakers from 33 states met this past week to plan for an Article V “Convention

Momentum for an Amendments Convention Accelerates Even More Read More »

Momentum for Amendments Convention Accelerates

Article V, CONSTITUTION | June 5, 2014

It increasingly looks like a “convention for proposing amendments” is really going to happen. The last 18 months have witnessed

Momentum for Amendments Convention Accelerates Read More »

A Legal Treatise on the Law of Amendment Conventions—For Free!

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Uncategorized | April 6, 2014

A spate of new applications from state legislatures for a “convention for proposing amendments” make it more likely that we

A Legal Treatise on the Law of Amendment Conventions—For Free! Read More »

The Lamp of Experience: Constitutional Amendments Work

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Supreme Court, Uncategorized | March 9, 2014

(This article originally appeared in the American Thinker.) Opponents of a Convention of States long argued that there was an

The Lamp of Experience: Constitutional Amendments Work Read More »

A Modern Quasi-Convention of States

Article V, CONSTITUTION, Uncategorized | March 1, 2014

Many opponents of an Article V convention seem to think that it would be a nearly unique event, for which

A Modern Quasi-Convention of States Read More »

Struggling With Nullification

CONSTITUTION, ObamaCare, Supreme Court, Uncategorized | February 3, 2014

Does a state have the right to nullify federal statutes the state considers unconstitutional? This depends largely on how you

Struggling With Nullification Read More »

← Previous 1 … 10 11 12 … 14 Next →
  • Home
  • Bio
  • Bibliography – Books and Articles
  • Adoption of the Montana Constitution
  • Blog
  • Contact

Copyright © 2026 Rob Natelson - Official Website | Developed by DWebPixel