Harold Meyerson explains how America’s commitment to states’ rights is undermining our economic recovery:

By accident of its birth — a collection of separate colonies that slowly came together to form an independent union and revolted against the remote power of the British government — the United States has an enduring bias toward localism, an aversion to centralized government that is part of its DNA. For some on the left, this has been seen as a positive. “It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country,” Justice Louis Brandeis once wrote.

Even though progressives such as Brandeis have celebrated our federalism, it’s important to remember that Brandeis lived and worked at a time when the federal government was icebound in conservative orthodoxy and the cause of social justice could be advanced only in a small number of states and cities. Segregationists like George Wallace and Richard Russell have celebrated our federalism, too, arguing for states’ rights at a time when the national government was moving to abolish the Jim Crow laws throughout the South.

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