A. to suspend writs of habeas corpus unless rebelled upon
B. to pass ex post facto laws and to make a bill of attainder
C.to take money from the treasury without legal reasons
...
and so on
written in article 1 section 9 of the constitution
1.10.1 No treaties, letters of marque or reprisal, coining of money, bills of credit; no bills of attainder, ex post facto laws, titles of nobility 1.10.2 No duties on imports, exports except with Congress' approval 1.10.3 No duty on tonnage, troops, ships of war, agreements with other states, or war without Congress' approval
Coining money, grant tiles of mobility, pass ex post facto laws
stuff
The powers forbidden to the US Congress (and Federal Government in general) are listed in the US Constitution in a very simply fashion. Congress is permitted those powers specifically stated (and implied) in the Constitution. Powers not enumerated in the Constitution are reserved for the States, or for the People. So what is permitted to the Congress is listed, but not what is forbidden.
Those powers are reserved by the people
The States and the people.
Article I, Section 8. Powers denied to the Congress and powers denied to the states – Article I, Sections 9 and 10, respectively.
The Tenth Amendment doesn't mention the powers of Congress; those are discussed in the seven Articles (primarily Article I), the body of the original Constitution. The Tenth Amendment is about powers reserved to the States (or to the people).Amendment X"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."
Reserved Powers
The powers forbidden to the US Congress (and Federal Government in general) are listed in the US Constitution in a very simply fashion. Congress is permitted those powers specifically stated (and implied) in the Constitution. Powers not enumerated in the Constitution are reserved for the States, or for the People. So what is permitted to the Congress is listed, but not what is forbidden.
The Constitution states the powers of Congress.
Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution lists those powers.
Congress is forbidden to lay tax on goods exported out of states. This is also referred to as a duty.
Article 1 deals with the Legislative branch. Section 1: Splits Congress into 2 houses and gives them the power to make laws. Section 2: States the requirements for someone to become a Representative and gives term limits. Section 3: States the requirements to become a Senator and gives term limits. Section 4: States that the Congress must meet once a year. Section 5: Has to do with House membership. Section 6: Has to do with Congressmen's salaries and prosecution of Congressmen. Section 7: Describes the vetoing process. Section 8: States the powers granted to Congress by the federal government. Section 9: Lists what Congress is forbidden to do. Section 10: Lists what the states are forbidden to do.
Those powers are reserved by the people
both congress and the states
The States and the people.
The delegated powers are powers reserved for Congress. They are listed in Article I of the United States Constitution.
Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution lists those powers.
powers in the Bill of Rights and powers that are in amendments.. ex: freedom of speech or voting