In recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court has restricted the ability of state and local governments to implement land use controls, wielding the Takings Clause of the Constitution as its weapon of choice. The Court has expanded the applicability of the doctrine far beyond claims concerning real property, to overturn legislation protecting employee health benefits, and to find unconstitutional programs providing legal services to low-income clients. This essay argues that this limiting of the government\u27s ability to exercise its police powers has subverted the original purpose of the Takings Clause. A case now pending before the Supreme Court, Del Monte Dunes v. City of Monterey, could provide the opportunity to reevaluate this course of ac...