Muscatine

I know how we love the constitution

Posted in: Muscatine

A gathering crowd of wild-eyed radicals is fixated on fundamentally transforming the basic law of the land. This group views the Constitution as, at best, an imperfect rough draft, a flawed document in need of a raft of fixes. At worst, they see it as a cheap campaign placard on which they can pin whatever faddish political slogans and gimmicks might win them votes.

 
I refer, of course, to the Republican Party, especially the Tea Party movement.

I know, I know. Liberals are supposed to be the great threat to our freedoms, what with their big government and popular, social safety-net programs. It's true that Democrats have introduced, by my count, 28 constitutional amendments in this session of Congress. Illinois Democratic Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. alone has introduced nine, aimed at guaranteeing everything from a clean environment to a progressive income tax (which, er, we already have).

Conservatives, of course, are self-styled defenders of the Constitution, accusing Democrats of subverting or discarding the document. "Sadly, it seems today that the Constitution is no longer at the forefront guiding Congress," Minnesota GOP Rep. Michele Bachmann lamented in July, calling for a "return to the fundamental principles" of the Constitution. Bachmann, by the way, is sponsoring a constitutional amendment that would restrict the president's fundamental power to negotiate treaties (she's worried that the president will try to replace the U.S. dollar with a foreign currency). And she is cosponsoring three other constitutional corrections: a balanced budget amendment, a parental rights amendment, and one which would prevent the government from owning stock. Apparently the Founding Fathers need help elucidating those fundamental principles.

Constitutional amendments are rightly the rarest of legislative changes, with only 17 amendments having been ratified since the Bill of Rights was adopted. Yet the self-proclaimed party of conservatism has become a constitutional graffiti movement. Republicans have introduced 41 constitutional amendments this Congress. Democrats
 haven't had a constitutional fix high on their agenda since the Equal Rights Amendment went the way of disco. But one can easily tick off a litany of constitutional edits that are promoted at the highest level of Republican politics.

No fewer than seven GOP-ers, for example, have offered balanced budget amendments. Five different Republicans, with 65 years in Congress among them, have sponsored term-limits amendments. There are proposals to prevent flag desecration, which no doubt draw their most fervent support from the folks who pulled on their American-flag T-shirts and stars-and-stripes hats last month and sat in sweltering heat on their American-flag chairs, exhorting Glenn Beck to defend us from those who disrespect Old Glory.

These, along with proposals to enshrine bans on abortion and gay marriage in the Constitution, are the classics. Others gaining popularity include the aforementioned stricture against government ownership of stock and the parental rights amendment, both of which enjoy the support of at least 100 House members, including top GOP leaders. There are also calls to cap federal spending as a percentage of economic output and to require a supermajority to raise taxes.

But you can also trace the rise of the GOP's nutty strain through the tenor of constitutional rewriting that the right thinks is necessary. It's no longer about simply tacking on, but also stripping out. Observe the calls to repeal the 14th Amendment, which guarantees citizenship to anyone born in the United States.

http://politics.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2010/09/08/the-gop-tea-party-declare-war-on-the-constitution.html

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Another articulate, lucid, and well written cut and paste job.  How is it TP, you never seem to post opinions in your own word?  You obviously have them you just never seem to express them in your own words.  Instead you post these cut and pastes that I believe you post only to inflame and incense certain others on this board.  Is this really what you believe about our Constitution? Or is this just some hyperbole to start another war of words?  We all love to share our opinions, but you seem to express every one else's opinions and not your own.  Just a constructive observation, my friend.

 

As for my opinion, I believe the Constitution isn't a perfect document.  But our forefather's wrote what they believed poignant at the time.  A document like this must grow with the times and there does need to be amendments to keep it viable.  Some in Congress see this, (mostly republicans in your opinion) and are trying to keep it as relevant for today as possible.  Nothing wrong with that.

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Well said, Opie.  Well said.

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As for my opinion, I believe the Constitution isn't a perfect document.  But our forefather's wrote what they believed poignant at the time.  A document like this must grow with the times and there does need to be amendments to keep it viable.  Some in Congress see this, (mostly republicans in your opinion) and are trying to keep it as relevant for today as possible.  Nothing wrong with that.


Good to know you're not a "strict construtionist".

Poignant?

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