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Let's stop pretending the Constitution is sacred (Traitorous, Anti-Christian Barf Alert)
Salon ^ | 1/6/2011 | Michael Lind

Posted on 01/06/2011 11:34:47 AM PST by markomalley

Will conservatives restore America to constitutional government? The new Republican leadership in the House of Representatives has promised not only to begin the new congressional session by reading the Constitution in its entirety, but also to require that every new piece of legislation cite the passage in the federal Constitution that authorizes it.

These gestures are certain to please the conservatives of the Tea Party movement who are the ascendant force in Republican primary elections. But Tea Party constitutionalism represents a deeply flawed understanding of America's founding, which ought to be based on the revolutionary idea of the power of the sovereign people to make and unmake constitutions of their design, not on superstitious veneration of particular constitutions handed down by wise demigods.

Tea Party constitutionalism blends several American traditions. One is the tradition of hostility to the federal government chiefly associated with the South, which adopted states' rights ideology in order to resist federal interference first in Southern slavery and then in Southern racial segregation. Now that the Republican Party, founded as a northern party opposed to the extension of slavery, is disproportionately a party of white Southern reactionaries, dominated by the political heirs of the Confederates and the segregationist Dixiecrats, the denunciation of many exercises of federal authority as illegitimate would have been predictable, even if the president were not a black Yankee from Abraham Lincoln's Illinois.

But there is more to the constitutional theories of the modern GOP than neo-Confederate ideology. Beginning with the adoption of the federal Constitution, some Americans have sought to promote reverence for this particular Constitution, while others have emphasized the power of the Constitution-making people. Thomas Jefferson thought that laws and constitutions should be updated frequently, while his friend and ally James Madison thought that constitutions and laws should be changed only infrequently in the interest of stability. John Adams thought that the founders of constitutions should be revered, as in ancient Greece and Rome.

Madison and Adams won the argument. The folk culture of American constitutionalism blends themes from 17th-century English Protestantism and 18th-century neoclassicism. From Protestantism comes the rejection of the "Catholic" idea of an evolving scriptural tradition interpreted by an authority -- the Vatican or the Supreme Court -- in favor of the idea that the Christian or American Creed is in danger of corruption if it strays too far from the literal words of the original, perfect revelation. According to the Washington Post, one Tea Party member in Louisiana "has attended weekend classes on the Constitution that she compared with church Bible study."

From 18th-century neoclassicism comes the idea that citizens of a republic must be taught that their constitutions are perfect and were handed down by superhuman lawgivers or "Legislators" -- Solon in Athens, Lycurgus in Sparta -- and must be preserved without alteration as long as the republic endures.

The blending of Protestant fundamentalism and neoclassical Legislator-worship explains the semi-religious reverence with which the Founders or Framers or Fathers of the Constitution have long been discussed in the United States. Other, similar English-speaking democracies -- not only Canada, Australia and New Zealand but modern Britain itself -- achieved self-governance or universal suffrage generations later, when these Protestant and neoclassical traditions had died out in their domains. The Canadians do not revere their first prime minister, John Macdonald, and to this day the British do not even have a formal, written constitution. Our Anglophone peers regard American constitution-worship as bizarre and quaint, like our fondness for displaying the national flag.

English-speaking democracies tend to be stable and free even when, like Britain, they lack a written constitution. But Latin American republics have been afflicted by dictatorship and civil war for generations in spite of having formal constitutions modeled on that of the United States. The contrast demonstrates that the true security for freedom is a culture of constitutionalism, not a particular constitution, or any written constitution at all. The details of a particular democratic political system -- presidential or parliamentary, bicameral or unicameral, unitary or federal -- are ultimately less important than the unwillingness of the citizens to resort to violence when they lose an election, unlike the Confederate ancestors of so many of today's white Southern Republicans, who tried to destroy the country upon losing an election.

The federal Constitution drafted in Philadelphia in 1787, as amended, is still in effect in the United States. In contrast, France is now under its Fifth Republic. An old joke has an American in Paris asking a bookseller for a copy of the French constitution. Irritated, the Parisian bookseller replies, "We do not sell periodical literature."

But the joke is on Americans, not the French. Indeed, the 50 states are very "French" in their populist approach to constitutionalism. Most states in the Union have gone through several constitutions, with no apparent harm. Many of today's state constitutions in the Northeast and West Coast date back only a few generations to the Progressive era, and show the influence of belief in apolitical, technocratic executives in the number of state officials appointed by a strong governor. At the other extreme, many constitutions adopted by the defeated Confederate "Redeemers" following the Civil War create weak state governments and feeble governors. The influence of Jacksonian populism accounts for the fact that in some states most executive branch officers and even state judges are directly elected.

In no state, to my knowledge, is there a cult of the all-wise Founders of the State Constitution, who drafted the most recent of several state charters. Few legislators, even few conservative Republicans, would be able to tell you the date at which their latest state constitution was adopted, much less name any of the drafters or ratifiers.

The treatment of state constitutions as mere charters of government to be periodically updated or replaced, not secular versions of holy scripture, gets it right. The essence of American republican liberalism is found in Jefferson's words in the Declaration of Indepedence: "That whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and and to institute new government, laying its foundations on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness." Here there is no implication that a perfect code of laws has been handed down to later generations by a superhuman generation of Lawgivers, who should be worshiped as demigods century after century. Constitutions are above ordinary statutes, to be sure, but both constitutions and laws are ordinary rules agreed upon by members of the sovereign people, not to promote their eternal salvation or to conform to some mystical law of nature discerned by philosophers, but to "effect their safety and happiness." Not only are later generations in a free and democratic republic likely to include as many intelligent, patriotic and virtuous people as the founding generation, but later generations have more knowledge of what works and does not work in politics in their country and other societies.

Of course federal laws should be constitutional. But if we as a people want the federal government to do something that the present constitution does not permit, let's amend the much-amended constitution once again, or replace it with a completely new constitution, as the states have frequently done. The U.S. Constitution is not the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments, and James Madison and John Adams were not Lycurgus and Solon.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government
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With a h/t to the Daily Caller.

Michael Lind: Traitorous Bastard

(Note: the only reason why I even bother with this is because of the reading of the Constitution in the House...along with the reactions from many of the LibDem Congressweenies)

1 posted on 01/06/2011 11:34:50 AM PST by markomalley
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To: markomalley

As I said on another thread: Claptrap.
All that ink wasted.


2 posted on 01/06/2011 11:37:49 AM PST by Monkey Face (A fig! A fig upon you, you charlatan liberals!)
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To: markomalley
Isn't this the guy that renounced conservatism?

Now that the Republican Party, founded as a northern party opposed to the extension of slavery, is disproportionately a party of white Southern reactionaries, dominated by the political heirs of the Confederates and the segregationist Dixiecrats, the denunciation of many exercises of federal authority as illegitimate would have been predictable, even if the president were not a black Yankee from Abraham Lincoln's Illinois.

That's quite the smear there, Mr. Lind. Calling the party that championed the abolition of slavery racist and "political heir" of segregationists. Real sweet.

3 posted on 01/06/2011 11:39:27 AM PST by sauropod (The truth shall make you free but first it will make you miserable.)
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To: markomalley
understanding of America's founding, which ought to be based on the revolutionary idea of the power of the sovereign people to make and unmake constitutions of their design

Mr. Lind is an ignoramus of the highest order.

4 posted on 01/06/2011 11:40:00 AM PST by Cletus.D.Yokel (Islam is a violent and tyrannical political ideology and has nothing to do with "religion".)
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To: markomalley
One is the tradition of hostility to the federal government chiefly associated with the South, which adopted states' rights ideology in order to resist federal interference first in Southern slavery and then in Southern racial segregation.

Paragraph3...the race card is played. Mr. Lind deals in "projection".

5 posted on 01/06/2011 11:41:20 AM PST by Cletus.D.Yokel (Islam is a violent and tyrannical political ideology and has nothing to do with "religion".)
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To: markomalley

Our Constitution already allows for the people to “make and unmake” Our Constitution through an amendment process.

Anything else is disregard for the rule of LAW.


6 posted on 01/06/2011 11:44:15 AM PST by SJSAMPLE
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To: markomalley
“But Tea Party constitutionalism represents a deeply flawed understanding of America's founding, which ought to be based on the revolutionary idea of the power of the sovereign people to make and unmake constitutions of their design, not on superstitious veneration of particular constitutions handed down by wise demigods.”

This just in, Salon thinks Jefferson Davis was right.

At first Tea partiers were dangerous revolutionaries with guns, now they're dull technocrats married to an outdated document... talk about flawed understandings.

Gee, if only the founders had left a device to change the constitution from time to time, a... I don't know, amendment process?

Oh well, nothing to do now but stock up on canned goods and sit in the basement.

7 posted on 01/06/2011 11:44:15 AM PST by jpf (http://flood-mybigmouth.blogspot.com/)
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To: markomalley
So if the Constitution isn't sacred, why should court decisions like Brown vs Board of Education be sacred? Or the 1964 Civil Rights Act?

ML/NJ

8 posted on 01/06/2011 11:44:37 AM PST by ml/nj
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To: markomalley

Liberals starting to worry about the constitution being read and becoming popular again......I like that!


9 posted on 01/06/2011 11:45:03 AM PST by The Cajun
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To: markomalley

“Our Anglophone peers regard American constitution-worship as bizarre and quaint, like our fondness for displaying the national flag.”

And believing in God. And working for a living. And being proud of our country. And defending ourselves. And having children and trying to make a better life for them.

It’s all so non-post-modern.


10 posted on 01/06/2011 11:45:26 AM PST by swain_forkbeard (Rationality may not be sufficient, but it is necessary.)
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To: markomalley

I have stopped pretending that folks who don’t hold the Constitution as sacred are Americans.

I have stopped pretending there is any reason for them to be tolerated and to continue to live unharrased as if they mattered.

The trash must be disposed


11 posted on 01/06/2011 11:45:49 AM PST by bert (K.E. N.P. N.C. D.E. +12 .....( History is a process, not an event ))
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To: markomalley
which ought to be based on the revolutionary idea of the power of the sovereign people to make and unmake constitutions of their design, not on superstitious veneration of particular constitutions handed down by wise demigods

The idiot is partially correct on the above point. We are a free people. We absolutely do have the power to amend our Constitution as we see fit. So, I invite the commie and his comrades to propose all the amendments they want. We'll consider them. Unless and until we do amend the Constitution, it stands. So he can sit down and STFU.

12 posted on 01/06/2011 11:46:26 AM PST by BuckeyeTexan (There are those that break and bend. I'm the other kind.)
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To: markomalley
"Now that the Republican Party, founded as a northern party opposed to the extension of slavery, is disproportionately a party of white Southern reactionaries, dominated by the political heirs of the Confederates and the segregationist Dixiecrats, the denunciation of many exercises of federal authority as illegitimate would have been predictable, even if the president were not a black Yankee from Abraham Lincoln's Illinois."

What a load!!! The Dixiecrats were Democrats who formed and disbanded in 1948 and blended back into the Democratic Party. The last two Democratic presidents were from the South (Carter, Clinton).

Racist Democrats trying to shed their horrific past by putting it on Republicans are shameless.

13 posted on 01/06/2011 11:47:38 AM PST by avacado
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To: markomalley

Michael Lind: Traitorous Bastard

Lind - product of the public school system and systematic mind programing of leftist propaganda - and yes, traitorous bastard.


14 posted on 01/06/2011 11:48:24 AM PST by Bitsy
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To: markomalley
He certainly has not grasped the fundamental principle of constitutionalism; i.e. the constitution is a rule and a measure aginst which statutes and court decisions are weighed.

This type of article indicates what those who love this country are up against. The question must be asked; if this type of person cannot be reasoned with, then what should be done with them?

15 posted on 01/06/2011 11:50:01 AM PST by AEMILIUS PAULUS (It is a shame that when these people give a riot)
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To: markomalley

THe Constitution can’t be sacred! That would be a violation of the ... oh, waitaminute ....


16 posted on 01/06/2011 11:50:41 AM PST by Tanniker Smith (I didn't know she was a liberal when I married her.)
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To: markomalley
...ought to be based on the revolutionary idea of the power of the sovereign people to make and unmake constitutions of their design...

100% CORRECT! Our Constitution IS based on that very idea, as is MY understanding of it -- as is the understanding of MOST people who have ever read the document.

The United States Constitution contains within it a very simple mechanism by which it can be amended (see Article V).

So, Mr. Lind, if you and your condescending, sanctimonious, know-it-all, pseudo-intellectual, leftist, salon.com-butt-buddies want to "unmake" the Constitution then please feel free to begin doing so IMMEDIATELY.

All I (and any other person who cares about the rule of law) will demand of you is that you FOLLOW THE ESTABLISHED PROCEDURES FOR AMENDING THE DOCUMENT!

17 posted on 01/06/2011 11:50:40 AM PST by WayneS (Enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm. -- James Madison)
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To: markomalley
...neo-Confederate ideology...

Interview With A Zombie. 'Nuff grunted.

18 posted on 01/06/2011 11:52:51 AM PST by danielmryan
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To: markomalley

Michael,

Can we start to question the left’s patriotism now?


19 posted on 01/06/2011 11:53:53 AM PST by CSM (Keeper of the "Dave Ramsey Fan" ping list. FReepmail me if you want your beeber stuned.)
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To: markomalley

This guy seems to miss the point. Amendment of the Constitution is an accepted political process (which is included within the Constitution). I’ve never heard of anyone, including Tea Partyers, opposing that.

What we oppose is simply violating and ignoring the Constitution, or “interpreting” it in such a biased way as to make it meaningless and toothless. If Congress wants to amend, or have a Constitutional Convention, fine as long as they follow the rules, which require quite a bit of consensus.


20 posted on 01/06/2011 11:54:28 AM PST by mangonc2
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