Our Beautiful Constitution

On this 4th of July weekend, Time magazine published an entire issue on the United States Constitution.  Its headline asked, “Is it Still Relevant?”  Of course it not only is relevant, it is our anchor of stability in a turbulent world.  We can withstand a bad President and a petulant Congress (for the short term, at least) because our Constitution both guides and limits.  If someone asked me to provide proof of a loving God I would simply ask them how else so many geniuses in the matter of human governance could have been clustered together in the right time and place to create both our country and the means to govern it.   Our founding fathers had the vision to devise a way to not only govern themselves, but govern a country that they could not imagine, yet believed would prevail.

The constitution of the United States is like a good parent.  It has allowed us to grow up as we have grown older, with the result that the United States of America is the oldest living democracy in the world.  The miracle of this document is that it lives, breathes and moves with the times.  The three branches of our government work together while standing alone.  While our laws must carry the weight of immediate and complete enforcement, the amendment of the laws must also be fluid and responsive.  Laws that can not be enforced produce anarchy and laws that can not be changed calcify into totalitarianism. 

Both the scope and limits of our foreign and domestic policy are outlined within the Constitution.  It is like a sonnet.  The structure is specific and rigid.  But what you say is entirely up to you.  If governed by good and intelligent people we should be able to provide the best decisions at the time, given the best facts available, and the confidence to know that we can change our mind when needs and circumstances change.  This isn’t flip-flopping (a term I hate) it is reacting to better data.  Laws that got us where we wanted to be in 1830 didn’t function well in 1930 and won’t work in 2030.  

Consider Article I Section 3 of the Constitution.  “The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each state, chosen by the legislature thereof...”  Not until 1913 when the 17th Amendment to the Constitution was passed would the citizen of the United States directly elect their senators.  Both the original decision and its amendment had good and justifiable reasons.  Times change; we change.  

For these and a host of other reasons, I am very suspicious of people who try to fiddle with my Constitution.  Changing it is a difficult, time consuming and laborious process.  Not impossible, but not something done on a whim either.  Of course, you can always try to get around the Constitution by Presidential decree or judicial interpretation, but those efforts are fairly transparent and we can see them for what they are.  It is important to have the courage to call foul when we see this happening—even if the efforts are those we approve of.  The same Constitution that protects us now will protect us from our worst nightmare.  It is our shield, but like every shield, we have to hold it up to allow it to work.  Guard the Constitution and it will guard you. 

And now, for a totally unrelated comment, a Butler Bit if you will:  I read that Hugo Chavez is in Cuba being treated for cancer.  God pays slowly, but God pays in full.  

It's a three day weekend folks.  Keep the faith. 

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