Friday, December 27, 2013

The Constitution - An Evolving Document




I had the chance to overhear a discussion the other day about how the country has deviated from the original intent of the Constitution.  He argument was that we should return and to the original interpretation of our founding fathers.  This is a common argument by conservative Republicans and, most currently, the Tea Party movement who has sought to legitimize their political position by laying claim to the historical meaning of the United States Constitution. Many Tea Party members subscribe to a literal reading of the national charter as a way of bolstering their opposition to the evolution of this democracy, and by the way, to provide credibility to their opposition, among others, to deficit spending, bank bailouts and President Obama’s health care plan.  These people even propose that all legislation passed by Congress should specify the precise clause in the Constitution giving Congress the power to pass such a law.  My thought as I listen to this discussion is that these people have no sense of history, no understanding of the evolutionary nature and adaptability of this democracy and wondered whether they were simply pawns of “those that have” in class struggle between those that have and those that have not – the epic struggle in this country and in the world.

The Constitution, as Justice Thurgood Marshall indicated in 1987 “was defective from the start, requiring several amendments, a civil war, and momentous social transformation to attain the system of constitutional government, and its respect for the individual freedoms and human rights, we hold as fundamental today.”  “The Constitution is a work in progress and will remain a story worth telling,” so summarizes Ms Greenhouse in her Op-Ed in the New York Times on Christmas Day, 2013.  The U.S. Constitution has its basis on Magna Carta and the freedoms it declares.  In the case of the Magna Carta it was the freedoms and rights for the Barons with land and Noblemen, not the common people.  In the U.S. Constitution, it was the freedoms and rights for white property owners, also not the common people.  If applied to current times, that would translate to people of wealth – corporations, and in general, the “one percent.  Is there any doubt why such conservative Republicans would want to return to the original interpretation of the constitution? 

The evolution and changes to the constitution has both been forward and backward depending on the position of people in Congress and also on whether there is a “right” leaning Supreme Court.  Take for example the 15th Amendment, it prohibits the federal and state governments from denying a citizen the right to vote based on that citizen's "race, color, or previous condition of servitude".  It was ratified on February 3, 1870, as the third and last of the Reconstruction Amendments.  It took 95 years and some fancy string pulling from President Johnson to make it happen through the Voting Rights Act of 1965!  So Justice Thurgood Marshall was correct, it has taken a long time for the government to obtain a respect for individual freedoms and human rights.  And, not to let it go to our heads on the wisdom and progress of our democratic evolution, but in June of this year, the Conservative leaning “Roberts Supreme Court” declared Section 4 of this Voting Rights Act unconstitutional. 

Section 4 contains a "coverage formula" that determines which jurisdictions are subject to the Act's other special provisions that eliminated the practice of limiting voting through discriminatory practices by certain States and Counties.  The map below shows where these discriminatory practices were more prevalent in 1964.  So guess what these States and Counties have begun to do ever since the repeal of Section 4?  They have begun to implement discriminatory practices again.  And guess what?  This practice has begun to expand, often is subtle ways, and this expansion is all in “red” States!


It bothers me when I overhear this type of discussion about returning to our “founding fathers” interpretation of the constitution.  Granted, they created something viable to work from, but I don’t think they indented to create a know-all be-all basis for government for all future time, they were revolutionaries not the gods of social structure! 

The only conclusion I can reach, given that none of the people having this discussion is in the 1% of the people of wealth, is that people like to “regurgitate” what they here in Fox News and biased radio commentators and never bother to investigate and analyze and really take political position best reflective of their true beliefs, status and desires.  These people do more damage to themselves and to the country than they can possibly realize.

No comments:

Post a Comment