Constitutional hypocrisy
By Joel S. Hirschhorn
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Oct 16, 2009, 00:07
Millions of Americans are politically informed, smart,
active and angry. They see many wrongs in our political and government system. They
are fed up with politics as usual, meaning corrosive corruption of politicians
by corporate and other special interests. They see little good in either the
Democrat or Republican parties. And they almost always share a common bond:
They love and honor the US Constitution, even though they may see some flaws in
it. Yet they are also constitutional hypocrites.
Why do I say this? Because Americans are overwhelmingly
ignorant or misinformed about the constitutional paths for amending the
Constitution. Too many, in fact, seem to miss the profoundly important point
that the Founders and Framers knew that they had not created a perfect document
and blueprint for the US. That is why they placed two specific paths for
amending the Constitution.
But very few Americans know that only one of these amendment
mechanisms has been used in the entire history of the country. All the current
amendments were proposed by Congress. This should raise this serious question
today: Considering the very low regard for Congress by the overwhelming majority
of Americans, which is richly deserved, why should we have any confidence that
Congress would ever propose amendments that could kill so much of the
corruption that plagues our system, especially corruption of members of
Congress?
This situation was somehow anticipated by the Framers. They
could see that there was a strong possibility that Americans would eventually
lose confidence in the federal government. Which is why they put a second path
to amending the Constitution into the document. A path that has never been
used. This is the provision in Article V for a convention of state delegates
that could propose amendments, which like the proposals from Congress would
still have to be ratified by three-quarters of the states.
Being human, the Framers made a mistake. They gave Congress
the sole power to call or convene an Article V convention. The single explicit
requirement that was supposed to make Congress call a convention was that
two-thirds of state legislatures had to request an Article V convention. The
Framers did not, apparently, envision a future in which Congress would
stubbornly ignore state applications for a convention and get away with it,
despite language that demands that Congress “shall” call a convention when one
simple requirement is met. How could they envision that Congress would
blatantly disobey something so simply stated in the Constitution? How could
they anticipate such weak states, unwilling to make Congress respect their
constitutional right? The Framers clearly were not cynical enough.
The situation we face today is that all 50 states have
submitted over 750 applications for a convention, considerably more than enough
to trigger the constitutional mandate that Congress convene an Article V
convention. How could Congress get away with this kind of unconstitutional
behavior? Apparently, a combination of political corruption and public
ignorance has allowed Congress to get away with this. Even among the millions
of Americans that proudly declare their loyal allegiance to the Constitution,
there is no recognition that unless they demand that Congress obey Article V,
they are constitutional hypocrites. Congress has no right to unilaterally
decide that it can ignore and disobey a part of the Constitution.
Note that Congress never even created a mechanism where they
would collect in a public way the state applications for an Article V
convention, which helped create public ignorance of this situation. Add to this
that many, many organized vested interests on the left and right like their
ability to corrupt Congress to get what they want from it. This is why they
have frequently mounted campaigns to make the public fear a convention, because
such a convention might actually propose reforms that would remove corruption
of Congress by contributing money for campaigns and pursuing lobbying.
Ignorance and fear have combined to thwart public demands
that Congress obey the Constitution and convene the first Article V convention.
In fact, there is only one national, nonpartisan organization vainly attempting
to educate the public so that Congress would be forced to finally give us the
first Article V convention. Friends of the Article
V Convention is also the only group that has collected state applications
for a convention and made them publicly available.
Their efforts may be working. A new
online survey asked this: Based on your assessment of American politics,
would you support or oppose a call for a Constitutional Convention? Supporters
won easily at 65 percent.
It comes down to this, unless you get informed and join the
mission to make Congress obey the Constitution, you are a constitutional
hypocrite, not what the nation needs.
Contact Dr. Hirschhorn, a co-founder of FOAVC,
through delusionaldemocracy.com.
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