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-- Inane ramblings (http://discussion.visorcentral.com/vcforum/showthread.php?threadid=16736)
quote:Except that the founders didn't believe those rights to have _anything_ necessarily to do with the Constitution. They were considered above it. The only reason the Bill Of Rights was included was to appease the anti-Federalists who feared that the new government would wind up being the same as the monarchies from which they separated. AAMOF, Hamilton didn't think it was a good idea to include them because he figured that if they were included, it might later lead to the government thinking that they could restrict them by interpretation, e.g. restricting freedom of the press by 'interpreting' who was or wasn't 'the press'. Much as I disagree with him on some things, he turned out to be eerily prophetic on that count. The compromises on that front were to add the 9th and 10th amendments trying to say that just because the Constitution didn't enumerate the rights didn't mean that the people didn't have them, and that if the Constitution didn't say the Feds could do it, it was supposed to be up to the states or the people. Unfortunately, a sheep-like public has allowed GovCo to exploit the Elastic Clause time and time again.
Originally posted by dick-richardson
I did not say or imply that the constitution was unquestionable. Hence my comment regarding infallibility. I said the constitution needed to be black and white, or at least interpreted as such, if it is going to be useful as the basis for gov't. Either we have the right to bear arms or we don't. Regarding Yorick's comment, judicial interpretation is merely the process by which the constitution's intentions are set out in black and white in a case by case manner.
quote:
Originally posted by Toby
Except that the founders didn't believe those rights to have _anything_ necessarily to do with the Constitution...
__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
Really, though, can we use the ideals of the founders as a basis for judicial review? As we get further and further away from the revolution, their writings speak less and less to our present situation. the religion joke is apt here--There's a wide range of thought as to what they actually thought and an even wider range of thought as to how they would have reacted to modern times. It's just not sufficient to be a standard.
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quote:
Originally posted by dietrichbohn
t's just not sufficient to be a standard.
__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
quote:
Originally posted by dick-richardson
It may well be, considering how well documented they are.
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quote:Yes, this is confusing. Your rights have nothing to do with being a citizen of the US government. You have them simply because you're here. That's part of the foundation of the government.
Originally posted by dick-richardson
This is beside the point, though I concur entirely. I was speaking to the foundation of the gov't, not to the foundation of my rights as a citizen of that gov't. Forgive the confusion.
quote:Bah...we're not talking about ancient Sanskrit or Egyptian heiroglyphics from thousands of years ago. We're talking about works written in English only a couple hundred years ago. Dammit, I've already admitted that Hamilton was right about something once today. Don't make me repeat myself. I wonder if the French socialists get into these sorts of debates.
Originally posted by dietrichbohn
yeah, I thought of that. But given the multiplicity of sources and the difficulty of interpreting them for today... it just feels like interpreting the apocrypha of the founding fathers is more like interpreting the apocrypha proper than a sound basis for judicial review...
quote:
Originally posted by Toby
Bah...we're not talking about ancient Sanskrit or Egyptian heiroglyphics from thousands of years ago. We're talking about works written in English only a couple hundred years ago.

quote:
Dammit, I've already admitted that Hamilton was right about something once today. Don't make me repeat myself. I wonder if the French socialists get into these sorts of debates.

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quote:Bah...those are just extensions of things that were already around. Hell, one of the founders edited his own Bible because he thought all that miraculous stuff was a crock, so don't tell me that atheism wasn't acceptable. And if they wanted to destroy your town, they'd just burn the thing to the ground. They didn't need nukes. Feh...spare me from the culture which addresses the symptoms and not the disease. Now there's a topic: Should cigarettes be banned since their only purpose is to kill?
Originally posted by dietrichbohn
[...] right, before nukes, planes, instant communication, acceptable atheism, and, er, assault rifles. [...]
"right, before nukes, planes, instant communication, acceptable atheism, and, er, assault rifles. "
Are you saying that none of the framers of the Constitution thought that progress would bring about societal change?
IMHO most of the dross that has been added, since then, to what they wrote merely absolves individuals of the responsibilities that come with being an American citizen.
A good example of this is the blame put on the "Banks" for the Great Depression. What about the millions of investors that tried to get rich quick, and the hundreds of thousands of farmers who borrowed too much money because they were offered low rates?
"...acceptable atheism..."
After what they did to Madelyn Murray O'Hare (sic), is it still acceptable to be a card carrying atheist, or we in a "Don't ask, don't tell" phase?
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"I am a debtor both to Greeks and to Barbarians, both to the wise and to the foolish."
YAHH! I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.
...Atheism wasn't acceptable, they had to call themselves "Deists." it was basically the same thing..
Atheism today is more accepted, but still a problem...
...The culture has changed in a significant way since the founding--communication and culture. TV, Radio, Internet, Britney Spears, Fox News, and on and on.
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"YAHH! I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.
...Atheism wasn't acceptable, they had to call themselves "Deists." it was basically the same thing..
Atheism today is more accepted, but still a problem...
...The culture has changed in a significant way since the founding--communication and culture. TV, Radio, Internet, Britney Spears, Fox News, and on and on."
But that's all surface stuff, none of it will be the same in 50 years (not even Britney Spears), the Constitution the way it was written addresses the same idealogical and moral needs as it did then. IMHO
Go back to work
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"I am a debtor both to Greeks and to Barbarians, both to the wise and to the foolish."
quote:
Originally posted by BobbyMike
But that's all surface stuff, none of it will be the same in 50 years (not even Britney Spears), the Constitution the way it was written addresses the same idealogical and moral needs as it did then. IMHO
quote:
Go back to work![]()
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quote:
Originally posted by Toby
Should cigarettes be banned since their only purpose is to kill?
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Eschew obfuscation!
quote:*sigh* Actually, *sigh* it *sigh* wasn't * sigh* an analogy *sigh*. bah! It was bah! this strange bah! new invention bah! called 'a joke' bah!. *shrug* They're *shrug* supposed to be *shrug* deliberate *shrug* stretches of reality *shrug* designed to *shrug* evoke a *shrug* pleasant feeling *shrug* and sometimes *shrug* laughter.
Originally posted by linguas
*sigh* bah! For this weak analogy to hold,
quote:
cigarette smokers would have to be buying the cigarettes just as a "deterent" to health
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or, on the other hand, gun lovers would be shooting continuously at everyone around them in the excersise of their "rights." *shrug*

quote:
edited to add dismissive *sigh*, *shrug*, etc. and to note what a waste of my valuable time this is.
quote:Keep in mind that I don't think there's been much of a shift in national thought and culture. The guys who did the Revolution were a relatively small part of society. Much like today, the majority of the population didn't want to rock the boat or question anything. Why do you think they chose a representative republic? They didn't want the average Joe who didn't have a clue screwing things up. Hmmm...direct democracy: pros and cons...discuss amongst yerselves. I'll start. Citizenship tests: why shouldn't natural born citizens have to take them like immigrant applicants do before they can vote?*
Originally posted by dietrichbohn
The communication and the rise of mass culture are not surface changes. They're a result of a massive shift in national thought and culture.
quote:
Originally posted by Toby
Citizenship tests: why shouldn't natural born citizens have to take them like immigrant applicants do before they can vote?

quote:
* Yes, I know the legal reasons. It's humor, son! Were you born without a funny bone?

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All right, time for some good old dubya bashing. What'dya think of the State of the Union. the guy goes into it with the highest approval ratings ever, capitalizes on it by getting a barb or two on the Dems ("But when those checks arrived in the mail most
Americans thought tax relief was just about right."), calling for more volunteerism, and the guy got a standing ovation for saying the word defecit!.
Any, so things are fine, right... but what possessed him to say this?
quote:
Some of these regimes have been pretty quiet since September 11. But we know their true nature. North Korea is a regime arming with missiles and weapons of mass destruction, while starving its citizens.
Iran aggressively pursues these weapons and exports terror, while an unelected few repress the Iranian people's hope for freedom.
, I want to know if you think that the pumping up we get from such phrases is worth their diplomatic toll, or if it's short-sighted jingoism.
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quote:Bah! Partisan horse puckey.
Originally posted by dietrichbohn
All right, time for some good old dubya bashing.
quote:
What'dya think of the State of the Union.
quote:
the guy goes into it with the highest approval ratings ever, capitalizes on it by getting a barb or two on the Dems ("But when those checks arrived in the mail most Americans thought tax relief was just about right."),
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calling for more volunteerism,
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and the guy got a standing ovation for saying the word defecit!.
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Any, so things are fine, right... but what possessed him to say this? [...]
quote:
Originally posted by Toby
*shrug* bah! Send the bill to Josh. *sigh*

*sniffle*__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
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