Pull Down That Statue of the U.S. ConstitutionBy David Swanson
Nobody, not racist warmakers, not imaginary non-racist warmakers, not founding fathers, not radical protesters should be
made into a deity, larger than life, in marble or bronze, on horseback or otherwise. Nobody is that flawless, and
nobody’s story so withstands the test of time. We need human-sized statues and memorials of whole movements.
The U.S. Constitution, along with the Declaration of Independence, has a whole marble building dedicated to its worship:
the National Archives in D.C., plus the Constitution Center in Philadelphia. It’s generally taught in U.S. schools as
something in the past, not something to be improved upon — hardly even to be questioned.
A new book, which should be taught in every school, takes a different approach. Fault Lines in the Constitution: The Framers, Their Fights, and the Flaws That Affect Us Today by Cynthia Levinson and Sanford Levinson gives the Constitution its due, praises its merits, and questions what might
have been done better from the start and what could be done better now, these many years later. The Constitution has
hardly been tweaked. It’s one of the oldest, least amended, and most difficult to amend. Areas where it broke ground
have been widely duplicated. Areas where other countries and U.S. states have found successful innovations have
generally not made it into the U.S. Constitution.
Fault Lines examines issues like legislative gridlock (the difficulty of creating new laws), the unequal power given to the
residents of small states, the presidential veto power, the supermajority required in the Senate before anything can be
voted on, gerrymandering, the lack of representation for Washington, D.C., or other U.S. colonies in the Caribbean and
Pacific, the absence of direct democracy (governance by public initiative), voter ID laws, poll hours, voter
registration restrictions, age and birth and residency requirements to run for Congress or President, the electoral
college, and the amendment process.
For each of these issues, the authors examine what the Constitution says, how it came to say that, what the results have
been, what other Constitutions say, and what changes might be considered. The content is all very straightforward and
factual. The authors lean so far toward acceptable unquestioned rational objectivity as to glorify John McCain’s role in
the mass-murder of nearly four million people in Vietnam and to warn of dangers from “our enemies.” Yet the best blurb
they could get on the back cover has Dan Rather calling the book “opinionated, maybe controversial.” Presumably, the
non-opinionated threshold can only be crossed by total brain death.
Fault Lines proposes numerous positive steps for amending the Constitution, including amending the Constitution’s rules for
amending the Constitution. But, bizarrely, it views the central problem in Washington, D.C., as “gridlock,” as the lack
of more laws. This, the authors claim, is the cause of the unpopularity of the U.S. government. But have they examined
the popularity of the laws that do get passed? If they did, would they still think more laws was the answer? Have they
noticed that when it comes to military spending or anything else that oligarchs aren’t organized against, nothing is
less present than gridlock?
How do you write a book about a government almost completely corrupted by money and not mention the money? Of course,
the Constitution did not sanction bribery, but it is treated as though it did, and that standard was sufficient for
including all kinds of topics in the book. Also not making an appearance: public financing of elections, democratization
of media, free air time for candidates, open debates, open ballot access, verifiable vote counting, the restriction of
human rights to humans rather than corporations, or the addition of rights for non human creatures and ecosystems.
Also, this whole book treats states of emergency as theoretical, as if the U.S. government had not made such a state permanent.
Still, I’d rather broach those subjects with someone who had studied this book than with someone who had just studied
the usual hagiographic texts taught in U.S. schools.
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David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist, and radio host. He is director of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign coordinator for RootsAction.org. Swanson's books include War Is A Lie. He blogs at DavidSwanson.org and WarIsACrime.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. He is a 2015, 2016, 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Nominee.
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