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The
Commandments: The Constitution And Its Worshippers By Jill
Lepore in the New Yorker
It is written in an
elegant, clerical hand, on four sheets of parchment, each
two feet wide and a bit more than two feet high, about the
size of an eighteenth-century newspaper but finer, and made
not from the pulp of plants but from the hide of an animal.
Some of the ideas it contains reach across ages and oceans,
to antiquity; more were, at the time, newfangled. We
the People, the first three words of the preamble, are
giant and Gothic: they slant left, and, because most of the
rest of the words slant right, the writing zigzags. It took
four months to debate and to draft, including two weeks to
polish the prose, neat work done by a committee of style. By
Monday, September 17, 1787, it was ready. That afternoon,
the Constitution of the United States of America was read
out loud in a chamber on the first floor of
Pennsylvanias State House, where the delegates to the
Federal Convention had assembled to subscribe their names to
a new system of government, to form a more perfect
Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility,
provide for the common Defence, promote the general Welfare,
and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our
Posterity.
Then Benjamin Franklin
rose from his chair, wishing to be heard. At eighty-one, he
was too tired to make another speech, but he had written
down what he wanted to say, and James Wilson, decades
Franklins junior, read his remarks, which were
addressed to George Washington, presiding. Mr.
President, he began, I confess that there are
several parts of this constitution which I do not at present
approve, but I am not sure I shall never approve them.
Franklin liked to swaddle argument with affability, as if an
argument were a colicky baby; the more forceful his
argument, the more tightly he swaddled it. What he offered
was a well-bundled statement about changeability. I find
that there are errors here, he explained, but, who knows,
someday I might change my mind; I often do. For having
lived long, I have experienced many instances of being
obliged by better Information, or fuller Consideration, to
change Opinions even on important Subjects, which I once
thought right, but found to be otherwise. That people
so often believe themselves to be right is no proof that
they are; the only difference between the Church of Rome and
the Church of England is that the former is infallible while
the latter is never wrong. He hoped that every member
of the Convention who may still have Objections to it, would
with me, on this occasion doubt a little of his own
Infallibility, and to make manifest our Unanimity, put his
name to this Instrument. Although the document had its
faults, he doubted that any other assembly would, at just
that moment, have been able to draft a better one.
Thus I consent, Sir, to this Constitution because I
expect no better, and because I am not sure, that it is not
the best.
Three delegates
refused to sign, but at the bottom of the fourth page appear
the signatures of the rest. What was written on parchment
was then made public, printed in newspapers and broadsheets,
often with We the People set off in extra-large
type. Meanwhile, the secretary of the convention carried the
original to New York to present it to Congress, which met,
at the time, at City Hall. Without either endorsing or
opposing it, Congress agreed to forward the Constitution to
the states, for ratification. The original Constitution was
simply filed away and, later, shuffled from one place to
another. When City Hall underwent renovations, the
Constitution was transferred to the Department of State. The
following year, it moved with Congress to Philadelphia and,
in 1800, to Washington, where it was stored at the Treasury
Department until it was shifted to the War Office. In 1814,
three clerks stuffed it into a linen sack and carried it to
a gristmill in Virginia, which was fortunate, because the
British burned Washington down. In the eighteen-twenties,
when someone asked James Madison where it was, he had no
idea.
In 1875, the
Constitution found a home in a tin box in the bottom of a
closet in a new building that housed the Departments of
State, War, and Navy. In 1894, it was sealed between glass
plates and locked in a safe in the basement. In 1921,
Herbert Putnam, a librarian, drove it across town in his
Model T. In 1924, it was put on display in the Library of
Congress, for the first time ever. Before then, no one had
thought of that. It spent the Second World War at Fort Knox.
In 1952, it was driven in an armored tank under military
guard to the National Archives, where it remains, in a
shrine in the rotunda, alongside the Declaration of
Independence and the Bill of Rights.
Ours is one of the
oldest written constitutions in the world and the first,
anywhere, to be submitted to the people for their approval.
As Madison explained, the Constitution is of no more
consequence than the paper on which it is written, unless it
be stamped with the approbation of those to whom it is
addressed... THE PEOPLE THEMSELVES. Lately, some say,
its been thrown in the trash. Stop Shredding Our
Constitution! Tea Party signs read. FOUND in a
DUMPSTER behind the Capitol, read another, on which
was pasted the kind of faux-parchment Constitution you can
buy in the souvenir shop at any history-for-profit heritage
site. I bought mine at Bunker Hill years back. It is printed
on a single sheet of foolscap, and the writing is so small
that its illegible; then again, the knickknack
Constitution isnt meant to be read. The National
Archives sells a poster-size scroll, twenty-two inches by
twenty-nine inches, that is a readable facsimile of the
first page, for twelve dollars and ninety-five cents. This
item is currently out of stock.
Parchment is
beautiful. As an object, the Constitution has more in common
with the Dead Sea Scrolls than with what we now think of as
writing: pixels floating on a screen, words suspended in a
digital cloud, bubbles of text. R we the ppl? Our words are
vaporous. Not so the Constitution. I have this crazy
idea that the Constitution actually means something,
one bumper sticker reads. Ye olde parchment serves as
shorthand for everything old, real, durable, American, and
truea talisman held up against the uncertainties and
abstractions of a meaningless, changeable, paperless
age.
You can keep a
constitution in your pocket, as Thomas Paine once pointed
out. Pocket constitutions have been around since the
seventeen-nineties. The Cato Institute prints a handsome
Constitution, the size and appearance of a passport,
available for four dollars and ninety-five cents. The
National Center for Constitutional Studies, founded by W.
Cleon Skousen, a rogue Mormon, John Bircher, and all-purpose
conspiracy theorist, prints a stapled paper version, the
dimensions of a datebook, thirty cents if you order a gross.
I got mine, free, at a Tea Party meeting in Boston. Andrew
Johnson, our first impeached President, was said to have
waved around his pocket constitution so often that he
resembled a newsboy hawking the daily paper. Crying
constitution is a minor American art form. This is my
copy of the Constitution, John Boehner, the Speaker of
the House, said at a Tea Party rally in Ohio last year,
holding up a pocket-size pamphlet. And Im going
to stand here with the Founding Fathers, who wrote in the
preamble, We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by
their creator with certain unalienable rights including
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Not
to nitpick, but this is not the preamble to the
Constitution. It is the second sentence of the Declaration
of Independence.
At some forty-four
hundred words, not counting amendments, our Constitution is
one of the shortest in the world, but few Americans have
read it. A national survey taken this summer reported that
seventy-two per cent of about a thousand people polled had
never once read all forty-four hundred words. This proves no
obstacle to cherishing it; eighty-six per cent of
respondents said that the Constitution has an impact
on their daily lives. The point of such surveys is
that if more of us read the Constitution all of us would be
better off, because we would demand that our elected
officials abide by it, and wed be able to tell when
they werent doing so and punish them accordingly.
This is what happens when our Constitution starts
shaking her fist, Sarah Palin tweeted in October,
about calls for an end to federal funding for National
Public Radio, which she charged with violating the First
Amendment by firing the commentator Juan Williams. The
American peoples voice was heard at the ballot
box, Boehner said on Election Night, and what the
American people want is a government that honors the
Constitution. Rand Paul thanked his parents, in his
victory speech, for teaching me to respect our
Constitution. Michelle Bachmann told ABC News that she
plans to offer Constitution classes in the House. Glenn Beck
asked his listeners to urge their representatives to join
Bachmanns constitutional caucus. Sharron Angle said
that she took comfort in the knowledge that Harry Reid
carries a copy of the Constitution in his breast pocket:
We want our senator to remember our Constitution, to
read our Constitution, and to consider every bill that he
votes for in light of that Constitution. The Tea
Partys triumph, she said, amounts to this:
Weve inspired a nation to take a look at that
document and begin to read it. Last week, when new
lawmakers were sworn in, the Constitution was read out loud
in the House of Representatives. It is the first time this
has ever happened.
If you havent
read the Constitution lately, do. Chances are youll
find that it doesnt exactly explain itself. Consider
Article III, Section 3: The Congress shall have Power
to declare the Punishment of Treason, but no Attainder of
Treason shall work Corruption of Blood, or Forfeiture except
during the Life of the Person attainted. This is
simply puthats off to the committee of stylebut
what does it mean? A legal education helps. Lawyers
wont stumble over attainder, even if the
rest of us will. Part of the problem might appear to be the
distance between our locution and theirs. Corruption
of Blood? The documents learnedness and the
changing meaning of words isnt the whole problem,
though, because the charge that the Constitution is too
difficult for ordinary people to understandnot because
of its vocabulary but because of the complexity of its
ideaswas brought nearly the minute it was made public.
Anti-Federalists charged that the Constitution was so
difficult to read that it amounted to a conspiracy against
the understanding of a plain man, that it was willfully
incomprehensible. The constitution of a wise and free
people, ought to be as evident to simple reason, as the
letters of our alphabet, an Anti-Federalist wrote.
A constitution ought to be, like a beacon, held up to
the public eye, so as to be understood by every man,
Patrick Henry argued. He believed that what was drafted in
Philadelphia was of such an intricate and complicated
nature, that no man on this earth can know its real
operation. Anti-Federalists had more complaints, too,
which is why ratificationa process wonderfully
recounted by Pauline Maier in Ratification: The People
Debate the Constitution, 1787-1788was touch and go.
Rhode Island, the only state to hold a popular referendum on
the Constitution, rejected it. Elsewhere, in state ratifying
conventions, the Constitution passed by the narrowest of
margins: eighty-nine to seventy-nine in Virginia, thirty to
twenty-seven in New York, a hundred and eighty-seven to a
hundred and sixty-eight in Massachusetts.
Nor were complaints
that the Constitution is obscure silenced by ratification.
In a 1798 essay called The Key of Libberty,
William Manning, the plainest of mena New England
farmer, a Revolutionary veteran, and the father of thirteen
childrenexpressed a view widely held by Jeffersonian
Republicans: The Federal Constitution by a fair
construction is a good one prinsapaly, but I have no dout
but that the Convention who made it intended to destroy our
free governments by it, or they neaver would have spent 4
Months in making such an inexpliset thing. Franklin
called the Constitution an instrument; he meant
that it was a legal instrument, like a will. Manning thought
that it was another kind of instrument: It was made
like a Fiddle, with but few Strings, but so that the ruling
Majority could play any tune upon it they
please.
For all the charges
that the Constitution was difficult to understand, between
1789 and 1860 only one state, California, required that it
be taught in school. The first textbooks examining the
Constitution werent printed until the
eighteen-twenties, and they were for law students. Three
volumes of Commentaries on the Constitution, written by
Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story, appeared in 1833. The
next year, Story published an abridgment for schools,
explaining that the Constitution is the language of
the People, to be judged of according to the common sense,
and not by mere theoretical reasoning. That may be,
but Storys schoolbook is a hundred and sixty-six pages
of close legal argument.
You cant explain
a thing without interpreting it. Story, a Northerner and a
nationalist, emphasized the Supreme Courts role in
arbitrating disputes between the federal government and the
states. In those years, the disputes mainly had to do with
slavery; Southerners who glossed the Constitution stressed
state sovereignty. In 1846, William Hickey published a
constitutional concordance. He got the idea from Polks
Vice-President, George Dallas, who believed the Constitution
prohibited Congress from interfering with the extension of
slavery into Western territories. The U.S. Senate, over
which Dallas presided, ordered twelve thousand copies of
Hickeys pro-slavery vade mecum. It does not appear to
have elevated congressional conversation. In 1847, the
governor of New York, Silas Wright, observed, No one
familiar with the affairs of our government, can have failed
to notice how large a proportion of our statesmen appear
never to have read the Constitution of the United States
with a careful reference to its precise language and exact
provisions, but rather, as occasion presents, seem to
exercise their ingenuity... to stretch both to the line of
what they, at the moment, consider
expedient.
By the middle of the
nineteenth century, nearly all white men could vote. Not all
of them could read, and not all of them owned a copy of the
Constitution, but Daniel Webster insisted, Almost
every man in the country is capable of reading it.
Whether they did or not is hard to say. Some did more than
read it. William Lloyd Garrison burned the Constitution at
an abolitionist rally in Massachusetts, calling it a
covenant with death, an agreement with hell.
John Brown wrote his own constitution, replacing We
the people with We, citizens of the United
States, and the oppressed people... who have no
rights. It was found on Browns body when he was
captured at Harpers Ferry. William Grimes, a fugitive slave,
had a different idea about what to do with the Constitution:
If it were not for the stripes on my back which were
made while I was a slave, I would in my will leave my skin
as a legacy to the government, desiring that it might be
taken off and made into parchment and then bind the
Constitution of glorious, happy and free America. And
then the American people went to war, over their different
ways of reading letters inked on parchment and wounds cut
into the skin of a black mans back.
Find It in the
Constitution, the Tea Party rally signs read.
Forty-four hundred words and God is not one of
them, as Benjamin Rush complained to John Adams, hoping for
an emendation: Perhaps an acknowledgement might be
made of his goodness or of his providence in the proposed
amendments. It was not. White isnt
in the Constitution, but Senator Stephen Douglas, of
Illinois, was still sure that the federal government was
made by white men, for the benefit of white men and
their posterity forever. What about black men?
They are not included, and were not intended to be
included, the Supreme Court ruled, in 1857. Railroads,
slavery, banks, women, free markets, privacy, health care,
wiretapping: not there. There is nothing in the United
States Constitution that gives the Congress, the President,
or the Supreme Court the right to declare that white and
colored children must attend the same public schools,
Senator James Eastland, of Mississippi, said, after Brown v.
Board of Education. Have You Ever Seen the Words
Forced Busing in the Constitution? read a sign carried
in Boston in 1975. Where in the Constitution is the
separation of church and state? Christine
ODonnell asked Chris Coons during a debate in October.
When Coons quoted the First Amendment, ODonnell was
flabbergasted: Thats in the First
Amendment? Left-wing bloggers slapped their thighs;
Coons won the election in a landslide. But the phrase
separation of church and state really isnt
in the Constitution or in any of the amendments.
A great deal of what
many Americans hold dear is nowhere written on those four
pages of parchment, or in any of the amendments. What has
made the Constitution durable is the same as what makes it
demanding: the fact that so much was left out. Felix
Frankfurter once wrote that the Constitution is most
significantly not a document but a stream of history.
The difference between forty-four hundred words and a stream
of history goes a long way toward accounting for the panics,
every few decades or so, that the Constitution is in crisis,
and that America must return to constitutional principles
through constitutional education. The two sides in this
debate are always charging each other with not knowing the
Constitution, but they are talking about different kinds of
knowledge.
Well keep
clinging to our Constitution, our guns, and our
religion, Palin said last spring, and you can
keep the change. Behind the word change is
the word evolution. In 1913, Woodrow Wilson
insisted, All that progressives ask or desire is
permissionin an era when development,
evolution, is the scientific wordto
interpret the Constitution according to the Darwinian
principle; all they ask is a recognition of the fact that a
nation is a living thing. Conservatives called for a
rejection of this nonsense about the living
Constitution. In 1916, the Sons of the American
Revolution campaigned for Constitution Day. In 1919, the
National Association for Constitutional Government published
some fifty thousand copies of a pocket edition of the
Constitution. (The associations other publications
included an investigation into the influence of socialists
in American colleges.) In 1921, Warren Harding called the
Constitution divinely inspired; it was Harding who ordered
the Librarian of Congress to take the parchment out of
storage and put it into a shrine. Soon, the National
Security League was distributing free copies of reactionary
books written by Mr. Constitution, James
Montgomery Beck, who was Hardings solicitor general.
The Constitution is in graver danger today than at any
other time in the history of America, Beck
warned.
By 1923, twenty-three
states required constitutional instruction and, by 1931,
forty-three. Studying Middletowns high school in 1929,
the sociologists Robert and Helen Lynd found these classes
worrying: 70 percent of the boys and 75 percent of the
girls answered false to the statement A
citizen of the United States should be allowed to say
anything he pleases, even to advocate violent revolution, if
he does no violent act himself. Still, such
instruction was by no means uniformly conservative. The
author of an elementary-school textbook published in 1930
wrote, This Constitution is yours, boys and girls of
America, to cherish and to obey, to preserve and, if need
be, to better.
The New Deal
intensified debate over the nature of the Constitution, a
debate whose cramped terms weve inherited.
Hopeful people today wave the flag, Thurman
Arnold, later F.D.R.s assistant attorney general,
wrote in 1935. Timid people wave the Constitution...
the only bulwark against change. Obama supporters wore
HOPE and CHANGE T-shirts; Tea
Partiers carry the Constitution. Liberals argue for
progress; conservatives argue for a return to the
nations founding principles. Change is a founding
principle, too, but people divided by schism are blind to
what they share: one half, infallible; the other, never
wrong.
Pop quiz, from a test
administered by the Hearst Corporation in 1987.
True or False: The
following phrases are found in the U.S.
Constitution:
- From each
according to his ability, to each according to his
need.
- The consent
of the governed.
- Life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
- All men are
created equal.
- Of the
people, by the people, for the people.
This is whats
known as a trick question. None of these phrases are in the
Constitution. Eight in ten Americans believed, like Boehner,
that all men are created equal was in the
Constitution. Even more thought that of the people, by
the people, for the people was in the Constitution.
(Abraham Lincoln, Gettysburg, 1863.) Nearly five in ten
thought From each according to his ability, to each
according to his need was written in Philadelphia in
1787. (Karl Marx, 1875.)
About a quarter of
American voters are what political scientists call,
impoliticly, know nothings, meaning that they
possess almost no general knowledge of the workings of their
government, at least according to studies conducted by the
American National Election Survey since 1948, during which
time the know-nothing rate has barely budged. Critics,
including James L. Gibson and Gregory A. Caldeira, have
charged that these studies systemically overestimate
political ignorance. A 2000 survey asked interviewees to
identify William Rehnquists job. The only correct
answer was the Chief Justice of the United States
Supreme Court. Answers like Chief Justice,
Justice, Chief Justice of the Court,
and anything breezier (a Supreme Court judge who is
the head honcho) were marked incorrect. Why the
ability to name Rehnquists job is necessary to good
citizenship is never made clear. Those surveys seem to have
had a point to provethey have been used to argue, for
instance, that the public ought not to play a role in
electing or selecting judgesas did surveys conducted
during the Cold War which appear to have been designed to
elicit the headline-generating news that Americans are so
ignorant of the Constitution that they can be gulled into
confusing it with Marxism. Americans have known the
Constitution best when they have revered it least,
Michael Kammen wrote, in an extraordinarily rich and
rewarding history of the Constitution, published in 1986.
The Hearst report reached quite a different conclusion:
Those Americans who are most knowledgeable about the
Constitution are the least likely to support changes.
In 1985 and 1986, Reagans Attorney General, Edwin
Meese, made a series of speeches advocating originalism.
Reagan nominated Antonin Scalia to the Supreme Court in June
of 1986. The Hearst survey was conducted that fall and
released in February of 1987. That May, Thurgood Marshall
said, in a bicentennial address, I do not believe that
the meaning of the Constitution was forever
fixed at the Philadelphia Convention. That
July, Reagan nominated Robert Bork to the Court, and,
despite the failure of Borks nomination, originalism
never looked back.
Last February, Meese
and a coalition of prominent conservatives, including
leaders of the Heritage Foundation, The National Review, and
the Federalist Society, met in Virginia to sign The
Mount Vernon Statement. It calls for a coalition of
social, economic, and national-security conservatives to
return the nation to the principles stated in its founding
documents, now under sustained attack in
our culture, our universities and our politics:
The self-evident truths of 1776 have been supplanted
by the notion that no such truths exist. The federal
government today ignores the limits of the Constitution,
which is increasingly dismissed as obsolete and
irrelevant. The Mount Vernon Statement was modelled on
the Sharon Statement, signed in 1960. The threat to the
Constitution, in the Sharon Statement, was a
menace, and it came from the forces of
international Communism. In the Mount Vernon version,
the threat is change: change is an empty
promise and a dangerous deception, and it
comes from the American peoplethat is, from those of
us who are to be found in the nations universities and
the federal government. The Sharon Statement was signed in
William F. Buckley, Jr.,s home, in Sharon,
Connecticut. The organizers of the Mount Vernon Statement
wanted to meet at Mount Vernon, but the Mount Vernon
Ladies Association turned them down. Still, the
statement was printed on fake parchment, and a guy dressed
up as George Washington handed out Sharpies.
Originalists argue
that originalism is the only faithfully democratic mode of
constitutional interpretation. Laws are passed by the
elected representatives of the people; the courts protect
the will of the people by making sure those laws adhere to
the Constitution, as originally drafted and popularly
ratified. Any other mode of jurisprudence is overstepping,
and amounts to an abuse of judicial power because it favors
the rulings of unelected judgesthe caprice of
contemporary courtsagainst the will of the people, as
embodied by the Constitution.
Liberal legal scholars
have tried different approaches in countering this argument.
One has been to point out that the American people whose
will originalism protects are dead, and that, even if they
werent, they arent us. If democratic
legitimacy is the measure of a sound constitutional
interpretive practice, the Columbia law professor
Jamal Greene has written, then Justice Scalia needs to
give an account of why and how rote obedience to the
commitments of voters two centuries distant and wildly
different in racial, ethnic, sexual, and cultural
composition can be justified on democratic
grounds.
Another approach has
been to argue that originalism, so far from being original,
in the sense of being the same age as those four sheets of
parchment in the National Archives, is quite modern.
Consider the Second Amendment: A well regulated
Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,
the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be
infringed. Historical evidence can be marshalled to
support different interpretations of these words, and it
certainly has been. But the Yale law professor Reva Siegel
has argued that, for much of the twentieth century, legal
scholars, judges, and politicians, both conservative and
liberal, commonly understood the Second Amendment as
protecting the right of citizens to form militiasas
narrow a right as the protection provided by the Third
Amendment against the governments forcing you to
quarter troops in your house. Beginning in the early
nineteen-seventies, lawyers for the National Rifle
Association, concerned about gun-control laws passed in the
wake of the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr., and
Robert F. Kennedy, argued that the Second Amendment protects
the right of individuals to bear armsand that this
represented not a changing interpretation but a restoration
of its original meaning. The N.R.A., which had never before
backed a Presidential candidate, backed Ronald Reagan in
1980. As late as 1989, even Bork could argue that the Second
Amendment works to guarantee the right of states to
form militias, not for individuals to bear arms. In an
interview in 1991, the former Chief Justice Warren Burger
said that the N.R.A.s interpretation of the Second
Amendment was one of the greatest pieces of fraud, I
repeat the word fraud, on the American public by
special interest groups that I have ever seen in my
lifetime.
The individual-rights
argument warrants serious debate. But, instead, on the
political stage, people who disagreed with it were accused
of failing to respect the Constitution, or of being too
stupid to understand it. In 1995, Newt Gingrich wrote,
Liberals neither understand nor believe in the
Constitutional right to bear arms. Who are the
know-nothings now? Liberal scholars and jurists. In 2005,
Mark Levin, a talk-radio host who worked under Meese in the
Reagan Justice Department, wrote that Thurgood Marshall, who
had challenged originalism, couldnt have had a
weaker grasp of the Constitution. In 2008, the
N.R.A.s argument about the Second Amendment was made
law in the District of Columbia v. Heller, which ruled as
unconstitutional a gun-control law passed in DC in 1968.
This decision, Siegel argues, has more to do with Charlton
Heston than with James Madison.
In 2004, Larry D.
Kramer, the dean of Stanford Law School, argued not against
originalism but against judicial review (a power wielded, in
recent years, by an originalist Court). Kramer offered
another jurisprudence, based on different historical claims:
popular constitutionalism. The Supreme Court is not
the highest authority in the land on constitutional
law, Kramer wrote. We are. Critics charge
that its unclear how popular constitutionalism works,
but the opposition of white activists to school
desegregation, the N.R.A.s interpretation of the
Second Amendment, and Iowans voting out of office judges who
supported same-sex marriage would all seem to fit into this
category; and if recent legislation is overturned by an
incoming Congress elected by people who believe that
legislation to be unconstitutional, that will be popular
constitutionalism, too.
Originalism is
popular. Four in ten Americans favor it. Not all Tea
Partiers are originalists, but the movement is fairly
described as a populist movement inclined toward
originalism. The populist appeal of originalism overlaps
with that of heritage tourism: both collapse the distance
between past and present and locate virtue in an imaginary
eighteenth century where the people and
the élite are perfectly aligned in unity
of purpose. Originalism, which has no purchase anywhere but
here, has a natural affinity with some varieties of
Protestantism, and the United States differs from all other
Western democracies in the far greater proportion of its
citizens who believe in the literal truth of the Bible.
Although originalism is a serious and influential mode of
constitutional interpretation, Greene has argued that it is
also a political product manufactured by the New Right and
marketed to the public by talk radio, cable television, and
the Internet, where it enjoys a competitive advantage over
other varieties of constitutional interpretation, partly
because its the easiest.
An unexamined question
at the heart of this debate, then, is how people actually
read the Constitution. Many people are now reading it, with
earnestness and dedication, often in reading groups modelled
on Bible study groups. The Tea Party Express endorses
The Constitution Made Easy, a translation into
colloquial English made by Michael Holler, and available on
Hollers Web site for eight dollars and ninety-five
cents. Holler studied at Biola University, a Christian
college offering a Biblically centered education. Much of
his translation, which appears side by side with the
original, is forthright. His Article III, Section 3, reads,
Congress will have Power to declare the punishment for
treason, but the penalty may not include confiscating a
persons property after that person is executed,
and, in an end note, he supplies the helpful information
that Corruption of Blood refers to the
common-law confiscation of the property of executed
traitors, which had the effect of punishing the
traitors heirs, or bloodline. Hollers
Second Amendment is less straightforward; he inverts the
language of the original, so that it reads, The people
have the right to own and carry firearms, and it may not be
violated because a well-equipped Militia is necessary for a
State to remain secure and free. Holler is an
N.R.A.-certified handgun instructor who, in addition to
offering courses on the Constitution, sells classes in how
to obtain a concealed-handgun permit.
U.S. Constitution for
Dummies, published in 2009, was written by Michael Arnheim,
an English barrister. The book includes a foreword by Ted
Cruz, a nationally prominent defender of the death penalty
and a former solicitor general of Texas who successfully
defended a monument to the Ten Commandments at the Texas
State Capitol. More recently, Cruz authored an amicus brief,
on behalf of thirty-one states, supporting the
anti-gun-control argument in the District of Columbia v.
Heller. Arnheims plain-English guide
translates portions of the Constitution (e.g., Due
process is really just an old-fashioned way of saying
proper procedure ), with an emphasis on
contemporary controversies, which he frames as battles
between judge-made law and the proper workings
of democracy; the right to privacy, for instance, is an
example of judge-made law. Arnheim is not stinting with his
views. In my opinion, he writes, same-sex
marriage in Massachusetts is unconstitutional, and the other
states therefore dont have to recognize such unions. I
am available if anyone wants to take this issue to the U.S.
Supreme Court!
Two more new guides
include both scholarly annotations and historical essays.
Jack Rakove, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian from
Stanford, has prepared The Annotated U.S. Constitution and
Declaration of Independence. Rakove wrote an amicus brief in
Heller, opposing the position argued by Cruz, but here he
goes no farther than to call the evidence for Cruzs
position tenuous. Richard Beeman, who teaches
history at the University of Pennsylvania, is the editor of
a small-trim, twelve-dollar paperback, The Penguin Guide to
the United States Constitution. In his commentary on Heller,
the laudably equable Beeman summarizes the arguments; shrugs
(The meaning of the Second Amendment is subject to
varying interpretations); and moves on. Both of these
excellent guides are valuable and judicious. Neither defines
Corruption of Blood.
I never knew
what the Constitution really is until I read Mr. Becks
book, a sly critic of James Montgomery Beck once
wrote. You can read it without thinking. Critics
of originalism are in a bind. When ideas are reduced to
icons, which, unfortunately, is the ordinary state of
affairs, constitutionalism and originalism look exactly the
same: the faux parchment stands for both. But originalism
and constitutionalism are not the same, and the opposite of
original is not unconstitutional. Originalism is one method
of constitutional interpretation. Popular originalism is
originalism scrawled with Magic Markers, on poster board.
The N.R.A. opposed gun-control laws. It argued, at length,
and over years, that those laws violated the Second
Amendment. Eventually, the Supreme Court agreed. So far, the
Tea Partys passions ignite faster and are stated more
simply. A sign at a Tea Party rally in Temecula, CA:
Impeach Obama: Hes
Unconstitutional.
The Constitution is
ink on parchment. It is forty-four hundred words. And it is,
too, the accreted set of meanings that have been made of
those words, the amendments, the failed amendments, the
struggles, the debatesthe course of eventsover
more than two centuries. It is not easy, but it is
everyones. It is the rule of law, the opinions of the
Court, the stripes on William Grimess back, a shrine
in the National Archives, a sign carried on the Washington
Mall, and the noise all of us make when we disagree. If the
Constitution is a fiddle, it is also all the music that has
ever been played on it. Some of that music is beautiful;
much of it is humdrum; some of it sounds like
hell.
[Jill Lepore is
the David Woods Kemper 41 Professor of American
History and chair of the History and Literature Program at
Harvard University. She received her Ph.D. in American
Studies from Yale in 1995, an M.A. in American Culture from
the University of Michigan in 1990 and a B.A. in English
from Tufts University in 1987. She is an elected member of
the Society of American Historians and a Distinguished
Lecturer of the Organization of American Historians. A
co-founder of the magazine, Common-place, she is currently
working on a biography of Benjamin Franklin and his sister,
Jane Mecom. She is also a staff writer at The New Yorker.
Her books include New York Burning (2005), a finalist for
the Pulitzer Prize in History and winner of the
Anisfield-Wolf Award for the best non-fiction book about
race; A is for American (2002); and The Name of War (1998),
winner of the Bancroft Prize and the Ralph Waldo Emerson
Award and a finalist for the J. Anthony Lukas Award. Her New
Yorker essay about Noah Webster's dictionary appears as the
introduction to Websterisms (2008). Blindspot, her first
novel, written jointly with Jane Kamensky, was published in
2008. Lepore put her biography of Benjamin Franklin and Jane
Mecom aside for The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea
Partys Revolution and the Battle Over American History
(2010).]
Source: sapper.blogspot.com/2011/01/have-you-ever-been-woodshedded-welcome.html
©2007-2011,
www.TheCitizensWhoCare.org/constitution-newyorker.html
or http://bit.ly/qcnzy6
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