So, like, a National myth-type thing? Every country has them, but not every country still wants those principles applied here. Ours is 1916, but even few die-hard Republicans think that Dev's ideas should be applied here today.
people always try to base their arguments on some authority, but to me anyone who tries to hold up the FF's as an example of how we should live today is, at the least, misguided. After all if we went back to the way the FF's had things we'd get
-slavery
-no rights for women
-no rights for workers
-only white men with a certain amount of wealth would have the right to vote
etc, etc, etc...
like any group of thought, you shouldn't throw it all out - they had some good ideas, but a lot of their ideas were crap and should be thrown in the rubbish bin
Well, no matter how much anyone says it, nobody actually wants to live exactly the way all those dead white guys thought was ideal. They didn't even agree on everything by a long stretch. We generally agree on the big things they agreed on - the stuff that made it into the Constitution. Personally I think Jefferson's vision of America would be an awesome way to live, but most 21st century Americans would probably find it too slow and too quiet. And I wouldn't hesitate to snip the slavery and still represent it as that ideal. We don't aspire to be exactly what they were. But the basic values of rule of law, of individual liberty, of
USA #1, of self-governance, those ideas may not have been exclusively
theirs, but they certainly had those ideas, and those are the ones that really matter.
(Before I say anything about the Constitution: I'm not a Constitutional scholar. I've read it some times, studied it a bit in high school, studied it a bit on my own, but I make no claim to be an expert. If I mistake anything, let me know.)
On every example galdre gave, it wouldn't be difficult to argue that those issues were incidental. That is, it's not as though disenfranchisement of women was written into the Constitution. It just went without saying, and it wasn't until later that we decided we had to explicitly affirm that women must be allowed to vote. The 3/5 count for slaves and the fugitive slave business was an acknowledgment of slavery, not an endorsement. Nobody ever acknowledged any "rights for workers" before the industrial revolution, more because the concept was foreign than because the founders were unsympathetic.
So while there was a bunch of crap the way they lived, that crap wasn't enshrined. They lived different day-to-day lives than we do, but they didn't prescribe day-to-day life. Jefferson's slaves and Franklin's France fetish can go in the rubbish bin.
And the thing is, our Constitution is pretty intact. We've added more than we've removed. That document is the only thing that
really links a 21st century American to giving a crap about anything John Adams thought about anything. Yeah, we change it around a bit sometimes, but for the most part, it's a really good document with a lot of really good ideas. The concern for what the founders wanted is essentially concern for whether we're correctly interpreting the
spirit of our government.
For example, I think it's right to invoke the founders in decrying the recent
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. While one could argue that restricting the "free speech" of a
commercial group violates the letter first amendment, it would be harder to argue that it violates the spirit. When you talk about that, you talk about the founders' intent.
As soon as somebody releases an edition of the Bible with amendments that eliminate the unjustified violence, the slavery, and the subjugation of women, as soon as somebody brings that book up to date
at all, then maybe a comparison will be worth entertaining. The US Constitution has been adjusted in my lifetime, and a total of four times in my parents' lifetimes. It's absurd to compare it to something as dead as the Bible. We're keeping it current.
What I find particularly ridiculous is the arguments over whether these men were Christians. First, I suspect self-identification as "Christian" meant something very different two hundred years ago, and second, all the arguments that it even matters are incoherent. They agreed, whatever their personal beliefs may have been, that the state would not involve religion. Whether or not they intended a nation based on some notion of "Christian values", which, for the most part, are pretty bland and universal, they clearly did not intend a nation based on
Christianity. The first amendment would've been worded differently if they had. Whether James Madison believed in the Trinity or worshiped goats naked down by the river is wholly irrelevant.
...I think that's enough of that.
I've always wondered what it would be like to sit it on a lecture from professor Obama on the constitution... ya know... considering he despises most of it.
Good grief. :rollseyes:
Wah wah Bush is a Nazi from the other direction. Let's be adults.