Posted by
Christopher Monroy on Friday, October 24, 2008 1:47:04 AM
The Constitution, whens the last time any of us actually read it? What about Declaration of Independence? Maybe we all should take some time out of lives and read it. maybe we need to go back and see what it was really like to live under tyranny and oppression.
First
off, The Constitution was written to not only be there framework of our
government but the DNA of our society as a whole. The Constitution was
designed and written to be a dead document and not a living document or
an evergreen document&183; If you want to reinterpret it then amend
it! The Constitution gives us the tools to do that in itself. Just like
DNA does.
With that said The Constitution is not a piece of
creative writing done in a 8th grade English Class and was not to be
interpreted in a "do what feels good way" and how you feel nor
throughout time. It has a purpose, and was written for that purpose. It
was written and meant to be interpreted by using common sense and and a
little wisdom that's it. It was written by men who are by far superior
to any of the ones in its institutions today. It was written and signed
then instituted AS IS...It says what it means and means what it says.
We
as Americans live in a Democratically elected Federalized
Representative Republic. We are not a nation of Law, that's the
definition of a police state. We are a nation of liberty and Justice.
Deal with it or leave... I don't always win and neither do you. But We
The People always win.
Don't try and pass some crap law with a
very long period of life that affects society as a whole to achieve you bogus points of view, and don't load it up with pork to get votes...
Screw these binding resolutions our congress tries to pass off as
meaningful laws and solutions. these are always only bandages to
"problems" and "issues" we encounter on our journey in this monumental
experiment we call The United States of America.
We where
designed at core to be a separatist nation yes, But we have evolved
past that for the most part throughout time but we still posses the
tool to go back to that if need be. Now I cant really say or give an
exact date when we evolved past the separatist attitude. But i can give
you the time wording. Its when we first stated and started saying The
United States "IS", instead of The United States "ARE". I'm sure that
if a day comes we will return to that if needed. But I as am sure most
Americans love this country as is.
Our Institution are of
perfect design, But the men and women stewarding them are not. They are
for the most part not interested in doing our bidding but solidifying
their power and making history rather then letting it happen naturally.
This is unacceptable and in its naked purist form treason and Idiocracy
not democracy.
At the same time we the people have only
ourselves to blame. we have elected and re elect the same people to
office time and time again even when these "leaders" fail us right in
front of our eyes because we feel we have no other option or we feel we
have no other choice.
We as Americans ALWAYS have a Choice...
look at each other and to others for leadership but we must look to
ourselves for leadership first and foremost. Only look to others if you
lack a burning ambition that you want and cant find in yourself then.
Then look to others to lead but never drop the reins. We must be sure
to remind them "Do as WE say do, not as YOU say and do".
John
Lock Wrote that those that govern are subject to a Social Contract
described as a broad class of republican theories which the people form
nations and maintain a social order. Such a social contract implies
that the people give up some rights and liberties to a government
and/or other authority in order to receive or jointly preserve social
order and to strengthen other natural rights, entitled rights and
liberties.
So by that token it is the right of the people to
change government when then government no longer serves the people. I
cant find who wrote that or when but its important.. i think it was
also John Locke
-Chris Monroy