SARAH PALIN BELIEVES THE CONSTITUTION IS FLAWED.
Yesterday, I discussed Rush Limbaugh's odd defense of slavery in an attempt to demagogue a 2001 statement from Obama that the original Constitution was "flawed." Obama also said that the Constitution is "a remarkable political document that paved the way for where we are now," a statement I would agree with: the strength of the Constitution is that while it did not always make good on the liberty it promised, it was amenable to changes that would fulfill that promise. Nevertheless, Limbaugh asks:
How is he going to -- I asked this earlier -- how is he gonna place his hand on the Bible and swear that he, Barack Hussein Obama, will uphold the Constitution that he feels reflects the nation's fundamental flaw. Fundamental. When he talks about a fundamental flaw, he's not talking about a flaw that can be fixed. Fundamental means that this document is, from the get-go, wrong.
The Constitution's acceptance of slavery, and its valuation of slaves as "three-fifths" of a person, was a fundamental flaw that contradicted the very principles outlined in the Constitution. It was fundamental precisely because it occurred at the moment of the document's creation. But the genius of the Founders was in establishing a political document that could change, if necessary, to extend the freedoms it initially denied. This, as I argued yesterday, reflects the recognition of the Founders themselves that the Constitution could be flawed in some way, for this reason it contains a process for amending it. Among others, our communist Chief Justice John Roberts believes that the amendment process ""did allow some fundamental flaws to be addressed like slavery." Indeed, Roberts notes that these fundamental flaws were serious enough to drag us into a bloody civil war by the 1860s. Creeping Sovietism.
Nevertheless, I'm mostly happy with the way the Constitution is today, with the exception of its disenfranchisement of residents of the District of Columbia. I would support an amendment to grant the District statehood. The founders may not have anticipated that the District would become a metropolis in its own right, and if they had wanted the Constitution to be treated like religious dogma, they would not have included a process by which the document could be changed. Yet the right insists on treating the Constitution like the Bible, which may be related to their tendency to project their own religious views upon it. Does this mean I believe the Constitution is "flawed"? In this small way, yes.
But I'm not alone. It's clear that Sarah Palin believes the Constitution to be flawed, because she wants to change it, by adding an amendment to establish marriage as exclusively being between a man and a woman.
I have voted along with the vast majority of Alaskans who had the opportunity to vote to amend our Constitution defining marriage as between one man and one woman. I wish on a federal level that's where we would go. I don't support gay marriage.
As the saying goes, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Yet Palin insists that the Constitution be changed from its original flawed design in order to include a restriction on personal liberty, something that may be in accordance with the cultural sensibilities of the founders but certainly not the principles of the document they created. Yet, if Palin does not believe the Constitution is "fundamentally" flawed, she certainly believes it is flawed enough to encourage changes that are as antithetical to its fundamental principles as to beg the question of whether or not liberals should be asking the same thing of Palin that Limbaugh asks of Obama.
--A. Serwer
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COMMENTS (9)
Go, Adam! Well-written post. The John Roberts quote is especially appropriate. The founders recognized one fact above all, which is that human reason is fallible, including their own, and that reasonable people might therefore disagree on many issues. For this reason, they included an amendment process; although, they put in place safeguards to ensure slow and deliberate change. Ironically, this is (or atleast, was) the essence of conservatism. I do want to quibble with your analogy to the marriage amendment and the idea that proponents must also see the Constitution as flawed. Your comparison to religious dogma is appropriate, if misunderstood. What they are seeking is a codification of "original intent" into a document that is elegantly, and intentionally, simple. This doesn't mean they think it's flawed. On the contrary, they want to fossilize it.
Posted by: Raj | October 29, 2008 12:07 PM
Rushbo and the other GOP mental defectives pontificating about views of professor of constitutional law are about as credible as that GOP congresscritter who wanted a law requiring displays of the 10 Commandments in all government buildings - but couldn't name any of the commandments! Idiots!
Posted by: CParis | October 29, 2008 1:32 PM
While we all appreciate your misogynistic endless Palin gripping, the selection of Joe Biden should be a great matter of concern to all save the pseudo-liberals and fauxgressives that back Obama.
Biden's support for the war in Iraq, praise of Bush's conducting the war, efforts to screw over Americans on behalf of his financial supporters, and appalling foreign policy ignorance would be sufficient to make a real Democrat vote Green.
Biden vs Palin:
According to the master senator, the U.S. and France "kicked Hezbollah out of Lebanon." Afterward, according to Biden, "I said and Barack said, 'Move NATO forces in there. Fill the vacuum, because if you don't know -- if you don't, Hezbollah will control it.' " Perhaps Biden meant to say the U.S. and France kicked Syria out of Lebanon. But even this is woefully glib. Syria never fully abandoned Lebanon. And there was no "vacuum" for Hezbollah to fill. The terrorist group was already firmly in control of southern Lebanon and part of the government. No one remembers Biden and Obama fighting for the stupidly impossible NATO move either….
Oh, wait: it's OK if you're an ObamaFanBoy
Posted by: Anonymous | October 29, 2008 1:32 PM
What they ought to do is re-define Washington D.C. so that it doesn't include any residential areas. Then you could just support its maintenance and service directly from the Federal Budget, and the residents in the area would count as either Virginians or Marylanders, depending on which side they fall on.
Posted by: Brett | October 29, 2008 1:59 PM
Anon,
Without pressure no candidates will accomodate positions, so put the pressure on and quit whining about ObamaFanBoys.
Posted by: jfv411 | October 29, 2008 3:08 PM
While we all appreciate your misogynistic endless Palin gripping,
Dictionary definition of a Freudian slip.
Posted by: Persia | October 29, 2008 3:59 PM
Criticizing a woman /= misogyny. It's in fact sexist to treat women like they're children who have to be coddled.
Anyway, what about the ERA, Adam? We should have an explicit equal rights amendment that would, for instance, make it much harder to deprive women of reproductive rights and equal pay.
Posted by: Amanda Marcotte | October 29, 2008 4:57 PM
Good post. One quibble: I don't believe an amendment is necessary to give the District statehood. I do believe an amendment is necessary to give the District representation in the Congress if it remains the federal enclave. But it doesn't have to be such an enclave -- the Constitution grants Congress plenary power over the District but does not mandate its use.
Posted by: Cliffy | October 29, 2008 6:31 PM
دردشة
Posted by: دردشه | June 15, 2009 1:26 PM