Where The Constitution Is Silent
The Supreme Court, with its GOP appointed majority, may start sending back issues to the legislatures, where they belong.
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
The Supreme Court, with its GOP appointed majority, may start sending back issues to the legislatures, where they belong.
Today marks the 246th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence at the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia on July 4, 1776, and although year 245 has been a rocky one, the American Experiment has held strong, although there are those who would debate that final clause. a brief 4th of July quiz …
When a justice says they’re using penumbral reasoning, they’re admitting that the next thing they say is not actually written in the constitution.
Instead of relying on “penumbras and emanations,” perhaps we should simply adhere to the plain language of the Constitution.
It is imperative that every American knows something of the Constitution. Everyone needs a personal copy of the Constitution and needs to read it often.
Where is that document that defined our nation? Is it now only a remnant of our past? I ask the question using the past tense, because I see us as not living under the umbrella of the Constitution, like I thought we were, as recently as November, 2020.