By
Publius Huldah
February 21, 2014
NewsWithViews.com
Q: How
are amendments to the federal Constitution made?
A: Article V of our Constitution provides two method of amending the Constitution:
1. Congress proposes amendments and presents them to the States for ratification; or
2. When 2/3 of the States apply for it, Congress calls a convention to propose amendments.
Q: Which
method was used for our existing 27 amendments?
A: The first method was used for all 27 amendments including the Bill
of Rights which were introduced into Congress by James Madison.[3]
Q: Is
there a difference between a constitutional convention, con con, or Article
V Convention?
A: These names have been used interchangeably during the last 50 years.
Q: What
is a “convention of states”?
A: That is what the people
pushing for an Article V convention now call it.
Q: Who
is behind this push for an Art. V convention?
A:The push to impose
a new Constitution by means of an Article V convention
(and using a “balanced budget” amendment as justification)
started in 1963 with the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations. 1 Today, it
is pushed by:
• Hundreds of progressive (Marxist) groups listed here
• George Soros
• Michael Farris, Esq., of “Convention of States” (COS), and author of the “parental rights” amendment which delegates power over children to the federal & state governments.
• Nick Dranias, Esq., of the Compact for America, Inc., whose “balanced budget” amendment imposes a new national sales or VAT tax on the American People.
• Former law professor, Rob Natelson.
• Nullification denier and law professor, Randy Barnett, who proposes an amendment which delegates to Congress the power to regulate “emissions” [EPA now exercises usurped powers].
• Nullification denier and birther denier, Mark Levin, Esq., whose “balanced budget” amendment legalizes Congress’ unconstitutional spending and does nothing to control the debt.
Q: Why
do they want an Article V Convention?
A: The only way to get rid of our existing Constitution and Bill of Rights
is to have an Article V convention where they can re-write
our Constitution. Jordan Sillars, Communications Director for Michael
Farris’ “Convention of States,” said:
“… 3. I think the majority of Americans are too lazy to elect
honest politicians. But I think some men and women could be found
who are morally
and intellectually capable of re-writing the Constitution…”
[boldface mine].
Q: How
can they impose a new constitution if ¾ of the States don’t
agree to it?
A: Only amendments require ratification by ¾ of the States
(see Art. V). But a new constitution would have its own new method of
ratification – it can be whatever the drafters want. For example,
the proposed Constitution
for the New states of America is ratified by a referendum called by
the President.
Q: Can
a convention be stopped from proposing a new Constitution?
A: No. Once the delegates are duly appointed & assembled,they
are acting under the inherent authority of A People to alter or abolish
their form of government [Declaration of Independence, 2nd para]; and
have the sovereign power to do whatever they want at the convention.
Q: Is
this what happened at the Federal Convention of 1787?
A: Yes. Pursuant to Article XIII of The
Articles of Confederation, the Continental Congress resolved
on February
21, 1787 (p 71-74) to call a convention to be held at Philadelphia
“for the sole and express purpose of revising the Articles
of Confederation.” But the delegates ignored this
limitation and wrote a new Constitution. Because of this
inherent authority of delegates, it
is impossible to stop it from happening at another convention. And
George Washington, James Madison, Ben Franklin, and Alexander Hamilton
won’t be there to protect you.
Q: Did
the delegates at the Convention of 1787 introduce a new mode of ratification
for the new Constitution?
A: Yes. The Articles of Confederation required the approval of all 13
States for amendments to the Articles to be ratified.
But the new Constitution provided it would become effective
if only 9 of the 13 States ratified it (Art. VII, cl. 1, U.S. Constitution).
Q: Who
would be delegates at a Convention?
A: Either Congress appoints whomever they want; or State
governments appoint whomever they want.
Q: Who
would be chairman at a convention?
A: We don’t know. But chairmen have lots
of power–and George Washington won’t be chairman.
Q: But
if the States appoint the delegates, won’t a convention be safe?
A: Who controls your State? They
will be the ones who choose the delegates if Congress permits the States
to appoint delegates. Are the people who control your State virtuous,
wise, honest, and true? [Tell PH if they are, so she can move there.]
Q: But
aren’t the States the ones to rein in the federal government?
A: They should have been, but the States have
become major consumers of federal funding. Federal funds make up almost
35% of the States’ annual budgets. The States don’t want to
rein in the feds – they don’t want to lose their federal funding.
Q: Did
Thomas Jefferson say the federal Constitution should be amended every
20 years?
A: No! In his letter to Samuel
Kercheval of July 12, 1816, Jefferson wrote about the Constitution
for the State of Virginia, which he said needed major revision. And remember
James Madison’s words in Federalist
No. 45 (3rd para from the end):
“The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite. The former will be exercised principally on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce … The powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the objects which … concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State.” [boldface mine]
The powers delegated to the feds are “few and defined” – what’s to amend? All else is reserved to the States or the People - so State Constitutions would need more frequent amendments. Do you see?
Q: Did
Alexander Hamilton say inFederalist
No 85 (next to last para)that a convention is safe?
A: No! He said, respecting the ratification of amendments, that
we “may safely rely on the disposition of the State legislatures
to erect barriers against the encroachments of the national authority.”
But today, our State legislatures don’t protect us from
federal encroachments because:
• We have been so dumbed down by progressive education that we know nothing & can’t think;
• State legislatures have been bought off with federal funds; and
• Our public and personal morality is in the sewer.
Q: Did
Our Framers – the ones who signed The Constitution - think conventions
a fine idea?
A: No!
• Mr. Pinckney said on September 15, 1787:
“Conventions are serious things, and ought not to be repeated.”
• Alexander Hamilton wrote of:
“…the utter improbability of assembling a new convention, under circumstances in any degree so favorable to a happy issue, as those in which the late convention met, deliberated, and concluded…” Federalist No. 85 (9th para)
• James Madison said in his letter of Nov. 2, 1788 to Turberville:[2]“3… an election into it would be courted by the most violent partizans on both sides; it … would be the very focus of that flame which has already too much heated men of all parties; would no doubt contain individuals of insidious views, who under the mask of seeking alterations popular in some parts but inadmissible in other parts of the Union might have a dangerous opportunity of sapping the very foundations of the fabric. … it seems scarcely to be presumable that the deliberations of the body could be conducted in harmony, or terminate in the general good. Having witnessed the difficulties and dangers experienced by the first Convention, which assembled under every propitious circumstance, I should tremble for the result of a Second, meeting in the present temper of America…” [boldface mine]
Q: Do
we have “violent partizans” or “individuals of insidious
views” who seek a “dangerous opportunity to sap the very foundations
of the fabric” of our country?
A: Yes, and they have been pushing for an Article V convention since
1963.
Q: What
did our Framers say about the purpose of amendments to the Constitution?
A:
• the novelty and difficulty of what they were
doing would require periodic revision (Mr. Gerry on June
5, 1787);
• remedy defects in the Constitution (Hamilton
on Sep.
10, 1787);
• useful amendments would address the “organization
of the government, not … the mass of its powers” (Federalist
No. 85, 13th para); and
• “amendment of errors” & “useful
alterations” suggested by experience (Federalist
No. 43 at 8.)[3]
Q: But
those pushing for a convention say the remedy for politicians who violate
the Constitution is to amend the Constitution.
A: Yes, that is their crazy claim: that
even though for over a century, the feds have been usurping hundreds of
powers not delegated in the Constitution, all we have to do is amend the
Constitution, and everyone will start obeying it.[4]
Q: But
they say the feds would obey future amendments because the feds haven’t
violated recent amendments, such as women’s suffrage.
A: Of the 15 amendments ratified since the 12th in 1804; 10 increased
the powers of the feds (13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th,
23rd, 24th, 26th); and 4 were “housekeeping” amendments (20th,
22nd, 25th, 27th) - so of course the feds “obeyed”those.[5]
Q: What
about their claim that the feds violate the Constitution because they
don’t understand it?
A: Rubbish! Our Constitution is so simple that Hamilton said The
People were “the
natural guardians of the Constitution.” The Oath of office at
Art. VI, clause 3, implicitly requires the feds to learn it. For phrases
the feds have perverted – such as the “interstate commerce,”
“general welfare” & “necessary and proper”
clauses, a quick look into The Federalist Papers reveals the original
intent. I illustrate that here
and elsewhere.
Q: How
do we get rid of the bad amendments such as the 16th & 17th?
A: Repeal them the same way we repealed the 18th amendment. Instead of
sending to Congress people who don’t know the Constitution; send
people who know the Constitution and commit to repealing the bad amendments.
And if they don’t act to repeal them, fire them!
Q:
Why was the “convention method” put in Article V?
A: This chart
compiles the references in Madison’s Journal of the Federal
Convention of 1787 to what became Article V.
• Law professor John A. Eidsmoe suggests the convention method of Article V was added rather hastily, at the time when the delegates were closing their deliberations, and this provision did not receive the careful attention given to most other provisions of the Constitution.
• It may also have been a compromise designed to induce Gov. Morris, Gerry, Mason,& Randolph to sign the Constitution.[6]
Q:
Why can’t what happens at the convention be controlled by federal
or State laws?
A: We are naïve and tell ourselves that people will “play by
the rules”. So we assume all we have to do is make some laws saying
delegates can’t exceed the scope of the call, and everyone will
obey it.
But if they don’t, who is going to enforce these laws you have so much faith in? The feds? Obama would love the constitution for the New states of America – it makes him dictator! He won’t prosecute delegates who violate the call. Your State government? They sold you out to the feds long ago. Errant delegates will be protected by the feds. It doesn’t matter what a law says if it isn’t enforced.
Ever since 1963, globalists have intended to use an Article V convention as the means for imposing a new Constitution on us. Today, George Soros - the destroyer of countries - is financing the push for a convention. Don’t let him and his minions destroy America.
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Conclusion
This little chart illustrates our Constitution & Declaration and the enumerated powers delegated to the federal government. For 100 years, we elected politicians who ignore them. We don’t understand that the amendments proposed by Michael Farris, Mark Levin, Randy Barnett, & Nick Dranias increase the powers of the federal government because we don’t know the list of enumerated powers in the Constitution. You could remedy that: Print out the chart and read the Constitution & Declaration!
As The Blue Tail Gadfly said, even though “the Constitution is not being enforced, it still declares this federal government LAWLESS! The true rule of law is still on our side, but not for much longer if the Constitution is allowed to be foolishly altered.”
� 2014 Publius Huldah - All Rights Reserved
Endnotes:
1.
Ford
Pursuit of Globalism
2.
Those pushing for a convention are not telling the truth about what
Madison said in his letter to Turberville. The only way you can know
who is telling the truth is to study the letter.
3.
Madison did not endorse the “convention method”
of proposing amendments. He always said that when States want amendments,
they should instruct their congressional delegation to pursue it:
• Madison’s comments & proposals at the Federal Convention of 1787 show this.
• In his letter of 1788 to Turberville, hespeaksof the two methods of proposing amendments:
“2. A Convention cannot be called … without the previous application of ? of the State legislatures…The difficulties … must …be much greater than will attend the origination of amendments in Congress, which may be done at the …[instruction] of a single State Legislature… ”
•
How was the Bill of Rights handled? On May
5, 1789, Rep. Bland (p. 258-261) introduced into Congress a petition
from Virginia for an Art. V Convention to propose amendments. On June
8, 1789, Madison (p. 448-460) circumvented Bland and introduced the
amendments for Congress to propose tothe States. On
September 24, 1789, Congress sent them to the States for ratification.
4.
If your spouse violates the marriage vows, amend the vows and
your marriage will be saved! If motorists violate the speed limit, amend
the speed limit and safety will be restored! When politicians violate
the Constitution, amend the Constitution, and all will obey it!
5.
It is important to understand that the proposed amendments drafted by
Randy Barnett, Mark Levin, Nick Dranias, and Michael Farris all
increase the powers of the federal government by legalizing powers they
have already usurped – or they delegate new powers to the federal
government.
6.
The Constitution was a product of compromise: Alexander
Hamilton was an abolitionist - but the Constitution permitted
slavery. James Madison wanted to stop the importation of slaves immediately
(Federalist
No. 42, 6th para); but Art. I, Sec. 9, clause 1 permitted
it to continue 20 more years. Hamilton said the Constitution wasn’t
perfect, but “is the best that the present views and circumstances
of the country will permit” (Federalist
No. 85, 6th – 8th paras). The “convention” provision
of Art. V seems to have been added – on the last day of deliberations
(Sep. 15, 1787) – to induce Gerry, Mason, & Randolph to sign
the Constitution. But they still refused to sign.
Publius Huldah is a retired attorney who now lives in Tennessee. Before getting a law degree, she got a degree in philosophy where she specialized in political philosophy and epistemology (theories of knowledge). She now writes extensively on the U.S. Constitution, using the Federalist Papers to prove its original meaning and intent. She also shows how federal judges and politicians have ignored Our Constitution and replaced it with their personal opinions and beliefs.h
E-Mail: publiushuldah@gmail.com