http://www.eagleforum.org/ publications/column/ unexpected-suggestions-for- constitutional-changes.html
Unexpected Suggestions for
Constitutional Changes
Constitutional Changes
by Phyllis Schlafly
April 30, 2014
It
looks like all sorts of people are joining the game of rewriting parts
of the U.S. Constitution. It started with state legislators who
apparently had time on their hands, and now it’s even extended to U.S.
Supreme Court Justices.
Justices
Antonin Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg made a joint appearance at the
National Press Club and added their two bits worth of advice about
changing our Constitution. Justice Scalia said he would like an
amendment to make it easier to pass more amendments, which probably is
music to the ears of those who are trying to pass several or even a
dozen new amendments. Currently it’s considered to be a laborious
process even to get a constitutional amendment introduced, much less
passed and ratified.
However,
Justice Scalia added a caveat to his suggestion, saying “I certainly
would not want a constitutional convention. Whoa! Who knows what would
come out of it?”
As
Hamlet bemoaned, “Aye, there’s the rub.” Any new constitutional
convention, called as allowed by Article V, would surely attract and
include political activists with motives and goals diametrically
different from those of Justice Scalia.
Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg then weighed in with the tiresome complaint of the
feminists. Her first choice for a constitutional change, she said, would
be the addition of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA).
The
American people, the mainstream media, and state legislators spent ten
years (1972 to 1982) considering the proposed Equal Rights Amendment.
They then let it die after it failed to get the three-fourths (38) of
the states that are needed to ratify a new amendment.
ERA
was marketed as something that would give new rights (with the false
promise of a pay raise) to American women (whom the feminists falsely
claim are oppressed by the patriarchy), but that phony sales talk
failed. Since the text of ERA doesn’t use the words “women” or “gender,”
but instead calls for “equality of rights … on account of sex,” it is
now beyond dispute that ERA’s principal effect would be to make it
unconstitutional to deny a marriage license “on account of sex.”
Our
biggest trouble about constitutional revisionism comes from 93-year-old
Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, who just emerged from
retirement to try to make himself relevant again. He has just written a
new book calling for six amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
Stevens’
most dangerous suggestion is to gut the Second Amendment. Stevens wants
to reverse the Supreme Court decision that upheld our right to keep a
gun at home for self-protection.
The
fundamental right of Americans to own guns was considered by our
Founders to be basic to a free society, and abolishing this right has
long been a major goal of the liberals who oppose the conservative
values at the heart of our nation. Our right to own a gun is not only
necessary for personal self-defense, but it’s fundamental to preventing a
takeover by a dictatorship, as we have watched happen in so many other
countries.
If
Congress acquiesces in the states’ petitions to call an Article V
convention, you can bet that rewriting the Second Amendment to allow gun
control and to forbid private ownership of guns will be a top priority
of many delegates. Would they succeed?
Justice
Stevens’ plan to achieve his goal is deceptively simple; he just calls
for adding five itty-bitty words: “when serving in the militia.” That
sounds so innocuous, but it would wipe out individual Americans’ right
to own a gun unless actually serving in the militia, and that would be a
dramatic takeaway of our current Second Amendment right to own guns for
personal self-defense.
Now
consider the usual confusion and pandemonium at a national political
convention. Consider how quickly one pre-selected and coached delegate
could make the motion to adopt those five little words, and the chairman
with the gavel could say, “All those in favor say aye, motion carried,
the change is adopted,” and bang goes the gavel. Amid the usual
convention noise, most delegates would be unaware of what was happening.
It
is likely that most of those who are supporting the calling of an
Article V convention have never been to a noisy, controversial national
political convention. But that is the way it is. If you need proof, watch the video
of how the 2012 Democratic convention chairman in Charlotte illegally
gaveled through a motion concerning the elimination of God in the
Democrats’ Platform.
It’s
amazing how some foolish Republicans are working overtime to give the
liberals the opportunity and the power to do so much damage to our great
U.S. Constitution.
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