Why do they hate America so much?

Why do they hate America so much?

by digby

This should be interesting. Journalist and legal scholar Garrett Epps at the Atlantic surveys the constitutional arguments coming out of the right wing and it reminds him of his childhood in the South where similar arguments were advanced to obstruct civil rights. He's decided to take on some of these arguments and is asking for suggestions:

This summer, I will be posting a series of short essays on what I consider to be the most dangerous unfounded claims about the Constitution currently floating around the airwaves and legislative halls. Each of us, I suppose, could make his or her own list of constitutional myths. The ones I list below are my top ten. I invite nominations from readers of their own.

Nominators should bear in mind that "you are a liberal and therefore you don't count," "even to suggest that idea is outrageous," "my civics teacher taught me the opposite in 1978," and "you teach creative writing and so you should shut up" don't (how can I put this politely?) qualify, in the strictest sense, as constitutional arguments. Beware, too, of any argument that includes the phrase "no amendment can change," unless you are referring to the rule of equal suffrage in the Senate. And don't try "everybody knows what the founding fathers were really thinking," unless you can find and cite some pretty dog-nab convincing evidence in the text and the actual historical record.

I'll be posting explanations of each of my top ten while listening to yours. In constitutional terms, it seems to me silly to wish everyone a good summer. Make no mistake: We are the midst of a very dangerous political crisis. Gridlock in Washington is pushing the United States toward a first-ever default on payments on the national debt. Conservative judges are champing at the bit to strike down the most important piece of progressive legislation since the 1970s, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, on the invented excuse that it somehow "regulates inactivity," a prohibition mentioned nowhere in the Constitution and never really detected in it by anyone until the day after the passage of the Act. Angry conservative majorities in state capitols are rewriting the social compact, chipping away at federal authority over interstate commerce, reasserting the old Confederate doctrine of state control over American citizenship, and, most alarmingly, creating new and frankly partisan restrictions on the very right to vote.

So if we accomplish nothing else, let's at least have some fun, discussing the Constitution to divert ourselves from disaster, like Boccaccio's characters, who told stories of love and adventure while the plague raged outside the villa's walls.

Here are my top ten:
  1. Conservatives believe only in "original intent" and others believe in a "living Constitution," meaning whatever they want.
  2. The Founders wrote the Constitution to restrain Congress and limit its powers.
  3. The "Unitary Executive" means all unclaimed federal power flows away from Congress and to the President.
  4. The Constitution does not provide for separation of church and state.
  5. Corporations have precisely the same First Amendment rights as natural persons.
  6. The Second Amendment was "intended" to make government "fear the people."
  7. The Tenth Amendment and state "sovereignty" allow states to "nullify" federal law.
  8. The Fourteenth Amendment was written solely to address the situation of freed slaves, and has no relevance today.
  9. Election of Senators is unfair and harmful to the states.
  10. International law is a threat to the Constitution and must be kept out of American courts.
He's taking suggestions.

When I looked over all of these and thought about how they all seem to revolve around the idea that the States are primary and the nation as a whole is just a loose framework meaning almost nothing, I realized that these people are the real America haters. They literally loathe the fundamental concept of the United States of America as a nation, preferring to think of themselves as Mississipians or Minnesotans than Americans. Do you think they know that?


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