For the first time ever, America’s most important
document has been reassembled for a modern audience in The Constitution of the United States of America: Modern Edition edited
by Dr. Henry Bain. Below are five fun and interesting facts about our
Constitution that you may or may not (but definitely should!) know:
1. September 17 is Constitution Day.
The
late Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, a Constitution enthusiast
and a skilled parliamentarian, struck a blow for constitutional literacy
a few years ago when he slipped a rider into an appropriation act that
required an annual celebration of the Constitution by federal agencies
and by educational institutions that receive federal funds.
The
law requires that on Constitution Day (September 17) every federal
department and agency “provide educational and training materials
concerning the United States Constitution to each employee.”
Furthermore, every educational institution that receives federal funds
for a fiscal year “shall hold an educational program on the United
States Constitution on September 17 of such year for the students served
by the educational institution."
2. Only three errors in the Constitution have ever been discovered, and Dr. Henry Bain himself found one of them.
Congress committed each error as
it prepared an amendment for adoption. By “error” this means something
that is incorrect and was not intended by the Congress that drafted the
constitutional text. Though scholars and lawmakers have been
scrutinizing the Constitution minutely for a long time, it appears that
nobody had noticed this second mistake until Dr. Bain pointed it out.
The error appears in the 17th Amendment on election of senators.
3. The Supreme Court’s little-appreciated role in the repeal of constitutional text.
We all know how text gets
added to the Constitution–an amendment is proposed by two thirds of each
house of Congress, and approved by three-quarters of the states, as
provided by Article V. But what about the opposite process, in which
text is removed from the document? That is an important part of the
process of constitutional development, but it is nowhere spelled out for
us.
The
short answer is that text can be subtracted by amendment just as it can
be added. That was done in the case of the Twenty-first Amendment,
which repealed the Eighteenth (Prohibition) Amendment. But little
attention has been paid to an alternative method. The Supreme Court can
do the job!
4. James Madison tried and failed to secure a well-organized Constitution: the story of the first ten amendments.
James
Madison, elected a representative in the First Congress, felt an urgent
need to obtain amendments that would guarantee Americans’ basic rights.
The task was not easy, since many of the Federalist members of
Congress, who were a large majority, thought this a needless distraction
from their efforts to get the new government running–establish courts,
secure revenue, etc. The anti-Federalists were totally opposed–they were
demanding many amendments, but these were attempts to weaken the new
national government, not to protect rights. Madison crafted a set of
twelve amendments, to be inserted at appropriate points in the
constitutional text, and succeeded in getting the package approved in a
preliminary vote by the House of Representatives. But the vote was too
close for comfort. (In the final vote, a two-thirds vote would be
needed.)
In
the House debate, a big obstacle to Madison’s project was revealed when
Roger Sherman of Connecticut, who had been a member of the
Constitutional Convention, spoke strongly against Madison’s proposal,
complaining that it was not proper for Congress to intrude into the text
recently composed by the Convention and approved by the states. Any
amendments should be placed at the end of the document, he declared.
Sherman did not confine himself to speechmaking. When the
anti-Federalists asked for a full debate on their numerous resolutions
(a project viewed with horror by all good Federalists), he voted with
them, and brought another Connecticut member along with him on the vote.
In
the face of this tactic, Madison yielded and placed the whole package
of amendments at the end of the constitutional text, where they became
the first ten amendments.
5. As much as 20% of the Constitution is now considered obsolete or no longer used.
While
it is extremely important to learn about our history’s past, it is also
necessary to learn what parts of the Constitution are and aren’t still
in place today.
This
widespread obsolescence sometimes affects entire paragraphs or
amendments (the Eighteenth Amendment, imposing Prohibition) and
sometimes tiny parts of sentences (the language making it clear that the
Constitution covers treaties made before 1788). When we have taken
account of all the pieces of obsolete text, large and small, we find
that more than one-fifth of the document is now obsolete and ready for a museum.
Now
that the Constitution is accessible, Dr. Bain hopes that students,
kids, and even activists and citizens will be able to understand the
Constitution in its own words, without the need for commentary or
paraphrase.
This amazing, one-of-a-kind modernization of the United States’ supreme law gives readers a better understanding of:
- The powers vested in each branch of the federal government
- The role of the states in our federal system
- The Amendments to the Constitution
- The meaning of antiquated terms and grammatical forms
- The vision that molded our country to what it is today
This was honestly a good read for me. I haven't read any of the Constitution in ages, and normally only see it as a dry document. But the large, spread-out printing means that it's actually accessible, not just to me, but even to my young girls!
Dr. Henry Bain is a constitutional expert, government researcher and editor of The Constitution of the United States of America. Modern Edition. Rearranged and Edited for Ease of Reading. He
is credited with discovering one of only three recognized typos in the
Constitution. For more information, please visit,
www.modernconstitution.com or Amazon.com.
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