About Civitarianism
Fix the Constitution
Great Country, Bad Constitution
- A constitution strengthens or weakens the moral character of a people.
- It is the foundation of the rule of law.
- Our Constitution may be the foundation of the rule of law in our country, but democracy is the foundation of the Constitution itself.
- Democracy is "all men are created equal," "one person, one vote," and "majority rule."
- Our Constitution does not respect democracy, which makes "rule of law" finagling and even scamming rather than an earnest enterprise.
The British Constitution
Three pillars of "unwritten" British constitution
- Parliamentary sovereignty
- Rule of law
- Democratic accountability
Our Constitution
- The Declaration of Independence is our country's "source of truth."
- The Constitution, though important to the rule of law, is more civic document than legal document.
- It is properly interpreted through the Declaration, the Long Decade of American Genesis (1776-1788), and the first several decades of our constitutional democracy.
- The Constitution was built from the assumption that there would be no political parties.
- "Tyranny of the majority" is an overrated falsehood. Minorities tyrannize, and democracy safeguards against despotism.
- The key to our Constitution is democratic statecraft (consent of the governed, Congressional sovereignty, relative local autonomy).
- A constitution can define the flow of government, but it cannot permanently "separate powers," as power resides in the branch of government wielding the sword.
- This is why democracy requires that the executive have its power sourced in the legislative branch.
- The judiciary can legitimately void laws which are anti-democratic, but there is no judicial role to "review" the constitutional validity of any policy.
- The Constitution itself is not the final word on how the Constitution can be changed.
The Virginia Plan
Restore the Virginia Plan
- Large House of Representatives (one for every 100,000 citizens)
- Small Senate (20-30), chosen by the House from nominees of the several states
- President selected by Congress (and unselected by Congress)
- Constitutional change via national referendums