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#FF0000
3rd August 2012, 08:17
From Jacobin Magazine's Spring 2011 issue, by Seth Ackerman. A pretty fucking fantastic piece on the US constitution.


The worldwide revolutionary turmoil of the years just after World War I witnessed the single biggest leap in labor’s long forward march. At least, it did in most places.


But while general strikes were panicking European elites into making sweeping concessions to their working classes, here in America the Wilson Administration was swiftly re-privatizing the economy and dismantling the progressive wartime labor codes — prompting Felix Frankfurter to render a despairing judgment: the United States, he wrote, appeared to be “the most reactionary country in the world.” When the unimpeded rule of the plutocrats was confirmed by Calvin Coolidge’s election six years later, William Howard Taft concluded with satisfaction that Frankfurter had been right: “This country is no country for radicalism. I think it is really the most conservative country in the world.” But why was that so? There were many theories. The patrician editors of The New York Times had given this matter some thought, and on Constitution Day, 1921, they provided one plausible explanation: “If it is true, as there is much evidence to prove, that Americans are showing themselves the most conservative nation in a turbulent world, the largest cause of it lies in our Federal Constitution.” The Constitution, the editors explained, “makes the American people secure in their individual rights as citizens when these are imperiled by passing gusts of sentiment.”


These dubious “gusts of sentiment,” in the lingo of American constitution-speak, are precisely what other societies call “the democratic will.” It stands to reason that a document drafted by a coterie of gilded gentry, openly contemptuous of “democracy” and panicked by what they saw as the mob rule of the 1780s, would seek to constrict popular sovereignty to the point of strangulation. Thus, brilliantly and subtly, the system they built rendered it virtually impossible for the electorate to obtain a concerted change in national policy by a collective act of political will. The Senate is an undemocratic monstrosity in which 84 percent of the population can be outvoted by the 16 percent living in the smallest states. The passage of legislation requires the simultaneous assent of three separate entities — the presidency, House, and Senate — that voters are purposely denied the opportunity to choose at one time, with two-thirds of the Senate membership left in place after each election. The illogical electoral college gears the whole combat of presidential elections around a few, almost randomly determined, swing states that happen to contain evenly balanced numbers of Democrats and Republicans. And the entire system is frozen in amber by an amendment process of almost comical complexity. Whereas France can change its constitution anytime with a three-fifths vote of its Congress and Britain could recently mandate a referendum on instant runoff voting by a simple parliamentary majority, an amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires the consent of no less than thirty-nine different legislatures comprising roughlyseventy-eight separately elected chambers.
There was a brief moment in U.S. history when these truths were acknowledged by the Left. During the Progressive Era, the Socialist Party branded the Constitution a menace to democratic government and a number of progressive intellectuals, including Charles A. Beard, Vernon L. Parrington, Carl Becker, and J. Allen Smith, lucidly recognized the document’s reactionary constraints and sometimes called for their overthrow. Beard established a Committee on the Federal Constitution which advocated subordinating the Constitution to popular control, declaring that “the people of the United States have not control over their fundamental law at the present time, save in a minor degree. The consequence is, our institutions do not reflect the popular will, but in reality other forces over which we have only a measure of control.” The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments, authorizing a federal income tax and direct election of Senators, were the most enduring (if inadequate) fruits of this period of ferment.


But unfortunately it was the counterattack that proved far more lasting.


During the 1920s and 1930s, as historian Michael Kammen has demonstrated, constitutionalism “assumed a more central role in American culture than it ever had before,” thanks in large part to “the efflorescence of intensely partisan organizations that promoted patriotic constitutionalism as an antidote to two dreaded nemeses, governmental centralization and socialism.” The National Association for Constitutional Government, the American Legion, the Constitutional League, the National Security League, the Sentinels of the Republic, all came together to “pledge themselves to guard the Constitution and wage war on socialism.” A national Constitution Day was instituted. Local school boards were pressed to further glorify the sacred parchment. All of this, I would argue, amounted to America’s version of the anti-democratic nationalist populism that was spreading in Europe in the same years. Today’s Tea Party, with its mania for constitutionalism, is the direct heir to this venerable conservative tradition that embraces the Founding Fathers’ masterwork as a bulwark against democratic adventurism — hence the Congressional Republicans’ ritual Constitution-reading, and their new rule requiring that specific constitutional authority be cited for each bill. Like Action Française or the antirepublican peasant leagues of Weimar Germany, the Tea Party’s patriotic constitutionalismoriginated in the 1920s as a conservative reaction against the working class movements that had surged forward to remake the state into the democratic instrument of popular aspirations.


It’s easy to make fun of the Right’s bizarro Constitution fetish, especially in its current Glenn Beck-ified form. Beck’s late guru, the Bircher and Mormon extremist W. Cleon Skousen, is now the main source of the Tea Partiers’ constitutional wisdom; his books, once out of print and gathering dust, have become posthumous bestsellers and required reading at Tea Party training courses. A true fanatic and weirdo, Skousen believed the Founding Fathers were inspired by the example of the ancient Anglo-Saxons, who in turn were inspired by the Biblical Israelites. All adhered to the divinely sanctioned principles of limited government, a system under which America made more progress in its first century than the world had made in the previous 5,000 years (hence the title of Skousen’s magnum opus, The Five Thousand Year Leap). But it all started falling apart at the start of the twentieth century, when progressives and socialists attacked the Constitution and Woodrow Wilson embraced their Satanic cause, taking the first fateful steps on the road to the serfdom we know today: minimum wages, a Federal Reserve, national parks, Medicare — all, Skousen insists, are unconstitutional.


All of this is nonsense, of course. But what is equally lamentable is that the recent rise (or, rather, return) to prominence of this constitutional crankery has spawned a whole genre of anxious liberal commentary aimed at rescuing the document’s honor from the clutches of uncouth reactionaries. It is an article of faith in this commentary that the Glenn Beck crowd simply misunderstand the Constitution and the intentions of the Founders. They labor under the illusion that our founding text enshrines conservative principles, when in reality (the claim goes) it’s an ambiguous document whose meaning is contested and always changing — or maybe even a warrant for ceaseless progress and change. But whatever it is, the Constitution according to today’s liberals is always misunderstood and never at fault, usually treated with a fond if wised-up reverence and never with the disapproving righteousness of the more advanced progressives. In a take-down of Tea Party constitutionalism, Dalia Lithwik in Slate writes that “the fact that the Constitution is sufficiently open-ended to infuriate all Americans almost equally is part of its enduring genius.” “It is an integrative force — the cornerstone of our civil religion,” writes Andrew Romano in Newsweek; but “the Tea Partiers belong to a different tradition — a tradition of divisive fundamentalism.” “The Constitution is ink on parchment,” writes Jill Lepore in a recent New Yorker piece (http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2011/01/17/110117crat_atlarge_lepore) (“The Battle Over the Constitution”), “it is forty-four hundred words. And it is, too, the accreted set of meanings that have been made of those words, the amendments, the failed amendments, the struggles, the debates — the course of events — over more than two centuries. It is not easy, but it is everyone’s.” That sounds nice and awfully inclusive, but unfortunately the Constitution is much more than that: it is a charter for plutocracy.


It is a measure of our current ideological morass that liberals, in their own enlightened and open-minded way, still masochistically embrace a throne-and-altar orthodoxy that subordinates the people’s will to a virtually unalterable diktat handed down by an ancient council of aristocratic, semi-deified lawgivers. At this very moment, when expansionary monetary policy and debt relief for homeowners are demanded by the Left to address the ongoing, grinding social crisis, it should not be forgotten that “a rage for paper money” and “an abolition of debts” were precisely the sorts of “wicked project[s]” that James Madison, writing in Federalist No. 10, specifically hoped his Constitution would rule out.


You would almost think Madison had been listening to Glenn Beck.


I originally wanted to take this article and paste it up all over town to get people hella upset -- but I do think it's a really good piece that presents an extremely refreshing perspective on the US constitution by not just taking shots at right-wing constitutionalism, but the liberal left's attempts to reclaim the constitution, or act as if it's some grand progressive document.

~Spectre
3rd August 2012, 09:11
As the article points out, the "founding fathers" admitted that this was the case:


Hence, it clearly appears, that the same advantage which a republic has over a democracy, in controlling the effects of faction, is enjoyed by a large over a small republic, -- is enjoyed by the Union over the States composing it. Does the advantage consist in the substitution of representatives whose enlightened views and virtuous sentiments render them superior to local prejudices and schemes of injustice? It will not be denied that the representation of the Union will be most likely to possess these requisite endowments. Does it consist in the greater security afforded by a greater variety of parties, against the event of any one party being able to outnumber and oppress the rest? In an equal degree does the increased variety of parties comprised within the Union, increase this security. Does it, in fine, consist in the greater obstacles opposed to the concert and accomplishment of the secret wishes of an unjust and interested majority? Here, again, the extent of the Union gives it the most palpable advantage.

The influence of factious leaders may kindle a flame within their particular States, but will be unable to spread a general conflagration through the other States. A religious sect may degenerate into a political faction in a part of the Confederacy; but the variety of sects dispersed over the entire face of it must secure the national councils against any danger from that source. A rage for paper money, for an abolition of debts, for an equal division of property, or for any other improper or wicked project, will be less apt to pervade the whole body of the Union than a particular member of it; in the same proportion as such a malady is more likely to taint a particular county or district, than an entire State.

In the extent and proper structure of the Union, therefore, we behold a republican remedy for the diseases most incident to republican government. And according to the degree of pleasure and pride we feel in being republicans, ought to be our zeal in cherishing the spirit and supporting the character of Federalists.

PUBLIUS

The constitution was set up to protect and grow the great disparity of property.

Dennis the 'Bloody Peasant'
3rd August 2012, 09:28
Reminds me of a quote.

"The country was founded on the principle that the primary role of government was to protect property from the majority, and so it remains" - Noam Chomsky

pluckedflowers
3rd August 2012, 10:32
Good article. I really like Jacobin. I don't agree with everything they print, but I like the cut of their jib.

Hexen
3rd August 2012, 10:53
Reminds me of a quote.

"The country was founded on the principle that the primary role of government was to protect property from the majority, and so it remains" - Noam Chomsky

Noam Chosmky is correct in this one.

The Constitution/Bill of Rights/etc was never written for all classes but rather exclusively for the Bourgeoisie and it remains so till this very day. This is the part that most people seem to overlook and don't understand sadly.

RadioRaheem84
4th August 2012, 06:34
But I am sure those running our society, liberal or right wing, know this very well.

GPDP
4th August 2012, 06:51
But I am sure those running our society, liberal or right wing, know this very well.

This. It's one thing with liberal or conservative commentators, since they often actually believe what they say. Those in the actual ruling class, however, know damn well the system is theirs and theirs alone.

RadioRaheem84
4th August 2012, 07:03
This. It's one thing with liberal or conservative commentators, since they often actually believe what they say. Those in the actual ruling class, however, know damn well the system is theirs and theirs alone.

That's something I wanted to make an entire thread topic about.

The ruling class has to be conscious of their social class position. Way more so than we even are.

There is no way that they cannot be because if I am aware of it, not even knowing a shred of real financial security or access to privilege, they damn well sure most know it in spades.

All that money and time and excess and they do not know what we know regarding class, the Constitution, capitalism, etc. Please......

They must have some clue about what their system does to the working class and people in general. The polarization, the antagonisms in society, the alienation, the disparity.

GPDP
4th August 2012, 07:16
Really, the only difference between liberals and conservatives in the ruling class (i.e. the actual bourgeoisie, not their mouthpieces) is that one of them, in their privilege, think of themselves enlightened enough to "help" those who they perceive as less fortunate, while the other flaunts their privilege in our faces and tells us all is as it should be and we should like it this way, damn it.

RadioRaheem84
4th August 2012, 07:19
Really, the only difference between liberals and conservatives in the ruling class (i.e. the actual bourgeoisie, not their mouthpieces) is that one of them, in their privilege, think of themselves enlightened enough to "help" those who they perceive as less fortunate, while the other flaunts their privilege in our faces and tells us all is as it should be and we should like it this way, damn it.

Yes, liberals almost get fumes coming out of their ears when we question their ideals on helping others.

Mr. Natural
4th August 2012, 16:20
Was the Constitution designed by an elite to protect its private property and other priveliges? Sure, but in doing so it created a Constitution in gross contradiction with populist Preamble, and this Preamble can be employed by revolutionaries to promote popular social transformation.

The Preamble: We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America." (emphases mine)

I have no trouble seeing radical content in this Preamble. I would love to speak in public to the impossibility of "We the People promoting our general Welfare" under capitalism. It can't be done.

My red-green best.

JPSartre12
4th August 2012, 17:02
Reminds me of a quote.

"The country was founded on the principle that the primary role of government was to protect property from the majority, and so it remains" - Noam Chomsky

In fact, our Senate in Canada was founded on the principal of protecting private property from the majority ... It's not a speculation, it's a fact about our government - hence why you have to be a government-appointed wealthy property-owner to even have a chance of getting in :bored:

RadioRaheem84
4th August 2012, 17:02
Was the Constitution designed by an elite to protect its private property and other priveliges? Sure, but in doing so it created a Constitution in gross contradiction with populist Preamble, and this Preamble can be employed by revolutionaries to promote popular social transformation.

The Preamble: We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America." (emphases mine)

I have no trouble seeing radical content in this Preamble. I would love to speak in public to the impossibility of "We the People promoting our general Welfare" under capitalism. It can't be done.

My red-green best.





A right wing Constitutionalist lawyer will run laps around you. You're debating the wrong thing my friend.

GPDP
5th August 2012, 00:17
A right wing Constitutionalist lawyer will run laps around you. You're debating the wrong thing my friend.

Agreed. Why even bother? You're playing their damn game. I say fuck that, let the bourgie bastards bicker among themselves about the constitution. We have more pressing matters to attend.

JPSartre12
5th August 2012, 00:34
Agreed. Why even bother? You're playing their damn game. I say fuck that, let the bourgie bastards bicker among themselves about the constitution. We have more pressing matters to attend.

Do you think that our post-revolutionary society will have anything alone the lines of a constitution or a charter of rights?

I'm aware of the fact that such documents legitimize and actualize the power of the State, but the Soviet Union did have them, as well. I'm not particularly fond of the Soviet model, but are their lessons from its construction of a constitution that we can take and put practice ourselves? I'm not sure. Your thoughts?

Mr. Natural
5th August 2012, 16:38
A couple of comrades believe a right wing Constitutional lawyer could run rings around any employment of the Preamble to illicit a populist, revolutionary awareness.

Well, let's have a go at it. Bring on your right wing Constitutional lawyer.

I'm far from an authority on the US Constitution, but
We, the people, promoting our common welfare sounds a lot like communism to me.

And while we're at it, the American people are much invested psychologically in the Constitution and its bourgeois "democracy." No revolutionary movement in the US could possibly ignore the Constitution, whatever such a movement's ultimate take on this founding document came to be.

My red-green, let's-get-organized best.

cynicles
5th August 2012, 17:02
In fact, our Senate in Canada was founded on the principal of protecting private property from the majority ... It's not a speculation, it's a fact about our government - hence why you have to be a government-appointed wealthy property-owner to even have a chance of getting in :bored:

Also why the majority of Canadians want to get rus of it among other things, but atleast were fortunate enough to not be trapped under the same dogma as our comrades to the south.

RadioRaheem84
5th August 2012, 18:31
We, the people, promoting our common welfare sounds a lot like communism to me.


Are you asserting welfare to mean welfare state? Where are you going with this?

The preamble is not socialist.

Die Neue Zeit
6th August 2012, 07:54
Do you think that our post-revolutionary society will have anything alone the lines of a constitution or a charter of rights?

I'm aware of the fact that such documents legitimize and actualize the power of the State, but the Soviet Union did have them, as well. I'm not particularly fond of the Soviet model, but are their lessons from its construction of a constitution that we can take and put practice ourselves? I'm not sure. Your thoughts?


I'm far from an authority on the US Constitution, but
We, the people, promoting our common welfare sounds a lot like communism to me.

I don't like preambles much, because they are less authoritative than the articles themselves.

By far, the best thing about the "Stalin" constitution from 1936-1977 was that it had no preambles; only authoritative articles that were supposed to be taken as facts.

Mr. Natural
6th August 2012, 15:44
RadioRaheem84, "We the people seeking our common welfare" most definitely does not suggest establishing a capitalist welfare state to me. I'm looking for ways to engage the highly conservative American working class/population with revolutionary ideas leading to revolutionary processes.

"We the people seeking our common welfare" suggests anarchism/communism. "Associations will be formed in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all," (Manifesto), is a statement of people seeking their common welfare.

"We the people seeking our common welfare" is a travesty under capitalism, and I choose to emphasize its socialist potential.

My red-green best

Hexen
7th August 2012, 12:01
That's something I wanted to make an entire thread topic about.

The ruling class has to be conscious of their social class position. Way more so than we even are.

There is no way that they cannot be because if I am aware of it, not even knowing a shred of real financial security or access to privilege, they damn well sure most know it in spades.

All that money and time and excess and they do not know what we know regarding class, the Constitution, capitalism, etc. Please......

They must have some clue about what their system does to the working class and people in general. The polarization, the antagonisms in society, the alienation, the disparity.

Of course class ignorance is what they designed to keep the system going more like.


RadioRaheem84, "We the people seeking our common welfare" most definitely does not suggest establishing a capitalist welfare state to me. I'm looking for ways to engage the highly conservative American working class/population with revolutionary ideas leading to revolutionary processes.

"We the people seeking our common welfare" suggests anarchism/communism. "Associations will be formed in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all," (Manifesto), is a statement of people seeking their common welfare.

"We the people seeking our common welfare" is a travesty under capitalism, and I choose to emphasize its socialist potential.

My red-green best

Your now just misinterpreting what the constitution actually says.

Rafiq
7th August 2012, 16:32
If you're that ideologically insecure that you need to adjust "The constitution" to whatever ideological convictions you subscribe to, perhaps it's time to reconsider why you choose to call yourself a communist in the first place.

Rusty Shackleford
8th August 2012, 08:20
Just read "Why We Loved the Zapatistas (http://jacobinmag.com/winter-2011/why-we-loved-the-zapatistas/)" and fell in love, absolutely head over heels with the Jacobin.

i know this has hardly anything to do with op but my god. :drool:

Zeus the Moose
15th August 2012, 04:33
Do you think that our post-revolutionary society will have anything alone the lines of a constitution or a charter of rights?

I'm aware of the fact that such documents legitimize and actualize the power of the State, but the Soviet Union did have them, as well. I'm not particularly fond of the Soviet model, but are their lessons from its construction of a constitution that we can take and put practice ourselves? I'm not sure. Your thoughts?

I think a transitional state (whatever you might want to call it) would have a something more or less equivalent to a constitution. However, it would based on principles of extreme democracy rather than preserving the interests of a minority (what is often called the "rule of law.") One of the big differences here, I think, would be that a constitution of a transitional state would be much more open to change, where the population that's under the jurisdiction of said constitution would be able to change it, if necessary, through a fairly simple referendum process.

CryingWolf
17th August 2012, 22:07
RadioRaheem84, "We the people seeking our common welfare" most definitely does not suggest establishing a capitalist welfare state to me. I'm looking for ways to engage the highly conservative American working class/population with revolutionary ideas leading to revolutionary processes.

"We the people seeking our common welfare" suggests anarchism/communism. "Associations will be formed in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all," (Manifesto), is a statement of people seeking their common welfare.

"We the people seeking our common welfare" is a travesty under capitalism, and I choose to emphasize its socialist potential.

My red-green best

You can't divorce the constitution from its context. The damn document was written and intended for the people who could read, i.e. the bourgeoisie.

Read the preamble this way:

"We the bourgeoisie people, in order to prevent populist revolts form a more perfect union, etc."

Does it still sound socialist?

Questionable
17th August 2012, 23:00
While we're on the subject of the Constitution, I have a question.

Why did the "Founding Fathers" guarantee the right to free speech, freedom of assembly, etc? If they were bourgeoisie trying to protect private property, what benefit would they gain from giving these rights to the masses? I know these "rights" are trampled all over by today's government, but what was the reasoning back then?

Ostrinski
17th August 2012, 23:11
While we're on the subject of the Constitution, I have a question.

Why did the "Founding Fathers" guarantee the right to free speech, freedom of assembly, etc? If they were bourgeoisie trying to protect private property, what benefit would they gain from giving these rights to the masses? I know these "rights" are trampled all over by today's government, but what was the reasoning back then?I think part of it is because the bourgeoisie is not some sinister conspiratorial group that convenes weekly in a dark tower by a stormy sea, but other than that I have no quality answer and am curious as well

Zeus the Moose
17th August 2012, 23:54
While we're on the subject of the Constitution, I have a question.

Why did the "Founding Fathers" guarantee the right to free speech, freedom of assembly, etc? If they were bourgeoisie trying to protect private property, what benefit would they gain from giving these rights to the masses? I know these "rights" are trampled all over by today's government, but what was the reasoning back then?


I think part of it is because the bourgeoisie is not some sinister conspiratorial group that convenes weekly in a dark tower by a stormy sea, but other than that I have no quality answer and am curious as well


I think the important thing in this is the difference between the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. In my view, the former was laying out the underlying structure for a bourgeois-democratic government (rule of law republic). The Bill of Rights, on the other hand, was in many respects a series of more radical-democratic concessions that came out of the struggles in the United States of the 1780s, where (mostly state) governments were moving against various smallholders in an effort to reclaim debts that the government ran up during the War of Independence; Shays' Rebellion (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shays_Rebellion) is probably the most famous of these struggles. Admittedly, even the Bill of Rights is somewhat of a mixed back from a communist perspective, since while it does formally uphold rights such as free speech/assembly/etc and the right to bear arms, it also upholds the right of private property vis a vis the Fourth Amendment. Nevertheless, the fact that there was mass support for some sort of bill of rights meant that it was taken on as a demand by sections of the American ruling class (Jefferson and the Anti-Federalists), partially for their own factional reasons versus the emerging Federalists, and partially to bring sections of the broader masses on side to one faction of the emerging bourgeois constitutional order. Essentially it's an example of making concessions for the sake of social peace.

Os Cangaceiros
18th August 2012, 00:02
While we're on the subject of the Constitution, I have a question.

Why did the "Founding Fathers" guarantee the right to free speech, freedom of assembly, etc? If they were bourgeoisie trying to protect private property, what benefit would they gain from giving these rights to the masses? I know these "rights" are trampled all over by today's government, but what was the reasoning back then?

Because there was no sit-down meeting where all the founders said, "hmm, how will we control the servile masses?" They most likely sincerely believed in the ascendant social values which they endorsed.

Lynx
18th August 2012, 00:38
Things like "a job, food, clothing and shelter" are not mentioned and are denied as rights.

Yes, burn it.

Robocommie
18th August 2012, 03:22
While we're on the subject of the Constitution, I have a question.

Why did the "Founding Fathers" guarantee the right to free speech, freedom of assembly, etc? If they were bourgeoisie trying to protect private property, what benefit would they gain from giving these rights to the masses? I know these "rights" are trampled all over by today's government, but what was the reasoning back then?

Because those were ideals of the Enlightenment, which was in vogue at the time. These are all liberal ideals, the ideals of the bourgeoisie. They resented the repressive measures used by the aristocracy for centuries to keep the bourgeoisie as a class down. Remember that the bourgeoisie evolved out of the middle classes of the medieval communes; the craftsmen, artisans and merchants who often had far greater wealth than the nobility, but still did not have equal rights in society because they were not born noble. The major thesis of the liberal revolution was equality before the law.

There were proletarian elements in both the American and French Revolution, but they were marginalized or crushed early on, and the whole revolution made to suit the purposes of the bourgeoisie against the aristocracy.

Rational Radical
18th August 2012, 04:15
Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States outlines how bourgeois the founding fathers were,they had hundreds of slaves,slaughtered the native americans and the whole concept of the electoral college is clearly elitist