The US Constitution consists of three articles—one for each branch of government—plus four more articles with general rules about citizenship and money and such things, and then come the amendments, which are numbered, and of which the first ten are considered the Bill of Rights.
So this month we’re going to talk about the legislative
branch, and lawmaking, which is the task of the legislative branch.
But first, a couple of other semi-relevant celebrations.
This week, March 4, marks 15 years since I started the Spherical Model blog.
Hurray!
And also this week, March 2, we mark the Independence of
Texas, from Mexico, in 1836.
As with the US separation from Great Britain, all avenues of
diplomacy aimed at having our rights respected had failed, leaving
separation—even if by war—as the only alternative for a people who would live
free.
In the case of Texas, Stephen F. Austin had traveled to the
Mexican capital to express the territory’s grievances and require the Mexican
nation to abide by its constitution. In answer, he was placed in an underground
dungeon, in which he could not stand, for 18 months. He never fully recovered
his health from that ordeal and died a few short years later. Austin came home
and declared that the only alternative left to them was to fight. And while the
siege at the Alamo was ongoing, the Texas Declaration of Independence from
Mexico was signed at Washington-on-the-Brazos (newly re-opened museum info
here). Within a few weeks, Sam Houston’s army
surprised Mexico’s Santa Anna, the dictator, at San Jacinto, captured him
alive, and forced him to recognize their independence and end the war. (By the
way, because the Texians won, that place is pronounced Say-ann Juh-SIN-toe.)
As the US Declaration of Independence reminds us, we humans
are born to be free. Governments are established to protect our lives, our
liberty, and our property. But government, like fire, needs to be carefully
circumscribed, so it doesn’t get out of control.
As Thomas Paine put it in Common Sense,
Society in
every state is a blessing, but government even in its best state is but a
necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one; for when we suffer, or
are exposed to the same miseries by a government, which we might expect
in a country without government, our calamity is heightened by
reflecting that we furnish the means by which we suffer.
For this reason, when the founders wrote the Constitution,
they limited government to certain enumerated powers—and nothing else, without
specific amendments passed by the majority of the United States.
To read the full article, FOLLOW LINK TO SUBSTACK.



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