10 Common-Sense Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
February 22, 2019
These are my suggested loophole-closing amendments.
Unfortunately, my recent essay Let's Face It: The U.S. Constitution Has Failed deeply offended readers whom I had no intent to offend. One reader even decided to stop reading my work, which is extreme in the polite and cordial little world of Of Two Minds, where differences of opinion are expected and welcomed as long as they add to our shared understanding of the great issues of our era.
The key point of offense is my suggestion that the Constitution itself is wanting, when it is obvious to all that it's those who have been entrusted to administer the Constitution who are wanting. My error was in not stipulating this self-evident truth at the outset.
The founders feared exactly what has come to pass: a government that no longer represents
the interests of the citizenry. They did their best in a fractious debate to stipulate safeguards,
but it's clear that many of the Founders understood that no document could completely safeguard
the Republic against a leadership that sought to undermine the Republic at every turn for
personal gain.
It is also constructive to recall Jefferson's observations on the need for dissent to
maintain liberty:
When Jefferson said, “God forbid we should ever be 20 years without such a rebellion,” he was
expressing the idea that “liberties are ensured by the spirit of resistance” and that all
great nations had rebellions (again justifying that liberty shouldn’t be sacrificed by
conservative worry). (source)
It seems to me that adding strict limits to the government's powers and closing the loopholes that
now threaten the Republic are forms of dissent that deserve an open airing. I offer these
proposed amendments as a start. I consider them common-sense ways to limit the abuses of power and
rank corruption that are undermining the Republic. The penalties have to be severe enough to thwart
all who seek to exploit the government's many powers for their private enrichment and gain.
1. No branch of the government may create an agency or entity, public or private, that is not
expressly authorized and defined by the Constitution.
No more Federal Reserve, CIA, etc. unless the authorization is added to the Constitution.
2. No agency or entity, public or private, may issue United States currency, or substitute forms
of currency, other than the Treasury.
No more Federal Reserve or Federal Reserve notes.
3. The Treasury is authorized to issue loans of one year or less duration to public and private
entities in response to financial crisis.
Resolving liquidity crises is the sole justifiable function of central banks. This amendment
gives those powers to the Treasury, so there's no need for a central bank.
4. No government may restrict the citizens' enjoyment of the civil liberties defined in the
Bill of Rights on all public and private land, with the sole exception being activities
that restrict or disrupt the normal flow of commerce.
No more "free speech zones" situated 5 miles from the political hack giving a hackneyed speech.
5. No personnel, paid or unpaid, of the government, government contractors or entities receiving direct
or indirect funding from the government may set foot on any foreign soil for the purposes of
hostilities or actions preparing for hostilities except as authorized by a Declaration of War
by Congress.
No more "wars of choice" or Imperial meddling / over-reach. You want military or mercenary
operations in 20 countries? Then get 20 Declarations of War from Congress.
6. No person or entity, living, robotic or digital, may contribute more than one day's pay of
the average American laborer to any person seeking elected office in any one election cycle,
in currency, goods, services or labor, paid or unpaid.
Any person seeking elected office who accepts more than this sum in any form, and anyone who seeks to
circumvent this statuary limit on campaign contributions, shall be barred from holding office
for their lifetime and will serve a minimum prison sentence of 5 years.
This is about $100 in today's money.
6A. No person or entity which has received funding, favors or contracts from the government, directly or
indirectly, within the previous 5 years is allowed to contribute to any elective office campaign,
under the penalties described in Amendment 6. Additionally, any entity that seeks to bypass this
restriction shall be fined 5 years of annual revenues, payable upon conviction.
6B. Every contribution, direct or indirect, in currency, goods, services or labor, paid or unpaid,
made to a person seeking elected office, must be published publicly within 48 hours of receipt.
Every entity's contribution must carry the name of the person or persons responsible for the
entity's management. Any entity that seeks to bypass this
restriction shall be fined 5 years of annual revenues, payable upon conviction.
A corporation with annual revenues of $1 billion would pay a $5 billion fine, or be
liquidated. Its shareholders and bondholders would be wiped out.
6C. No individual may spend more than one month of the average laborer's monthly pay on their own
campaign for elective office. Anyone who seeks to
circumvent this statuary limit on campaign contributions shall be barred from holding office
for their lifetime and will serve a minimum prison sentence of 5 years.
This is about $4,500 in today's money.
7. The civil rights of citizens cannot be extended to legal entities, and are reserved solely
for living individual citizens.
8. No government employee may accept a position in any private entity that has
accepted funding, favors or contracts from the government in the previous 5 years for a period
of 10 years after leaving government office.
No more revolving doors, no more corporate capture, no more campaign contributions beyond
trivial sums. Campaigns of volunteers will face off against each other.
9. Every agency and office of the government, and every entity or person that has received funding,
favors or contracts, directly or indirectly, from the government, shall be independently audited
every 4 years, and the results of these forensic audits are to be made public on the day of their
issuance. Any entity that seeks to bypass or evade this
requirement shall be fined 5 years of revenues, payable upon conviction. Any person who seeks
to bypass or evade this requirement shall serve a minimum prison sentence of 5 years.
No more unaudited agencies and government contractors.
10. The government is restricted solely to the powers explicitly stipulated in the
Constitution. No additional powers may be assumed unless authorized by an amendment to the
Constitution.
This won't stop all mischief, but it at least provides a constitutional barrier and a
bulwark of dissent to governmental over-reach.
These are my suggested loophole-closing amendments. You undoubtedly have others and / or
improved versions of these. Let's put them on the table for debate and discussion.
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