Runaway
American Brainwashing
by Joel S. Hirschhorn
January 16, 2007
You may not want to
know this. Americans have been successfully brainwashed to fear
exactly what their revered Constitution gives them the right to
have. Those smart Framers of the Constitution decided that we
needed exactly what the establishment, pro-status quo elitists
who run our plutocracy do NOT want us to have. There is even a
well funded semi-secret group organized to prevent what we the
people have a right to.
Has the brainwashing
worked? You bet it has. In the absence of public furor, for over
200 years Congress has not done what Article V of the Constitution
says it "shall" do. Congress has never issued a call
for an Article V convention of state delegates to consider constitutional
amendments, in response to two-thirds of state legislatures asking
for one. That numeric requirement, the only specified requirement
in Article V, has been satisfied, with 50 states submitting over
500 requests. Such a convention operating under authority of the
Constitution would be a fourth, impermanent branch of the federal
system, not beholding to the three permanent branches. Such independence
has been cartooned into a frightening monster.
There is no uncertainty
about what the Framers thought the nation needed. They wrote in
crystal clear language a two-step process for amending the Constitution.
First, we need to craft proposals for possible amendments. Either
Congress can do it or an Article V convention of state delegates
can. Second, ratify proposed amendments by three-quarters of the
states, either through their legislatures or state conventions,
as Congress chooses. The Framers believed that Americans, acting
through large numbers of state legislators, deserved a way to
circumvent the excessive power of Congress or its refusal or inability
to satisfy sovereign citizens - their bosses. No role was given
to the federal judiciary and executive branch in amending the
Constitution.
An Article V convention
is a clear threat to the political, social and economic establishment
exerting self-serving influence on Congress. It can put into public
debate ideas for amending the Constitution that threaten established
political forces, both liberal and conservative. Acting independently,
it can courageously propose amendments without interference from
status quo defenders.
So, not surprisingly,
many persons and groups holding power oppose an Article V convention.
How have they brainwashed Americans to fear such a convention?
They fostered the image of a "runaway convention" -
something to fear on a par with fears of a physical attack on
the nation by foreign enemies or terrorists. How could something
placed into our Constitution to thwart an ineffective federal
government be turned on its head to become such a feared threat?
Clever people grasped
onto a historical fact and extrapolated it into a fantasy nightmare.
In fact, the nation's first and only constitutional convention
was a runaway. Rather than do what had been planned for it - namely
to modify the Articles of Confederation that first tied the states
together - the state delegates constructed what we have for over
two hundred years worshipped: the U.S. Constitution. Those rascal
Framers created a strong federal government that not everyone
at the time wanted. The anti-status quo guys won.
Backstage power brokers
have never wanted another convention that might change the political
system they expertly corrupt and control. They made people believe
that a convention could destroy their cherished, constitutionally
protected rights and freedoms. Or, equally bad, strange amendments
would overturn the structure of our federal government and throw
the nation into chaos and destroy our lauded political and governmental
stability.
Is there any supporting
evidence for fearing an Article V convention? No. To the contrary,
there are solid reasons for demanding it.
First, there have been
many state constitutional conventions and a huge number of amendments
to state constitutions. Look around. Our states and their governments
have not been ruined. Conventions were not hijacked and turned
into weapons. And the first national constitution convention was
hugely successful, even if it was a runaway, telling us that the
good is the enemy of the better.
Second, the requirement
that three-quarters of the states must ratify any specific amendments
produced by an Article V convention provides a safety net. This
is such a high hurdle that it is crazy to believe that truly awful
amendments could ever become permanent changes to our Constitution.
Anyway, when an amendment not worthy of retaining has happened,
it was fixed through another amendment.
Third, the nation's
first Article V convention would be so unique and of such historical
significance that in our modern age of media and Internet communication
there would be a solar-bright light on all its activities, from
the election of state delegates to their debates and final amendment
proposals. In fact, this temporary fourth branch of our federal
system would be under more public scrutiny and less susceptible
to corruption than our present, permanent branches of government.
Fourth, we should reject
the indirect way of changing our constitution, namely through
interpretations and judgments by those few non-elected, political
appointees that serve on the Supreme Court. Plus, as President
George W. Bush has demonstrated, a runaway CEO of our nation along
with an ineffective Congress can take big bites out of our constitutional
rights and protections and suffer no consequences.
Fifth, while it is
true that we have had considerable political and governmental
stability, we have paid a heavy price for it: namely a permanent
culture of corruption, lying and deception that have danced around
our constitutional protections and riddled American democracy
with hypocrisy. Too much stability has turned our democracy into
a plutocracy and a convention could consider remedies.
Sixth, the majority
of Americans are independents, not loyal Democrats or Republicans,
and only an Article V convention offers a truly independent route
to addressing intransigent root problems that the political system
under two-party control has allowed to fester.
Seventh, the congressional
experience with proposing amendments has shown that though many
may be considered, few survive. Over 11,000 have been considered
by Congress, but only 33 reached the ratification phase, and only
27 were ratified - very few in the last 100 years. [The last amendment
was finally ratified in 1992 - 203 years after it was first proposed
by Congress!] Why should we think that a convention would agree
on a huge number of amendments? With all America watching, delegates
that know their states would focus on a few critical amendments
likely to be ratified.
Lastly, what about
that semi-secret group that was created to block attempts to amend
our Constitution? Few know about The Constitution Project (www.constitutionproject.org),
"that urges restraint in the constitutional amendment process."
It was formed in 1997 to "oppose the facile rewriting of
the U.S. Constitution." They fear "unthinking tinkering
with fundamental rights and liberties" - actually, amendments
on social and fiscal issues from conservatives. It has been funded
by The Century Fund, a liberal group. The nearly 70 members in
the constitutional amendments initiative are true status quo elites.
Many were members of Congress or presidential appointees. They
produced guidelines for evaluating possible amendments that, as
discussed in The
Second Constitutional Convention by Richard
Labunski, were formulated to defeat attempts to amend the Constitution.
On the political right,
the John Birch Society has consistently pushed the Big Runaway
Lie and said the "prospect [of a convention] is ominous."
"We do not believe that, under today's mentality and morality,
the nation can handle that much sovereignty in one place."
To support their position, they cite elites: Conservative U.S.
Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren Burger said "there is
no effective way to limit or muzzle the actions of a Constitutional
Convention. The Convention could make its own rules and set its
own agenda. Congress might try to limit the Convention to one
amendment or to one issue, but there is no way to assure that
the Convention would obey." Liberal Supreme Court Justice
Arthur Goldberg said "one of the most serious problems Article
V poses is a runaway convention. There is no enforceable mechanism
to prevent a convention from reporting out wholesale changes to
our Constitution and Bill of Rights.
delegates could put
a runaway convention in the hands of single-issue groups whose
self-interest may be contrary to our national well-being."
Ardent right-wingers admire what a joint congressional resolution
said in 1935: "The government of the United States is not
a concession to the people from some one higher up. It is the
creation and the creature of the people themselves, as absolute
sovereigns." Yet, they do NOT trust we the people to exercise
our sovereignty and be smart enough to make a convention work
in the public interest!
There are, luckily,
pro-convention advocates. Listen to the wise words of Judge Thomas
Brennan, former Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court and
Dean Emeritus and President of Thomas Cooley Law School in Lansing,
Michigan: "There is no danger of a runaway convention. That
phrase, 'runaway convention', and all the accompanying horror
stories about repealing the Bill of Rights are utterly without
substance. They are myths, harmful to democracy, invented by those
who are afraid to let the people exercise their historic and God-given
right to self government." Amen.
Despite the truth,
opponents to an Article V convention have successfully framed
the issue in the public consciousness. A highly negative status
quo bias belief has been cemented into many minds - but not everyone.
Even when confronted with pro-convention information, brainwashed
people fall victim to the pain of cognitive dissonance. The truth
is blocked out to minimize discomfort. They stay fixated with
the implanted Big Runaway Lie that a convention will harm the
nation. For those that let in objective reality, angry dissent
must fuel demand for one.
Where do we go from
here? If respect for our Constitution and our sovereign selves
prevails, pro-convention patriots must work extra hard to move
the nation towards an Article V convention. The first battle is
to get a convention. The second challenging battle is to prevent
a convention from being abused and co-opted by the power elites
that would be out for blood after failing to prevent a convention.
A high level of public support is critically needed to win both
battles. To win the first battle, the smart strategy is not to
let people become sidetracked about specific possible amendments.
Those who have fostered the Big Runaway Lie will surely posit
some terrible possible amendments - ones that would immediately
frighten and alienate huge numbers of Americans. Public fear is
their weapon.
Back to reality: What
we now have, along with runaway public distrust of government,
is runaway political disengagement as evidenced by low voter turnout,
runaway disgust with both the Republican and Democratic Parties,
runaway economic inequality, runaway corruption of government
by corporate and other special interests, and runaway mainstream
media dysfunction - a corporate press more than a free press.
The only thing Americans should fear is more of the same.
Can people purge their
brainwashing? Only if they confront the false status quo bias
belief and acknowledge that power elites did it to maintain a
system they manipulate. To be against a convention is to stay
a victim. Let the truth set you free. Do not fear the second American
constitutional convention. Embrace it. Do not worry about a convention
being hijacked. Instead, stay focused on this ugly truth: America
has already been hijacked by corporate and other special interests
on the left and right, along with their sycophant corrupt politicians.
Stay vigilant! Because power elites will use every dirty trick
imaginable to instill fear about a convention and then to undermine
it, should they lose the first battle.
Come work for an Article
V convention to reboot American democracy and provide a transfusion
into the body politic through a heavy dose of transparent direct
democracy. Help the USA remain committed to the rule of law. Compel
Congress to respect what is clearly stated in the Constitution,
and the meaning of "shall."
The Supreme Court decides
whether laws passed by Congress are or are not constitutional.
But it refuses to tell Congress and the nation that Congress'
refusal to call an Article V convention is unconstitutional. What
happened to checks and balances? Maybe Supreme Court Justices
have also been brainwashed, or like members of Congress don't
want to risk losing their power.
The bitter truth is
that literally every individual, group and institution now holding
real power opposes a second national constitutional convention.
Does that make the quest for a convention futile? Only if one
gives up on the supermajority of Americans that should, for their
own sake and the sake of future generations, want a convention.
Elitists have much to lose. Everyone else has much to gain.
The fight for American
democracy is not over. Our Founders fought British oppression
and now we must fight congressional oppression. Can nonviolent
collective action produce an Article V convention? It would be
possible if each of us says "yes!" And then help spread
an idea virus to reach a tipping point among we the people: Millions
of Americans must tell state legislatures and congressional delegations
they demand a convention. Tools may include citizen state petitions
on the Internet and thousands of community meetings arranged through
meetup.com. Such activities and a convention itself would provide
what many believe the Framers intended to create: a deliberative
democracy.
On the occasion of
the 200th anniversary of the Constitution, esteemed political
scientist James MacGregor Burns warned that "major changes
will not be made until there is a severe crisis - at which time
we might open the floodgates to reckless constitutional change."
Instead, he advised taking thoughtful action now. "We must
all become framers," he advised.
To keep working on
the goal of forming "a more perfect Union,' and as a political
necessity and a moral obligation, we OUGHT to have a second national
constitutional convention - which means we the people CAN have
one. Simply put, an Article V convention is all about "power
to the people." Either you believe in it or you don't. The
people who created our nation and Constitution believed in it.
They gave us Article V. Our elected MISrepresentatives in Congress
and their masters don't believe in it. They won't willingly give
us a convention. We have a runaway Congress. That's what's frightening.
And that's why we must fight for a convention.
~~~~~~~~
Joel S. Hirschhorn
is the author of Delusional Democracy - Fixing the Republic Without
Overthrowing the Government. His current political writings have
been greatly influenced by working as a senior staffer for the
U.S. Congress and for the National Governors Association. He advocates
a Second American Revolution.
Learn about the author's
new book on www.delusionaldemocracy.com.