No, not the lords-n-serfs corporatocracy the gun-nut freakazoids think is freedumb. The actual constitutional liberty delivered by the Fourteenth Amendment.
At
a time when this ideology that calls itself “constitutional
conservatism” demands that we all confine our imaginations of how
American government should function to the Founders’ intentions (with a
little retroactive Christian Nationalism minus the entrenchment of
slavery), it’s important to remember that in response to the trauma of
the Civil War, there was a “second founding” encompassed by the Civil
War amendments and the effort towards Reconstruction that really must be
understood as well.
With perfect timing,
Jeffery Rosen of the National Constitutional Center and Tom Donnelly of
the Constitutional Accountability Center are
announcing a
Second Founding Initiative that will undertake a five-year discussion
to commemorate the 150th anniversaries of the key moments of those
crucial years.
While the American people rightly
revere George Washington, James Madison, and their fellow Framers, it
took the heroic efforts of Lincoln, Stevens, Frederick Douglass, John
Bingham (the framer of the Fourteenth Amendment), and many others to
create the “more perfect Union” built on winning a bloody Civil War and
ratifying a series of amendments that ended slavery, protected
fundamental rights from state abuses, guaranteed equality for all, and
expanded the right to vote. While the 1787 Framers succeeded in creating
the most durable form of government in history, it’s only after the
Second Founding that the Constitution fully protected the liberty and
equality promised in the Declaration of Independence….
In
light of the Second Founding turning 150, the time is ripe for a
national conversation about its enduring meaning and continuing
importance. Of course, few Americans have likely thought about this
period (or its leaders) since their high school history classes—and,
even then, they are as likely to remember Reconstruction as a period of
Northern vengeance and national disappointment as they are a precursor
to Brown v. Board of Education, King, and the achievements of the civil-rights movement….
Over
the next five years, the National Constitution Center and
Constitutional Accountability Center will work together on the Second
Founding Initiative, with an advisory board chaired by Justice Sandra
Day O’Connor. The bi-partisan initiative is committed to bringing
together scholars, thought leaders, and citizens from diverse
philosophical and legal perspectives to commemorate and debate the
meaning of the Second Founding, the original understanding of the
Reconstruction Amendments, and their contemporary significance.
This couldn’t come a moment too soon. Many of us were shocked and delighted when a conservative presidential candidate
offered a shout-out
to the Fourteenth Amendment as an important Republican accomplishment
back in July. But Rick Perry has since dropped out of the race, and the
constitutional conservatives who have a tendency to wish away all the
unpleasantness of the 1860s (except, of course, when they are looking
for an alleged precedent for the movement to recriminalize abortion) are
again riding high. Remembering the Second Founders and their
determination to keep America from perpetually being a stunted and
internally riven eighteenth century agrarian slave-owning oligarchy is
an urgent educational—and political—undertaking.
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