The topic of discussion for this
Constitution Monday is the need for an informed citizenry. The citizens of
America must know what the Constitution says and how the government works if
the United States of America is to remain a free nation.
The American colonists did not have
any desire to break from Great Britain until their mother country began taxing
them to bolster the funds of the king. The Americans were content to pay taxes
that were used to improve their living conditions, but they were not willing to
be taxed by Parliament without having any representation there. When they could
see that the king and Parliament were not listening to them, they proceeded
with plans to declare their intentions to be an independent nation.
After
the Revolutionary War gentlemen from the colonies met together in Philadelphia
met
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to amend the Articles of Confederation. One of
the very first acts performed at the convention was to amend the Articles of
Confederation out of service. Then the delegates proceeded to write a new
Constitution for their new nation.
One of the delegates’ main concerns
was to write a Constitution that would give the federal government enough power
but not too much power. They fought a war for independence from King George,
and they certainly did not want to have the same kind of concentration of power
in the new United States.
They decided to give the power to
the people. That is the reason that the Constitution begins “We The People of
the United States….” The Constitution gives the power to the people and allows
them to exercise their God-given rights. The people loan some of their power to
the government but retain enough to take control if necessary.
The people must understand the
Constitution and the government well enough to know what the government should
be doing and what it should not be doing. Many school districts teach little or
no civics or history classes, and the rising generations do not know the
Constitution or government. An excellent example is the newly elected
representative from New York, 29-year-old Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. She is the
youngest woman in Congress and basically has no idea what she should be doing
and may not care that she does not know.
I applaud the Indiana state senator
who proposed Senate Bill 132 that would require high school students to pass a
citizenship test in order to graduate from high school. Republican Senator
Dennis Kruse says that “There is a deficiency in government and civics knowledge and it’s getting worse.” Believe it or not, there are people who oppose the bill.
I believe that all citizens of the
nation should know basic civics in order to be informed citizens. We required
immigrants to wish to become citizens to pass a test to prove that they
understand the responsibilities of citizenship. It is only fair that we require
home-grown citizens to do the same.
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