The Political Theory Of The Constitution

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The Constitution was made to be the code by which all Americans had to live by. It set up the laws that we, as Americans, were to live by in the United States. The law is the set of rules that we live by. The Constitution is the highest law. It belongs to the United States. It belongs to all Americans. The Constitution lists some key rights. Rights are things that all people have just because they are alive. By listing the rights, they are made special. They are made safe. The Bill of Rights is a part of the Constitution. The Bill of Rights lists many rights of the people. The Constitution was made off of major political ideas, including the laws of nature and nature’s God, unalienable rights, divine right of the kings, social contract theory, and the rights of resistance to illegitimate government. "The laws of nature and of nature 's God" are the beginning point of the political theory of founding America. The political theory explains the Founding Fathers ' decision to declare America 's independence from England. But they had to think; Is the law of God supreme or is it subject to the laws of the people? The Founding Fathers, in the end, agreed to treat …show more content…

Each article explains a different part of the government or its citizens. For example, the first 3 Articles talk about the 3 different branches of government along with their powers. While the Bill of Rights talks specifically about individual rights. There are a total of 7 Articles within the Constitution. They all have a different purposes to serve and they all explain something different. Along with the Articles if the Constitution, there are many amendments. Approximately 11,539 proposals to amend the Constitution have been introduced in Congress since 1789. But only 31 amendments have been passed so far. The amendment process is so long and hard that many of the amendments can’t even get out of the Congressional Committee. It was made this way on

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