Why We Shouldn't Abandon The Constitution of the United States

379 Words1 Page

Why We Shouldn't Abandon The Constitution of the United States

The above statement is somewhat mind-boggling. It is something that a revolutionist might have coined over 200 years ago and it leaves much to the imagination. It is about as close to being treasonous as one could get without actually committing the crime. The former Vice-President Albert Gore once stated that "the constitution was a living breathing document, open to change". His statement was quite controversial and it definitely created a stir with the patriot-cult crowd. Why would anyone want to scrap the entire Constitution of the United States of America? Has someone come up with a more impressive document that better signifies what this country is all about?

The strict constitutionalist within me would not be in agreement with abandoning our constitution under any circumstances. If we were to abandon this document, we return to the same situation that we were in during 1776. There would be nothing that would bind the states together. Not having a constitution almost caused us to lose the revolutionary war. During the decade that we were without the constitution, many events occurred such as Shay's Rebellion in Massachusetts, British contempt for treaties, Indian depredations, and Spanish movements on the western and southern borders. All of these combined to demonstrate how vulnerable the United States really were. Our first President, George Washington was quoted as saying " I confess to you candidly, I can foresee no evil greater than disunion".

This disunion was attempted once between the states and brought about the Civil War. A conservative document that lays the foundation for our republic is exactly what our country needed and that is what prevailed. It is the world's oldest written constitution still in effect. It contains the very principles that our statutes and codes emerged from. It defines that our government must be confined to the rule of law. The Constitution’s 25 Amendments, added over a period of 180 years, have in most cases, plugged the loopholes, rather than change the focus of the document. This is what I believe in preserving, the document in its entirety. I do not believe that it is a document that is open to direct change. However, I do believe that there is some truth in what former President Franklin D.

Open Document