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Constitution Day 2024

Constitution Day 2024

The untapped power of the Ninth Amendment

George Noga
Sep 15, 2024

On September 17th we celebrate America’s 237th Constitution Day honoring the oldest (by far) charter of government extant. Most constitutions fail within 20 years. Our Constitution’s most important words are its first three, “We the People”. Have you ever wondered why they are the only words emblazoned in giant supersized script? Those three words are truly radical and astounding; they mean all power emanates from we the people – not from some king or government. In an age of monarchs and despots, those three words must have scared the bejesus out of them.

We The people text
 

Our Constitution, which is just 4,543 words on 4 sheets of paper, contains many provisions that are largely unknown by most Americans. This Constitution Day I am focusing on the Ninth Amendment, which in its entirety states:

“The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”

History of the Ninth Amendment

The Federalists believed a bill of rights was unnecessary because the Constitution granted government only certain specific and enumerated powers. They argued that listing some protected rights may be misinterpreted to mean all unnamed rights were unprotected. However, several states were so distrustful of government, they made their ratification of the Constitution contingent on a bill of rights.

The wording of the Ninth Amendment is amorphous. There are similar provisions in the Constitution such as the “due process” clause in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and the “necessary and proper” clause in Article 1, Section 8. The Ninth Amendment refers to “reserved” rather than “enumerated” rights and hence holds less sway; it is rarely cited in Supreme Court cases. It was mentioned in Griswold v. Connecticut1 when the court ruled there is a right to privacy. However, assertions of unenumerated rights have nearly always failed at the federal level.

Fortunately, the constitutions of most states (including Florida) also contain provisions nearly identical to the Ninth Amendment; these are referred to as baby ninth amendments – and are being used increasingly by public interest legal organizations to thwart government infringement on unenumerated rights.

Power of the Ninth and Baby Ninth Amendments

The Ninth Amendment2 has the power to be a dynamic force for protecting individual rights. Our perception of rights is constantly evolving in the age of social media, artificial intelligence and the human genome. Also, government is intruding more and more on our rights as it becomes a leviathan state. The architects of the Constitution could not have known about rights that did not then exist. In fact, the American people have more rights than any government could ever list.

Following are some rights that currently are being restricted by government and are ripe for Ninth Amendment challenges.

  • The right to earn a living without excessive and unnecessary government restrictions. For example, hair braiders should not need cosmetology licenses.
  • The right to work for less than the minimum wage and if under minimum age.
  • The right not to have your assets seized without due process. Many states confiscate cash from citizens without charging them with a crime.
  • The right to control your property such as no minimum building size.
  • The right to work from home without government imposition of OHSA restrictions, banning of window signage, parking and other mandates.
  • The right to be free from government surveillance on your own property.
  • The right to operate a food truck without draconian government regulation.
  • The right to make and sell baked goods in your home kitchen without having to install a commercial kitchen or be subject to government inspections.
  • The right to due process before being declared incompetent or having restrictions imposed on travel, marriage, health care and hiring an attorney.
  • The right to make and sell caskets and to provide memorial services.

All of the rights listed above are routinely violated by governments and they represent only the tip of the iceberg. The Ninth Amendment can limit the power of government and protect Americans’ unenumerated rights. It is time to put it to work.

Constitution Day 2024

On September 17th we celebrate the United States Constitution. Even with its imperfections cited supra, it is the best charter of government crafted by the hand of man to define the relationship between man and the state. It has endured 237 years precisely because it is based on the correct understanding of human nature; its systems of separation of powers and checks and balances are pure genius.

The Preamble to the Constitution lists first among its objectives – to form a more perfect union. The Ninth Amendment can play a greater role in protecting our unenumerated rights and thereby to form a more perfect union.

Happy Constitution Day 2024 from More Liberty – Less Government!

  1. Although it was mentioned, the Ninth Amendment was not the basis for deciding Griswold.
  2. Hereinafter all references to the Ninth Amendment also include baby ninth amendments.
© 2024 George Noga
More Liberty – Less Government, Post Office Box 916381
Longwood, FL 32791-6381, Email: mllg@cfl.rr.com
 

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Constitution Day 2023 – Slouching toward a post constitutional America

Constitution Day 2023

Slouching toward a post constitutional America

GEORGE NOGA
SEP 17, 2023

Our Constitution is 236 years old today, quite an accomplishment considering most constitutions fail within 20 years. The US Constitution is the best charter of government ever to define the relationship between man and the state. It may be the best document ever penned by the hand of man. It is based on a fundamentally correct understanding of human nature and its system of separation of powers and checks and balances is pure genius. Its first three words, we the people, the only ones in supersized script, are breathtaking. In an era of despots and monarchs, nothing was more radical than the notion that all power flowed from we the people.

We The people text
Photo by Anthony Garand on Unsplash

Regrettably, our celebration of Constitution Day 2023 is not one of unleavened joy. Instead, we are slouching toward a post constitutional America. The Constitution is merely 4,543 words on 4 sheets of paper. But alas, the Constitution is not self-enforcing; it requires defenders in every generation as it tends to get diluted over time. Today, the rule of law and equal justice under the law are under siege by progressives who believe the ends justify the means. They weaponize the state to reward friends and to punish political opponents. They attack the Electoral College, Supreme Court, filibuster, Senate and even our first amendment rights.

Progressives attack the Constitution mainly because it makes it slow and difficult to enact change. This is not a flaw of the Constitution; rather, that is its greatest strength. In order for a new law to take effect, the Constitution requires 5 steps.

  1. House of Representatives: Designed to reflect the current will of the people.
  2. Senate: Originally senators were appointed by and represented states; only one-third were elected every 2 years. Senators’ six-year terms (and also the filibuster) were intended to immunize Americans from transitory passions.
  3. President: The president, elected by all the people, must sign any new law.
  4. Supreme Court: Justices, appointed for life, make sure laws are constitutional.
  5. Juries: When laws involve criminal elements, juries are sovereign and may nullify laws by refusing to convict, as they have done numerous times such as with fugitive slave laws, prohibition, anti-war protestors and sodomy laws.

The drafters of the Constitution were extraordinarily well versed in history and had justifiable contempt for democracy, which they regarded as a form of tyranny – like two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner. The French Revolution instantly actualized the will of the people; how did that work out? More recently, in the former Yugoslavia, the Serb majority demanded immediate actualization which resulted in chaos, genocide and 140,000 deaths; how did that work out?

The Constitution was designed to make it difficult to pass laws. Our founders believed in limited government and that laws should be enacted only when absolutely necessary, enjoy widespread support and not reflect transient majoritarian passions.

Constitutions are merely words on paper

One nation’s constitution guaranteed freedom of religion, speech, the press and the right to assembly. It provided for the direct election of all government bodies. It promised equal rights in political, economic and cultural spheres.

Another country’s constitution guarantees democratic rights and liberties and the right to vote and hold office. All citizens are guaranteed freedom of speech, of the press, assembly, religion, travel and association.

The first constitution referenced above is from the former Soviet Union; the second is from North Korea. Our American Constitution differs only slightly from those of the USSR and North Korea in promising rights and liberties to the people. However, they all are merely words on paper. If Americans in every generation do not vigorously defend our Constitution, we will end up just like the USSR and North Korea.

A republic if we can keep it

Progressives seek to abolish 236 years of liberty because they believe they know what’s best for everyone and are willing to shred the Constitution to achieve it. The words of the Constitution, no matter how mellifluous, won’t protect us any more than they protected the people of the USSR or North Korea. They are merely words on paper.

Benjamin Franklin’s words are just as poignant today as when he uttered them in 1787. We have a 236 year old constitutional republic, “if we can keep it”. Our beloved Constitution will survive only if we keep it in our hearts and minds and pass that fervor on to the next generation. It is up to us. Happy Constitution Day 2023!

© 2023 George Noga
More Liberty – Less Government, Post Office Box 916381
Longwood, FL 32791-6381, Email: mllg@cfl.rr.com