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Congress has long exercised powers that are not constitutionally authorized. At the same time, in an effort to avoid hard choices and increase its members’ reelection chances, Congress has delegated most of the actual work of legislating to faceless, unaccountable bureaucracies, which continue to grow unchecked. The Federal Register, which contains all proposed and final regulations issued by federal agencies, has published over 3.2 million pages. If it were printed and stacked, it would be taller than the Washington Monument. This mountain of regulation — not even legislation — slows economic growth, stifles innovation, and prevents countless Americans from pursuing their version of the American Dream.  

The growth in our federal government has also led to unsustainable federal spending. The federal debt recently topped $22 trillion. Our country’s entire GDP is only $20.5 trillion, meaning that if we took every penny that is earned or produced by every American over the course of a year, we still could not pay off our debt. Every American’s share of the debt is currently about $67,000, and within 10 years, every man, woman, and child will owe $100,000. Future generations of Americans are being born into staggering debt for services they will never see.

The Supreme Court has been complicit in this perversion of the constitutional order, failing in its duty to serve as a check on the power of the legislative and executive branches. As the federal government has grown large enough to control every facet of our lives, so has the importance of the Supreme Court grown. The court now routinely rules on the most important political issues in American life, including healthcare, immigration, affirmative action, abortion, political gerrymandering, and campaign finance. These “winner takes all” decisions have led to more polarization and a more toxic political discourse. 

With a conservative majority on the court, there is hope that the constitutional ship can be righted. But it will take decades to uproot the mountain of bad precedent that has built up for nearly a century. We should all hope that the federal courts will finally begin taking their constitutional role seriously. But we should do more than hope.

It is long past time for the states to exercise their sovereign power under Article V to call for a convention to reign in the federal government’s power.
The far greater risk is inaction. We know with certainty that, without action from the states, our federal government will continue to grow and spend unchecked. Amending our Constitution to remedy this threat is no insult to our founders. It’s an acknowledgement of their wisdom in equipping us with the tools necessary to overcome a threat to our Republic which they foretold so many years ago.
They begin by noting that the Convention of States provision in the U.S. Constitution -- which allows the states to propose amendments -- was unanimously supported by the Framers of the Constitution.
Today, the "day the Framers feared" has arrived, and it's time for the states to use their power under Article V to correct the abuses we see in Washington, D.C.

Undothechange 4 Mar 29
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4 comments

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We are supposed to be a nation under Rule of Law. Many laws make it impossible to always be ruled by them because there is too much possibility of ignorance, which is "no excuse."

Our country was designed for people who could rule themselves, yet we have legislators (state and national) who pass numerous laws in order to have a law for which they were responsible (with name on it for posterity) and to justify their being in office. U.S. Congress has become a bunch of complainers about problems who then broadcast their solutions yet maintain the problems (voting against their professed solutions, i.e. The AOC Green Plan, when pressed to vote) so we will keep electing them because we believe in their solutions and desire resolution.

It is indeed time for a reset of our country!

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The United States of America was conquered and abolished in 1867 . The Nation was replaced with a Corporate Oligarchy . Government of the Corporations , for the Central Banks and by the Attorneys .

"Real History" Group

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I am in complete agreement, and have long promoted several efforts to promote an Article V Convention. What particular amendments do you support? I think term limits for members of Congress and the SCOTUS would be good, as well as granting the states the power of countermand against Congress.

I have a list a mile long of amendments.
Of course the common term limits, balanced budget but I also think we need to have a way for congress to counter the decision of the Supreme Court. My favorite is sort of whimsical but it’s still makes a ton of sense.
Change the day of the elections to April 16th! When the rape is still fresh in your mind!

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I seriously believe the only hope is to let the system crash and rebuild from the pieces that remain. I don't hold any hope for reversing the course, nor any hope in the system continuing to operate for another 50-100 years. Every major empire eventually falls - and we are on the down hill slope. The only thing keeping the US propped up is our vast military that bullies the rest of the world via economic and militaristic thug tactics. The US dollar is the world reserve currency due to the threat of a gun - and this house of cards will eventually crumble under the weight of that glue.

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