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Mark Levin: States Should Call Convention to Propose Amending Constitution and Put Tax Day, Election Day Back to Back

Photo Credit: CNS NewsMark Levin: States Should Call Convention to Propose Amending Constitution

Mark Levin, the nationally syndicated radio host who served as chief of staff in the Justice Department during the Reagan Administration, argues in his new book—The Liberty Amendments: Restoring the American Republic—that state legislatures should use the authority granted them in the Constitution to call a convention to propose amendments to the Constitution.

“It is the only way out,” Levin said in an interview on CNSNews.com’s Online With Terry Jeffrey. “The federal government, Congress, the Supreme Court, the president, the bureaucracy, they are not going to reform themselves, they are not going to limit their activities. Only we can–through our state representatives from the bottom up.”

Levin’s proposal is based on Article 5 of the Constitution, which says constitutional amendments may be proposed in two ways—either by two-thirds majorities in both houses of Congress or by a convention called by two-thirds of the state legislatures. Whichever way an amendment is proposed, however, it cannot become part of the Constitution unless it is ratified by three-quarters of the states.

“It’s time to turn to the Constitution, to save the Constitution, if you love the Constitution, before there is no Constitution,” Levin told CNSNews.com.

Levin says in The Liberty Amendments that he used to oppose the idea of the state legislatures convening a convention to propose constitutional amendments.

Read more from this story HERE.

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Mark Levin: Amend Constitution to Put Tax Day and Election Day Back to Back

In his new book—The Liberty Amendments: Restoring the American Republic—nationally syndicated radio host Mark Levin, who served as chief of staff in the Reagan Justice Department, argues that the Constitution should be amended to put tax day and election day back to back.

“I would move tax day to the day before election day,” Levin said in an interview on CNSNews.com’s Online With Terry Jeffrey.

“I think this is very important, because if you’ll notice, election day and tax day are about as far apart as they can get, like seven months apart,” said Levin. “So we’re voting on the promises of politicians rather than the reality of what these politicians have done.”

“In my view,” said Levin, “particularly when it comes to incumbent politicians, those of us who still pay our federal income taxes, we pay our taxes, then the next day we go out and vote, and I think that is crucially important, so we are linking reality to the electoral process.”

Under current law, Americans must file their federal tax returns by April 15 and elections for federal offices are held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

Read more from this story HERE.

Campaign Puts ‘Gay Rights’ Behind Constitution

Photo Credit: WNDThe cases are well known: The Colorado baker in trouble because he declined to violate his faith and promote same-sex “marriage” with his work, the Washington florist who made the same decision and the New Mexico photographer who was fined by the state for turning down a request to promote lesbianism with her services.

More and more people who adhere to the biblical definition of marriage are finding themselves in that no-win situation of being forced by “nondiscrimination” laws to endorse and support “alternative lifestyles.”

An attorney whose work on constitutional issues is well known says such conflicts shouldn’t happen. Matt Barber, vice president for Liberty Counsel Action, told WND that the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is supreme, and local ordinances that demand people violate its precepts must fall.

But some place their own agenda above the Constitution, and therein lies the conflict, he said.

The solution?

Read more from this story HERE.

Mark Levin Proposes Article V Constitutional Convention, Intended as End-Run Around Federal Tyranny

[On his radio show this week, Mark] Levin previewed an argument under Article Five of the United States Constitution which expresses how the Constitution can be changed through the amendment process by using the traditional passage of a proposed amendment by two-thirds of both the House of Representatives and the Senate; then on to the several states for ratification. Once three-fourths of the states have ratified the proposed amendment, the approved Amendment becomes part of our United States Constitution.

What Levin also said was that the States could also propose a convention to add a specific amendment or reject a current amendment by calling an Amendment Convention. This convention would have no bearing on the existing framework of the Constitution, but would only affect the addition or subtraction of an amendment at hand.

Levin reported that under Article V of the Constitution, two-thirds of the several states could form a convention on their own through actions initiated through their own state legislatures. Once an amendment is successfully proposed, it could be ratified by approval of three-fourths of the legislatures of the several states, and then imparted into the Constitution.

The Founders placed this alternative method of amending the Constitution as an end-around the possible tyranny of an all-powerful federal government. The Founders knew the federal leviathan could never be completely trusted with policing itself and therefore gave ultimate authority to the states to make changes when they deemed it necessary.

Read more from this story HERE.

Sen. Harry Reid Morphs Into a Constitution-Loving Patriot in Describing Why the Filibuster Must Go (+video)

Photo Credit: J. Scott ApplewhiteBy Stephen Dinan. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Monday that the men who wrote the Constitution intended for the president’s nominees to be subject to only a majority vote, and said filibusters of nominees were never envisioned.

The Senate’s leading Democrat, who led repeated filibusters of President George W. Bush’s nominations when Republicans held the majority, said he’s changed his mind since then, and he accused the GOP of forcing his hand by slow-walking so many of President Obama’s nominees.

Mr. Reid, of Nevada, said the Constitution only requires supermajority votes for specific circumstances: treaties, impeachments, constitutional amendments and overrides of presidential vetoes. He said everything else should be subject to a majority vote. Read more from this story HERE.


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Senators: No Deal Yet on ‘Nuclear Option’

By Newsmax, Reuters and The Associated Press. U.S. senators said on Monday that no agreement had yet been reached to avert a showdown over President Barack Obama’s executive-branch nominees and threats by Democrats to strip Republicans of their filibuster power to block such nominations.

As the talks entered their fourth hour, Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer said a deal was unlikely on Monday, but Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss said the chamber’s two leaders, Democrat Harry Reid and Republican Mitch McConnell, were urged to keep trying to find common ground.

Votes are set for Tuesday on seven of Obama’s nominees.

Meanwhile, Democratic Sen. Jon Tester indicated progress, telling reporters: “The two sides aren’t off by far.”

All but three senators returned to Washington Monday night for the unusual joint-caucus meeting behind closed doors to hammer out a deal. Read more from this story HERE.

Bill O’Reilly Believes that Preachers Should be Jailed for Telling Homosexuals They’re Going to Hell (+video)

In a pathetic exchange with Fox Commentator John Stossel, Bill O’Reilly maintains that a preacher should not be allowed to tell homosexuals that they’re going to hell.

O’Reilly pontificated that “that should be against the law.” In O’Reilly’s view, preaching hell as a consequence to sin brings “intentional personal anguish” to the homosexual and he or she should be protected from such words.

Stossel weakly pushed back, suggesting that the line should be drawn at “fighting words” but O’Reilly interrupted retorting, “Well, going to Hell is pretty violent…”

O’Reilly concluded that no one should be able to “terrorize someone” because of disagreements over beliefs.

The Castle Under Siege

Photo Credit: Alexander HunterThe First, Second and Fourth Amendments to the Constitution aren’t much admired by liberals, or “progressives,” or whatever they’re calling themselves this month. Free speech is restrained by speech codes, President Obama’s disdain for the right to bear arms is well known, and the government’s electronic snooping has shredded the guarantees against self-incrimination.

Now even the Third Amendment, which guarantees that “no soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law,” is endangered, too. The courts have rarely considered this iron prohibition on quartering of troops, but now they must.

Two years ago, Christopher Worley, a police officer in Henderson, Nev., called on Anthony Mitchell to ask whether police could use the Mitchell home to keep watch on a neighbor. Mr. Mitchell declined. Soon he heard pounding on the front door. Henderson police officers arrived with orders from their superiors: “If Mitchell refused to answer the door, force entry would be made, and Mitchell would be arrested.” The door was battered down, and Mr. Mitchell was arrested at gunpoint for “obstructing an officer.” The frightened family dog was shot.

The Mitchell family sued, asking the U.S. District Court for Nevada to hold the cities of Henderson and North Las Vegas in violation of their constitutional rights when police seized their home and used it for a sting operation against a neighbor.

Read more from this story HERE.

82% of Americans Agree Founding Fathers Would be Unhappy With Feds

Photo Credit: cliff1066™

Photo Credit: cliff1066™

As Independence Day approaches, most Americans think the Founding Fathers would have had a sad celebration this year.

A Fox News poll asks voters what the Founding Fathers would think of Washington these days: Fully 82 percent think they would be unhappy with how things are going there.

That includes 96 percent of those who identify with the Tea Party movement, 95 percent of Republicans, 88 percent of independents and 68 percent of Democrats.

Democrats (23 percent) are about six times as likely as Republicans (4 percent) to think the Founding Fathers would be pleased.

Meanwhile, more than three-quarters of voters (77 percent) believe the United States would be a better country if we followed the ideas of the Founding Fathers and the Constitution more closely.

Read more from this story HERE.

School Apologizes for Threatening Constitution-Citing Valedictorian’s Naval Academy Appointment

Photo Credit: Mr. T in DC

Photo Credit: Mr. T in DC

A Texas school district has apologized to a high school valedictorian whose appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy was threatened after he delivered a speech that referenced God and the U.S. Constitution — in defiance of district policies.

Remington Reimer, a senior at Joshua High School, made national headlines on June 6 when officials cut off his microphone in mid-speech after he strayed from pre-approved remarks and began talking about his relationship with Jesus Christ…

The following day the principal, Mick Cochran, met with Reimer’s father and …”threatened to send a letter to the United States Naval Academy advising them that Remington has poor character or words to that effect,” Sasser told Fox News. “The principal said he wanted to try to ruin him for what he did – for talking about the Constitution and his faith.”

Fran Merek, the superintendent of the Joshua Independent School District, issued a carefully worded statement apologizing for the incident.

“On behalf of the school district, I would like to take this opportunity to apologize to Mr. Todd Reimer and Remington Reimer for any interpretation of a threat by Mr. Cochran in expressing his displeasure at a meeting on Friday morning between Mr. Todd Reimer and Mr. Cochran following Remington Reimer’s valedictory address,” Marek wrote in a statement. “The District has never intended to nor will take punitive action against Remington Reimer for deviating from the prior-reviewed speech. The District endorses Remington Reimer’s appointment to the Naval Academy and wishes him success for all future endeavors in his naval career. District officials will ensure that district policy is followed at future graduation ceremonies.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Teacher Goes Ballistic, Beats Activists with Her Purse Following Debate on Constitution (+videos)

Photo Credit: YouTube

Photo Credit: YouTube

A woman who described herself as a teacher of the Constitution was caught on video clashing with members of a controversial Christian organization. Bradlee Dean, a figure TheBlaze has covered in the past, founded “You Can Run But You Cannot Hide International,” a ministry that delivers assemblies and speeches in public schools. Members of this organization recently engaged a woman in a contentious conversation — one that led her to physically attack the Christian activists.

The incident, which was captured on video and later released by the group, shows the volatile exchange that unfolded at a 7-11 gas station in Florida. The debate erupted as Dean’s ministry was apparently trying to nab support for the Bible and Christian values in public schools.

Videos:

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[If you have time, here’s the longer clip of the exchange between the teacher and Dean:]

Read more from this story HERE.

Why are Justices Scalia and Thomas Lavishing Praise on their Extremist Liberal Colleagues?

On television, Justices Thomas and Scalia lavishly praise extremist liberal activists. For those who eviscerate the Constitution, such praise is unjustified on the merits as well as contradicted by the scathing writings of Thomas and Scalia themselves.

I. LAVISH PUBLIC PRAISE

It is daunting to dispute Justice Clarence Thomas when one agrees that he is a “national treasure” and “our greatest justice.” Nevertheless, with the president’s second term ominously portending a Supreme Court nightmare unimaginably more spine-chilling than it already has been for the last two generations, it is vital to place in perspective the justice’s repeated recent televised appearances “lavish with praise for his colleagues — especially the liberals.”

Last September, Thomas averred that all justices are “good people” who “try to get it right” and who “don’t agree with each other, but … agree that this is more important than we are and we’ve got to make this thing work”; he singled out Justice Ginsburg as “a good person” and “fabulous judge.” On January 29, he explained that “she makes all of us better judges” and proclaimed Justice Kagan a “delight.”

Thomas is not alone. Purportedly conservative commentator Jennifer Rubin asserts: “I may not agree … with … Justice Breyer’s constitutional approach, but I have no doubt he is trying to get it ‘right.’” On November 27, Justice Scalia stated all his fellow justices are “honest” and decide cases “fairly and honestly.” Previously, he characterized Justice Ginsburg, with whom he often disagrees, as among “some very good people [who] have some very bad ideas.”

These seemingly reassuring statements are glittering generalities lacking any evidence or explanation of meaning. Specifically, what differentiates “good” and “bad” people? Should officeholders be evaluated in a vacuum divorced from the consequences of their official actions based on “bad ideas”? Does sincerely “trying to get it right” make a judge “good” and “fabulous”? Why is it good to “make this thing work” if doing so causes great harm? Is the televised off-the-cuff warm oral praise by Thomas and Scalia supported by their own considered written words in official Supreme Court opinions?

Before turning to those writings, it is important to provide a context.

A College Bull Session?

The Supreme Court is not a debating society, a scholars’ think tank or an ongoing college “bull session.” Justices wield fearsome power to determine the outcome of real controversies between people engaged in very substantial, often life and death, disputes. Decisions often cause immense joy and agony – for example, joy for rapists and murderers and unspeakable agony for their victims. Moreover, the high court decides not only winners and losers among actual litigants but also among competing public interests on the most critical and fiercely contested political issues. Justices’ “ideas” result in highly consequential decisions adopting or imposing values and policies, often undemocratically.

Lincoln famously warned: if policy “upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers.” To a large extent, that has happened. The high court has become the last best hope of democracy’s losers. When they cannot prevail in fair debates and elections, they zoom to the court to overturn the results.

In his autobiography, Justice Douglas revealed a “shattering” statement by Chief Justice Hughes: “At the constitutional level where we [justices] work, 90 percent of any decision is emotional. The rational part of us supplies the reasons for supporting our predilections” Douglas added: “I had thought of the law [as] principles chiseled in granite. I knew judges had predilections. …But I had never been willing to admit to myself that the ‘gut’ reaction of a judge … was the main ingredient of his decision … Judges … represent ideological schools of thought …. No [justice] was neutral.”

So the “very bad ideas” of justices are not harmless academic musings. They are “gut reaction” value judgments. And not just minor ones. Abusing “interpretation,” justices often ram their own personal morality down the throats of a strongly opposed large majority. Consider two examples.

First, it is largely unknown that media-protected justices have played an immensely toxic role in encouraging highly unpopular illegal immigration. Law professor Lino Graglia demonstrates that, despite widespread misinformation, the Constitution does not grant citizenship to American-born babies of immigrants. It is justices’ rulings that effectively have made them citizens. Moreover, an unelected bare majority explicitly required that illegal foreign-born aliens be given a free public education, gratuitously adding that unlawful aliens’ babies born here are citizens – thus “entitled to all the advantages of the American welfare state.”

Second, for four decades, justices who consider themselves morally superior to the public have done everything they could to subvert and repudiate capital punishment, despite its being explicitly and repeatedly authorized by the Constitution. Those vitally affected, especially victims and their traumatized loved ones, are not likely to yawn about good versus bad ideas. As explained elsewhere, “[a]n unbridgeable values chasm exists between victims of the worst crimes and the zealous devotees of their depraved victimizers.” The latter are likely to pronounce “good” those justices who will do anything to save murderers and rapists; the former are likely to disagree sharply – and painfully.

What’s “Good” about Making “Bad Ideas” “Work”?

Justice Thomas implies that there is something laudatory about making the court work. But as shown by Thomas Sowell, “very bad ideas” can be very destructive and even horrifying. For example, if Iran successfully produces nuclear weapons that “work,” there can be nuclear attacks against Israel and the United States, as well as nuclear blackmail. That would certainly be an example of something that “works.” Scalia himself recently observed: “kings can do … good stuff that a democratic society could never achieve … Hitler produced a marvelous automobile and Mussolini made the trains run on time. So what? That doesn’t demonstrate what’s a proper interpretation of a Constitution.”

Is celebration warranted when improper and often dishonest so-called interpretations “work” to produce both unconstitutional and harmful or even disastrous results? Before giving kudos to the Supreme Court for “working,” it must be determined if this is toward good” or “bad” policies and if it results from abuse of power to impose personal values of justices rather than the People’s as expressed in their Constitution and statutes.

Obviously, the Supreme Court, as an institution, works in the sense that it has questionable legitimacy and its diktats are, so far, accepted. But in another sense, justices, for two generations, have “worked” by undermining the rule of law to achieve a far left agenda that could not be implemented by full, fair and open debate in a democratic republic. And they are not done yet – not by a long shot!

Making bad ideas work has required a frontal assault on the rule of law for a very simple reason: From Woodrow Wilson to Barack Obama, condescending leftist elitists have realized that the Constitution’s protected freedoms would prevent dictatorship of often unpopular “reforms” by those who think they know what’s best for the people better than the people themselves.

Recently, frustrated leftist law professor Louis Michael Seidman has called the Constitution so “utopian [yet] downright evil” that we should “give up” on it. He apparently thinks the Supreme Court has not rendered the document sufficiently unrecognizable to its Framers.

Just last June, five “fabulous” justices, over a vehement ObamaCare dissent joined by Thomas and Scalia, made the court “work” by driving another nail in the coffin of federalism, a critical Constitutional safeguard of liberty against federal tyranny. Justices have been legitimizing unlimited federal power for over 70 years, as they previously sanctified segregation for 58 years. The court “worked” by seizing the highly divisive abortion issue from the states, creating a “right” that even highly respected prominent liberal scholars concede is nowhere in the Constitution. And it should never be forgotten that, notwithstanding President Buchanan’s prediction that the slavery issue would be “speedily and finally settled” by the Supreme Court, six justices “worked” to produce a decision that took “a civil war to overturn,” as the late Judge Bork put it.

“A” for Effort?

There are two problems with the mantra that sincerely “trying to get it right” makes a justice “good.”

First, this is a strikingly low standard for highly educated and trained powerful judges. They don’t have to actually get it right; if they try, give them an “A-for-effort.” Should medical and law licenses be granted to all who study very hard, including those who fail their exams? Does “trying to get it right” trump actually being right? As Winston Churchill pointed out, “[i]t is no use saying, ‘We are doing our best.’ You have got to succeed in doing what is necessary.” What is necessary for justices is to apply the law, not misstate and rewrite it.

Second, sincerity can be downright dangerous. It is a short step from “trying to get it right” to arrogantly concluding, not merely that a view or policy is right, but that this must be forced upon everyone for their own good by elitists who presume themselves to be betters because they are cocksure that they know better.

Judge Learned Hand cautioned precisely that “[t]he spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too sure that it is right.” Self-righteous self-certainty has been a hallmark of ruthless fanatics throughout history. After all, for one convinced of being “right,” wouldn’t it be immoral, or even sinful, to tolerate what is “wrong”? If necessary, why not just torture and murder heretics?

Surely, the fanatics who flew planes into the World Trade Center thought they were “right.” By all accounts, sixteenth century Pope Paul IV was personally honest and incorruptible; but he also was convinced of his moral superiority and that he was “right.” So he became a “reformer.” The result: ghettos and persecution for Jews and an intensified Inquisition accompanied by the most unimaginable torture to “save souls.” Positive he had “got it right,” this autocratic pope ordered law student Pomponio Algerio to be slowly boiled to death in oil to save his soul and protect the church from heresy. In turn, an unrepentant Algerio, convinced of his own rectitude, calmly accepted being boiled in oil – also to save his soul!

Giving thanks for small favors, at this point in history, justices do not actually boil in oil those who disagree with them. Nevertheless, the sobering reality, explained below in Part III, is that these “fabulous” and “good people” have no qualms about further and cruelly torturing the tortured to protect their torturers.

Click HERE for Part II.