Originally posted by David Floyd
No, you want PART of it around
No, you want PART of it around
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But that isn't the intent of the Constitution,
nor is that allowed anywhere in the document. There is only one mechanism for expanding or contracting the Constitution/Bill of Rights, and that is an amendment.
How would it be a waste of time to adapt our Supreme Law to what society wants? That is, unless there is not enough societal support for that adaptation, and what you really mean is what the liberals want.
Gun control is a perfect example. The American population overwhelmingly, by a huge margin, supports and wants some form of regulation on guns. It varies in degree, but most want it. So SCOTUS has ruled, consistently, that gun regulation is permissible. Your strict view of the constitution doesn't allow for that. I'm saying, so what? Most people want it, the SCOTUS says it's reasonable, so gun regulation is okay.
The recent case of the death penalty for retarded people is another case. The perceptions of society have changed over time, and SCOTUS changed the interpretation of "cruel and unusual" accordingly. I see no problem with this, nor any need to ammend the constitution every time the country's attitude changes in this regard.
Interpretation is fine, but some things are so clear that interpretation is not necessary.
The Constitution is in no way inflexible, provided you have enough support to change it. What could be wrong with that?
So it's simple. Keep the Constitution, but to a certain degree it's open to interpretation and a little bit of fudging. SCOTUS will keep that in reasonable check.
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