Thirty-nine delegates represented the people of the 13
original states at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. When they signed the document on September 17, 1787, the U.S.
Constitution was ratified and put into effect.
While the United States is young at just 230 years, the
United States Constitution, our country’s supreme law, is by far the longest
lasting constitution in human history. And it is responsible for our nation
becoming the freest and most prosperous nation ever.
Those two paragraphs contain far more information about our
Constitution than a frightening number of American citizens actually know about
their founding document.
The Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of
Pennsylvania conducted a poll about the Constitution in 2014, and it revealed how
shockingly little people know about even the most basic elements of our
government and the Constitution that formed it.
Here are some examples from the poll:
* More than one person in three (37 percent) could not name any
of the rights protected by the First Amendment.
* Freedom of speech was identified by 48 percent, but the
right to peaceably assemble came in at just 10 percent, freedom of religion at
15 percent, freedom of the press at 14 percent, and the right to petition the
government at 3 percent.
* Only one of four (26 percent) could name all three
branches of the government. (In 2011, 38 percent could name all three
branches.)
* One-third couldn't name any branch of government.
*Asked which party has the most members in the House of
Representatives, 38 percent said they knew the Republicans were the majority,
but 17 percent responded the Democrats were, and 44 percent reported that they
did not know (up from 27 percent who said they did not know in 2011).
*Asked which party controls the Senate, 38 percent correctly
said the Democrats, 20 percent said the Republicans, and 42 percent said they
did not know (also up from 27 percent who said they did not know in 2011).
Annenberg’s director, Kathleen Hall Jamieson lamented, "Protecting
the rights guaranteed by the Constitution presupposes that we know what they
are. The fact that many don't is worrisome."
An Annenberg poll in 2017 would likely produce even worse
results. The future of both our freedom and prosperity are in question in our
country, largely because our schools and families have failed to teach our
young people the fundamentals of America that are essential to creating informed
citizens and preserving our republic. And as bad as the picture painted by the
Annenberg study is, The Federalist online paints a picture that is much worse.
“U.S. civics education, if it exists at all, is being
transformed into a political machine to push left-wing causes, undermine
American government, and incite civil unrest,” writes The Federalist’s managing
editor, Joy Pullman.
A 525-page report from the National Association of Scholars
titled “Making Citizens: How American Universities Teach Civics,” reveals the “New
Civics” that uses attractive, bipartisan-sounding words like “civics” and
“service learning” to trick Americans into allowing Leftist political machinery
to hijack public funds and young minds, Pullmann wrote.
“Poor civics instruction has increased over the past
half-century,” she wrote, “likely contributing to the broad decline of American
civic life.” She then listed some long-standing and strong social influences we
are losing:
* Volunteering has dropped dramatically despite
increases in unemployment and free time
* Far fewer Americans participate in social activities and
organizations
* Those who join the military are increasingly drawn
from a narrowing subset of Americans
* Many adults have scant knowledge of American government and
history (but still can vote!)
Anyone over the age of 60 should recognize the high degree
of failure of our education system and families to properly educate our youth
about the wonders of the United States of America, so that they can actually
perform as competent and loyal citizens.
Recent protests adequately show that the demonstrators do
not understand the First Amendment. They often don’t have an informed idea of
what they are demonstrating against, and many protests are based not on what actually
happened at an event, but instead on a perception of it. And, they either don’t
understand, or don’t care, that a constitutionally protected protest is neither
violent nor destructive.
Karl Marx would be proud of the Left’s efforts and success.
We see his words at work: “Take away a nation’s heritage and they are more
easily persuaded.”
Quiet subversion, done both deliberately and through
ignorance, is at work in many schools and the news media. Once regarded as living
its motto “all the news that is fit to print,” The New York Times has abandoned
fairness and objectivity, an infection shared by much of the national news
media, which now seem to subscribe to the motto, “all the news that fits.”
Benjamin Franklin is quoted as having answered a question
about whether the Founders had created a republic or a monarchy
with this statement: A republic, if you can keep it.
A large number of the American people have decided that our
republic should no longer be kept, and will happily sacrifice its historic and
broad successes.
1 comment:
In reference to President Donald Trump's Addresses United Nations !
Isn't it great to have a President who loves America, and who Doesn't Apologize for her!
And who doesn't draw red lines in the sand.
That's the Trump I voted for!
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