Notes:BC1.L&C.Constitution 1

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  • Principles of founding stated in DOI. Moral basis of Constitution.*
  • Historians see the founding as the result of a list of things
  • Natural law/rights
  • Protestantism
  • English legal tradition
  • Republican virtue
  • US Constitution
  • Not true - only one makes correct government intelligible - Natural law/rights
  • Conservatives equate equality and liberty with 21st century liberalism
  • Liberals believe that founders understanding of rights is too narrow.
  • It did not include the rights listed in FDR's 2nd Bill of Rights and UN of 1948 universal declaration of Human Rights.
  • Essentially a right to a minimum standard of living.
  • H Clinton has added that leading object of foreign policy is to protect rights of LGBT worldwide
  • Founders clearly opposed slavery. Ended it in 8 states and outlawed it in future new states
  • Today, founders views are repudiated because they did not embrace the added rights.
  • for example, equality means that every person should have the same resources for the purpose of the UN Declaration.
  • For example, progressives today view jobs as benefits to be distributed by government for the benefit of groups considered disadvantaged.

Why focus on the Declaration of Independence.

  • A founding document.
  • colonial legislatures generally at odds with governors appointed by King or corporation. Legislatures had usually had their way. Not so after 1763.
  • Americans appealed to:
  • English Constitution - elected representative government
  • Idea of natural law and natural rights - a universal standard.
  • Americans became more insistent on local legislation and rule.
  • but failing that, they appealed more directly to natural law.

Declaration:

  • Equality
  • All men are created equal
  • Men means everyone - not a race or males or property owners
  • State Constitutions are indispensable.
  • Particularly Virginia's
Each is equally free and independent. Independent of all authority and rule by other humans.
Not a quality of law or government policy
  • We can agree to be ruled by others - but all alike in this regard.
  • Founder James Wilson: when we say all men are crated equal, we mean not to apply this equality to their virtues, their talents, their dispositions, or their acquirements.
  • Nor does it mean that all people have equal access to the good things of life
  • People do not have a natural right to a minimum wage, health care, education, social security, paid for by society.
  • It only means that no one is by nature the ruler of any other person.
  • Natural law
  • The Declaration says that all men are endowed by their creator with unalienable rights. - L, L, P of H.
  • Rights are a claim of how things should be.
  • If everyone is born free and no one has a right to take that away then everyone as the right to LLPofH.
  • Founders: except for the temporary state of childhood. . . .
  • IN Va Bill of rights two others
  • acquiring and possessing property
  • just economic order establishes market freedom so that poor can sell their labor to buy property
  • free exercise of religion according to one's own conscience.
  • These all sum up what it is that humans have by nature and what they deserve to keep - what they are able to claim for themselves against others.
  • These cannot be separated from duty - none of us can make a slave of another
we all have a duty not to steal or murder.
  • No nation has the right to rule any other nation for the same reason that no person has the right to rule another without their consent.

What does a government do to secure those rights? This is seldom discussed and must be understood to understand the founder's intent. It was important to the founders.

  • with few exceptions, the constitution sets up a Division of labor
  • State governments handle domestic policy and federal government handles foreign.
  • DOI states that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men.
  • That state where there is no government was seen as "the state of nature".
Madison - Federalist 51.
  • So to secure our rights
  • government secures those rights against the threats of other nations. Protects our rights and property by the means of armed forces.
  • The preamble of the constitution names the common defense as one of the purposes of the union.