For the full text of the U.S. Constitution, see Full Text of the United States Constitution.
For a course on Government and the Constitution, see List of Courses.
The United States Constitution is the supreme legal text that forms the framework of the United States government. It was written by the Constitutional Convention of 1787 which debated many plans and compromises. The existing Congress sent it to the 13 states; after heated debates all 13 states ratified it in 1788 and it started in operation in 1789, with George Washington the first president, as the first Congress met in New York City.
The values the U.S. Constitution promotes is referred to as Americanism. Furthermore, it is a rejection of globalism. This is demonstrated in multiple ways, including its Treaty Clause and its prohibition on nobility.
Contents
- 1 Other interesting facts about the Constitution:
- 2 Constitutional Principles
- 3 Preamble
- 4 Articles
- 5 Amendments
- 6 See also
- 7 References
Other interesting facts about the Constitution:[edit]
Reproduction of painting of George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and others signing the U.S. Constitution in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by Henry Hintermeister.
- It superseded the Articles of Confederation.
- It is the oldest written national constitution. (San Marino did not write one until the 20th century.) [1]
- Constitution Day is celebrated on September 17th, and all public schools are required to devote attention to it that day.
- Established on November 26, 1789, the first national "Thanksgiving Day" was originally created by George Washington as a way of "giving thanks" for the Constitution. [2]
- The U.S. Constitution was prepared in secret, behind locked doors so that outside interests could not interfere. Historians believe that the delegates did keep absolute secrecy.
- Some of the original framers and many delegates in the state ratifying conventions were troubled that the original Constitution lacked a guarantee of individual rights to protect them against the federal government. Supporters promised such a "bill of rights" and in 1791 the first ten amendments were ratified and became known as "The Bill of Rights". [3] After the Civil War, the Constitution was amended to prevent state governments from infringing on the rights of the people.
Constitutional Principles[edit]
The Constitution of the United States of America specifies the laws by which The United States government is allowed to govern, included among these are the Freedom of Religion, Freedom of The Press, Freedom of Speech, and the right of habeas corpus (Amendment XIV). It also, helps to guarantee the rights of the minorities by rule of law, such as African Americans and other minority groups, and to guarantee religious freedoms. It also defines a system of checks and balances by establishing three separate but equal branches of government (Legislative, Judicial and Executive), and lists the of powers not specified in The Constitution are reserved to the states and to the people. It also established a representative republic form of government, by the consent of the governed.
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Preamble[edit]
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We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
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”
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Articles[edit]
The US Constitution contains seven articles, followed by twenty-seven amendments. Click the Article names to read a full description of each article.
- Article I pertains to Congress.
- Article II pertains to the presidency.
- Article III pertains to the Judicial branch of government.
- Article IV addresses relations between the states of the United States.
- Article V details the process for amending the Constitution.
- Article VI establishes the Constitution, law passed by Congress, and treaties entered by the United States as the supreme law of the land.
- Article VII explains the Constitution's ratification.
Amendments[edit]
- First Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Third Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Sixth Amendment
- Seventh Amendment
- Eighth Amendment
- Ninth Amendment
- Tenth Amendment
- Eleventh Amendment
- Twelfth Amendment
- Thirteenth Amendment
- Fourteenth Amendment
- Fifteenth Amendment
- Sixteenth Amendment
- Seventeenth Amendment
- Eighteenth Amendment
- Nineteenth Amendment
- Twentieth Amendment
- Twenty-First Amendment
- Twenty-Second Amendment
- Twenty-Third Amendment
- Twenty-Fourth Amendment
- Twenty-Fifth Amendment
- Twenty-Sixth Amendment
- Twenty-Seventh Amendment
See also[edit]
- Constitutional Convention
- Declaration of Independence
- Articles of Confederation
- James Madison
- Thomas Jefferson
- John Adams
References[edit]
- ↑ http://www.constitutioncenter.org/explore/FastFacts/index.shtml
- ↑ http://www.constitutioncenter.org/explore/FastFacts/index.shtml
- ↑ http://www.constitutioncenter.org/explore/TheU.S.Constitution/index.shtml
- ↑ http://www.constitutioncenter.org Constitution Center
| Nationalism |
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| | Individuals | Founding Fathers • Alexander Hamilton • Henry Clay • Abraham Lincoln • Robert Taft • Larry McDonald • Donald Trump • Jair Bolsonaro • Matteo Salvini • Nigel Farage • Lyndon Johnson • Viktor Orbán • Christoph Blocher • Santiago Abascal • Franklin Roosevelt • Steve Bannon • Patrick Buchanan • Hillary Clinton • Peter Strzok • Lisa Page
• Alfred Dreyfus | | | Entries | Nationalism • Border wall • Economic nationalism • Self-governance • Sovereignty • National conservatism • Euroskepticism • Patriotism • Subsidiarity • U.S. Constitution • Brexit |
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| Globalism |
|---|
| | Individuals | Tedros Adhanom • Joe Biden • Josep Borrell • George H.W. Bush • George W. Bush • Jimmy Carter • Emanuel Celler • Dick Cheney • Bill Clinton • Hillary Clinton • Tom Connally • J. William Fulbright • Walter F. George • Henry Kissinger • Emmanuel Macron • Angela Merkel • Victoria Nuland • Barack Obama • David Rockefeller • Eric Schmidt • Klaus Schwab • Arthur H. Vandenberg • Ursula von der Leyen • Volodoymr Zelensky | | | Groups | Bilderberg group • BlackRock • Bohemian Grove • CNN • Council on Foreign Relations • Davos • Europhiles • Fox News Channel • G7 • NATO-backed mercenaries in the Ukraine war • Neocons • Open Society Foundations • Trilateral Commission • World Economic Forum | | | Agreements | CFIUS • European Union • International Criminal Court • NAFTA • NATO • Paris climate agreement • United Nations • World Health Organization • World Trade Organization | | | Goals | Biden Putsch • Biden junta • Globalism • Great Reset • Liberal World Order • Maidan coup • One-world government • Russia-Ukraine war • Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act • U.S. Color Revolution • War on Sovereignty • | | | Repudiation of Globalism | Americanism • Brexit • Donald Trump • Economic nationalism • Euroskepticism • MAGAnomics • Nationalism • Self-governance • U.S. Constitution | | | Harm | Biden border crisis • CCP global pandemic • European migrant crisis • Illegal immigration • Maidan coup • Russophobia |
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