Category Archives: U.S. Constitution

Oh, how they torture the language so

From the desk of tortured logic and tortured words, we humbly submit this political flimflam and falderal:

NASHVILLE, TN: The Tennessee state Senate recently voted 24-8 to amend the state constitution giving future state legislatures the right to enact laws putting new restrictions on abortions in Tennessee.

Why?

Because in 2000 the Tennessee Supreme Court ruled that the state constitution gave Tennesseans, and particularly Tennessee women, greater rights in this area than the U.S. Constitution.

Now, the Tennessee bicameral legislature is majority Republican in both the Senate and House of Representatives, and the House is expected to also vote for this resolution.

I thought Republicans were for giving individuals the rights to determine their lives and here is a case where the state constitution gives individuals more rights, more individual power than the federal constitution. After all, one must remember that this is the same legislature that recently voted to allow Tennesseans to refuse to follow the new federal health care laws.

This amendment would read:

“Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion. The people retain the right through their elected state representatives and state senators to enact, amend, or repeal statutes regarding abortion, including, but not limited to, circumstances of pregnancy resulting from rape or incest or when necessary to save the life of the mother.”

There was an unsuccessful attempt by Senator Roy Herron, Democrat from Dresden, TN, to amend the amendment to protect the right to an abortion in the case when the mother’s life is in danger. According to Herron, the amendment, as drafted, says “the Legislature can protect you if they will or harm you if they want.”

In response to this, Senator Mae Beavers, a Republican from Mount Juliet, TN, said adopting the amendment would “convert the Supreme Court into a roving constitutional convention.” She went on to say that the amendment “is about returning to the people, through their legislators, the right to enact reasonable regulations to protect the health of women and the unborn.”

But the Tennessee Supreme Court has already ruled that the Tennessee Constitution, as presently written, gives the people, including women, more rights than the federal one to regulate her health and even that of her unborn child. It doesn’t say a woman has or should or is required to have an abortion. It says it’s not the government’s business.

Shouldn’t this be something Republicans should cheer, hold dear, almost sacrosanct?

But the Republican-controlled state Senate and House, the party of small government and fewer regulations, the party that believes that people can better regulate themselves than government, has decided here, the individual can’t be trusted to regulate herself, and wants to give that power to the state legislature, because in this case they know better. They want to be the roving constitutional convention, roving over individual rights as they see fit.

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Filed under absurdity, GOP, politicians, politics, Tenessee legislature, Tennessee Constitution, U.S. Constitution, words

Rhetorical demons

Dear Sarah Palin,

I doubt you will listen or read any of this, and I doubt even more that you will do anything, but I send it in the hopes that there is still some shred of humanity left in you, something that ideological rhetoric hasn’t swallowed and made hollow.

Like snow, this rhetoric of violence accumulates, and at first it stirs the blood and makes everything clean and clear, just as a new snowfall does. But the grime and dirt that follows reminds us that beautiful, stirring rhetoric can cover an ugly, mean soul.

Sarah Palin's target map

Sarah Palin's target map

Almost all of us at one time or another will have adversaries and maybe even enemies. But Jesus said you had to love your enemies. Where is your love? I do not see it in this poster or hear it in your words. Has your rhetoric become your savior? Has it left your soul mean and ugly, a place suitable only for grime and dirt. I hope not. Not only for your sake, but for the sake of my soul and souls of the rest of the citizens of this country. This country can only be great when the people are great. And the people can only be great when rhetorical demonizing doesn’t become our savior and consume our souls.

You are not the only politician, pundit, or private citizen to spread this rhetorical demonizing, but you are not above blame, either. The blood of many is the blood of one. People died in a church in my hometown in part because of this rhetorical demonizing. People died in Kansas and Arizona and other places because of it as well. Your hands are not clean. Nor is your heart. Sadly, neither are mine.

I am reminded of the words of, I believe it was Benjamin Franklin, who at the end of the Constitutional Convention, when nerves were raw, tempers still flared, and people grabbed for absolutism and threatened not to approve sending the U.S. Constitution on to the states for ratification, turned to his fellow delegates and said, “Gentlemen, let us doubt a little of our own infallibility and put instrument to paper” and approve sending the document forward.

I think a little more doubting of our own certainties and infallibility is in order before rhetorical demonizing hollows out our souls. It’s a sign of humility. It’s a sign of compassion. It’s sign that you’re truly human in the best sense of that word.

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Filed under Constitution, demons, rhetoric, Sarah Palin, U.S. Constitution