The Constitution Doesn't Say That!
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- Опубліковано 12 тра 2022
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🪶 What else do people get wrong about the constitution?
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hi
Legal Eagle 2024
Check the chapters, they appear to be for the wrong video!
Orwell didn't parody Marx, he parodied Stalin.
That's a huge mistake.
FYI your chapter tags are showing the NFT video tags for me. Figured you may want to know that.
I wonder when people started viewing the constitution as “giving people the right” as opposed to “restricting the governments ability to infringe on rights”
But the US Constitution does give people rights. I think it was the first national constitution that had "Bill of rights".
Edit: Read the edit so you don't misunderstand what I actually mean. Even if US constitution words the rights as 'god given', that doesn't mean those rights could exist without existence of Constitution. 'god given' doesn't hold any precise meaning. That could also imply that non Americans and people before formation of USA also have rights mentioned in constitution, which is not the case. Those rights are materialized through constitution. They will be meaningless in the eyes of law, if they weren't mentioned in constitution.
You can't go outside USA and claim that you have a natural/god given right to do things mentioned in US Constitution.
Or In some countries food is considered a natural right but in US constitution it is not mentioned, therefore technically in eyes of US courts food isn't considered a right. But some may consider food as an unalienable natural right.
@@sanket.solanke nah, OP is correct. The government did not give us the right to free speech, it’s a right natural to all human beings. The Constitution simply agrees and promises that the fed gov will not infringe upon the rights we all inherently have
@@sanket.solanke incorrect
@@sanket.solanke "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights" those rights are god given not government given
@@Ya_Mf_Boi
You have to watch yourself when using the Declaration of Independence as justification for things. One needs to understand the legal justifications necessary to support the argument that the people of a nation were equal to, had equal authority to, and could declare itself independent from the rule of a person who believed he was king due to preordination from a god.
Lol I've had more than one person say I was lying about having read the entire U.S. constitution. That it was impossible because it was SO long; no one could read the WHOLE thing! 😆
That's how you know the other person *hasn't* read a lick of the constitution and likely confuses it with the declaration of independence... and probably gets THAT wrong, too.
Then ask them when the constitution was ratified... I can guarantee they'll say "1776" instead of, you know, 1792-ish.
I have been told this too. 😂😂
I literally keep 1 in my coat pocket or backpack, so I have 1 every where I go!
Or you could find any half awake newspaper editor - like Me - who has to read and grasp thousands of words an hour, and ask us to go and run through it.
Aye now if they say they have read the entire US code, now that, that is saying something.
To be fair I'd be impressed if many people have read both the US, and their home state, constitution
The fun thing about not having an official language is, in theory the corresponding offices could ratify laws in klingon and it would be perfectly viable.
🌎: ''MmmMm-Huhn....Arabic Greek Hebrew Latin and more languages are the compound 'English'. There are so many immigrants with languages here. Most groups celebrate their 'cultures'. Flags Cheers Songs and buy lotsa products. The general population should know how the 'translation' is important.
''My Rights''......"how did you come by the Rights you speak of'' ?
Thanks for your words and reading these.
Except that the official language thing is regulated to states since it’s technically under the 10th Amendment or that the founding fathers didn’t care to put it in since everybody spoke English already.
only if "worf" gringrich gets elected to congress
It's English
Which is why we probably should establish an official national language - Of course everyone should be free to speak whatever language they want to whomever they want, but its only logical to establish a standard language of communication for official matters
"So you can imagine, if Americans confuse the US Constitution with the Soviet Constitution, they're probably wrong about a whole bunch of other things..." 🤣🤣🤣
I feel like this is rather unfair, as most Americans don’t know every phrase or sentence in the Constitution off the top of their head or by heart. The phrase in question sounds old timey and philosophical so it could easily be assumed it was in the US Constitution.
@@Jax1534 yes, it's such a long paper with seven pages or couple dozen amendments. Something one would use 15 minutes in reading.
@@voittolehti2432 I never said it was long. I’m saying the average person doesn’t have it memorized.
@@Jax1534 if you dont know the constitution of your country be heart then dont start rioting and crying for your liberty be quoting the constitution
@@aoki6332 Most
Americans know the Bill of the Rights though, at least the first few Amendments.
Years ago in my 20s I bought a pocket-sized printing of the US Constitution in a book store for like three dollars. Certain "legal experts" (not) to this day still try to tell me things that are "in the Constitution" and I always reply, "Where? I didn't see that in my copy." Always met with silence... I guess those experts never bothered to see if a copy was available in the local book store.
The word is "Precedent."
That's a huge mistake though. The Constitution is more than its text. The details of what it means are hashed out in a long history of court cases and traditions. For instance, the right to have your rights explained to you when you are arrested isn't in the Constitution, it was established in the Miranda case, but it's fair to call it a "constitutional right." And when it comes to human rights, the Ninth Amendment explicitly states that rights may exist even if they are not spelled out in the Constitution. It may be correct that something isn't "IN" the Constitution, but that doesn't mean it's not a part of it.
@@rickhodges4808 but your Miranda rights are the rights found in the 5th and 6th amendments, which are in in the constitution.
@@stephanie22345 Yes, but there's nothing in the Constitution that says they have to read your rights to you.
Exact phrases dont have to be in the constitution to be a part of the document. There are other documents and precedents that clarify meanings. And we ignore some plainly written parts like "organized militia."
"Unsure / don't know" appears to be an option on these surveys, yet tons of people are picking the wrong answer instead. That seems more worrying than not knowing the correct answer.
Dunning-Kruger affect to an extent: people who don't know think they know more than they actually do.
I would also call "Foul!" where "No" is a correct answer but it's lumped with "Unsure" in the graphics shown. "I don't know" should always be a separate statistic. As in "Is X part of the US Constitution? a) Yes, b) No, c) I don't know, resulting in a pie chart with 3 wedges.
@@ldbarthel I'm guessing it was in the original paper, but reporting only gave the headline number. TBF, when two thirds of your respondents think that the USA enshrines the fundamental principle of communism in it's core legal document, the confidence levels of the rest are not really as relevant 😄
@@ldbarthel True in general, but in this case the "no / don't know" could be lumped together as both are "correct".
@@ZhangtheGreat funnily enough, donning kruger is not what you think it is, its not some wild up and down, its actually flat line but just slightly shallower than actual ability line
I taught high school government for over 25 years. We read the constitution every year and discussed its history. I only hope they remember it.
They don't. When I get them in college, their pre-test scores for even basic government questions are quite bad (
"Of course we remember studying the Constitution, it's what gives us the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"
They might remember it, but how do they interpret it? Since everything is interpreted nowadays.
Did you treat the important court cases?
@@CheapFlashyLoris why are you citing the declaration of independence?
When I was young (many moons ago) It was mandatory for everyone to read the constitution in High School. The class was called Social Studies. I don't think they teach that anymore.
I remember getting it assigned for an overnight homework in AP Gov. Groans all around--"That's going to take _so long_ to read!" I remember getting hope, opening it up, and breezing through the _extremely plain language_ in like 15 minutes. It's honestly shocking that we don't have middle schoolers read it.
@@GSBarlev I totally agree.
@@GSBarlevin my middle school, although we didnt read the constitution itself, we read the bill of rights and studied the history of the constitution and the intentions of the people who wrote it. I think the idea that the contitution is easy enough for middle schoolers to read is a bit much, since my classmates definitely would not have wanted to read and study the whole thing- or maybe they wouldnt have been able to 🥲🥲highschool is definitely a necessity, but middle schoolers are just too immature and lacking to care
I also learned it in school back in the early 2000s. The problem is America leaves it up to the schools to decide what to teach
They do teach it, whoever they do it in such a fashion to which any self respecting individual would disregard/mistrust the information provided due to the Broken/misinforming school system we have today. Once the test on the topic has come a passed it gets forgotten like any other garbage that was forced to them, even though I do agree that every citizen should have their basic rights known by heart.
This is genuinely scary to realize how few people actually know about one of the single most important documents to American society.
It because schools have stopped teaching about base freedoms, haven’t you noticed that we are surround by socialist and that the playbook that being taught. Compare or curriculum to that taught in communist countries, you find it shocking.
Can you tell me why I should care?
@@fredstampflee888 Nice buzzwords...
@@fredstampflee888 sadly even people on the right are starting to fall for the liberal propaganda about the bill of rights applying to state and local governments, in spite the first amendment explicitly saying that it only applies to Congress.
@@williampennjr.4448 Technically, you are correct. The bill of rights originally only applied to the national government. However, the 14th amendment's Due Process Clause changed that, requiring both the state governments and national government to protect those rights
(Edit: minor grammatical changes)
I love it when someone says something like "Hey man, you can't change the Constitution!" Yes you can, it's called an Amendment. There have already been 33 of them.
33 proposed (in the sense that a state could ratify them), 27 passed by 3/4 of the state legislatures or conventions.
I mean, the presumed meaning of that statement is that you can't READ INTO the constitution your own meaning and desires. Obviously we have an amendment process but it's very difficult to do, and with good reason.
@@robertjarman3703 Whether they pass or are not is really irrelevant to his point. The point is there is a process for changing it.
@@SeraphsWitness Literally every decision having to do with the Constitution is based on reading into it, since no one who wrote it is alive today to explain, and even if they were, most would probably say parts were intentionally left vague so that future generations could reinterpret them as needed. The necessity for an overwhelming vote is simply to ensure a given new interpretation is agreed upon by everyone, not to dissuade reinterpretation.
I encountered someone who knew amendments were possible, but thought such amendments couldn't override the main text of the constitution or any prior amendment.
Just an acknowledgement of your willingness to speak at UA-cam speed, and the quality of your editor(s). This is a great video. Thank you.
TBH, my high school civics teacher made that class hell, and was more interested in teaching us his own beliefs... but good on Devin for saying "7 pages" with such deep sarcasm. We had a county charter fail once because its opponents kept saying "15-page document" in woeful voices... I like to imagine one of them holding a Clive Cussler novel while saying it...
woah woah woah now... Dirk might have been utterly cavalier in the late 70's, but that's no reason to go round smearing his name saying politicians might stoop so low as to read fiction...
Oh, wait... right. Politicians rarely read non-fiction, and seem to enjoy surrounding themselves with fiction writers...
I was a little confused at first when you put up that first phrase. I was like "that's Marx, not the constitution!"
Then you proved me correct and my day was made. Thank you
Same, I first thought: That doesn't sound like any American value, then it hit me it was communist, and I guessed it was Marx.
Yeah, that was my first thought as well. I cannot believe that there are American people that actually believe Karl Marx's words are part of the US Constitution.
Surveys are a really unreliable way of determining what people think, let alone what they know, because the answer can easily be made to be dependent on the way in which the question is asked. Can be done right, but can also result in complete nonsense.
People always get the meaning of the quote wrong. It was never meant to allow people to slack off and still get everything they want. Marx's definition of "need" was very narrow, as in what a person needs to live and work, not what they desire. Therefore a doctor or lawyer will still get different things than a factory worker and some people will get more than other. Said doctor would get less food than a factory worker, because he doesn't need as much.
Also, since everybody can work whatever they are best at (so not being forced into a low-wage job because you hadn't the money to get education), they are (at least in Marx's views) the most productive at that point and since everybody only gets what they need, everything is used optimally; which in fact is a very capitalist way to order things.
Same lol, I was like that's DEFINITELY Marx.
As a high school social studies teacher, I have been fascinated by the huge surge in discussion of "parent's rights," especially as regards school curricula, in recent years. I was wondering if there is any chance you could do a video on the history of this concept? I know it is not explicitly given in the constitution, though I did find a case that interprets the 14th Amendment to apply to parental rights to raise children as they choose (though this applied to the home, not parental rights over schools). I would LOVE a deep dive into the idea, especially as it intersects with rights of a child and rights of states as regards public schooling. I would do more research myself but I have too many papers to grade. So...please please please?
Parents pay for the school, they should have some influence in how they educate their children. It's not exactly a 'right' as explained by the no taxation without representation section but it isn't really that complicated. A teacher that doesn't listen to their community is not going to be a teacher for long.
Public schools are prisons
Basically it's from the 9th, "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." The concept that parents wouldn't have near exclusive power over their children's education would be a foreign concept to most in the US a decade or two ago. Back in 1890, schools would have been a hyper local thing (basically group home schooling today) and so it likely never came up. It's also helpful to understand what a right is. A right is what you have in the absence of coercion. The government coercing parents to send their kids to a government school and then ignoring parent's wishes on the content of the teachings is all kinds of problematic from both a rights and constitutional standpoint. Of course, our constitution hasn't even gotten lip service since the 1930's so it's kind of meaningless at this point. Arguably it was never really followed.
@@suzerain840 Parents pay the state, not the school, which elects school boards that parents can vote on. Parents can have some influence over what is taught in schools by electing boards who best represent their interests. And even better than other parts of government, parents can opt out of public school if they don't like their representatives and teach their children at home. Parents have the right to democratic representation, but they should not have power over policy making for the same reason every citizen has the right to representation, but should not have power over law making.
@@GrendalTheBeasty The 14th Amendment was also written to protect unenumerated rights. Most civil rights cases of the last century have been 14th Amendment cases.
The 14th Amendment also changed the nature of American government by making state governments bound to the US Constitution, which prior to 1868, they were not. So the first amendment restricted the Federal Government from establishment of religion but states were free to establish state religions. The ninth amendment also would have only been applicable to the Federal Government prior to 1868
In law school my Con Law professor made an excellent point. What’s taught about the Constitution in law school should actually be taught in high school. The average American should have a basic education in the US Constitution from the commerce clause to the public forum doctrine and everything in between.
No. High schoolers by and large are not going to (1) need those specifics in their daily lives nor (2) remember those specifics five years down the road. All they need to know is that the Constitution is vague, it doesn't specifically address a lot of modern society's questions, so what the court rules is often more a subjective interpretation of the law (keeping precedent in mind) rather than a "I looked it up in the document and found the Truth of the matter" type of ruling. Even the words "Congress shall make no law" has exceptions for most judges. K-12 is big picture with a lot of ground to cover. The nitty gritty comes later as you specialize. My first-year college students do not remember major differences between the House and Senate on a pre-test, and you expect them to remember the nuances of what is and what is not interstate commerce?
@@JK-il7km your post is exactly why constitutional law should be taught in high school . You as a grown adult, clearly have no idea about the basic precepts of the Constitution. That is very clear from your post. The fact that you seem to think the Constitution is vague or outdated is a perfect example. It’s a living document, specially designed to have application well beyond the life of the Framers. It’s sad that someone who claims to be a college professor has such little understanding of one of the most important documents every created. You’d benefit from a lesson in con law .
@@marcc4303 You think 4400 words is full of clearly defined concepts? Where does it define interstate commerce? Where does it define a natural born citizen? Where does it define a militia? How can a document say "Congress shall make no law" but the SC give it exceptions? If it is so clear, why does the SC spend all this time defining concepts? Let me guess, lawyer, thinking the public needs to know the 10+ cases where the SC defined interstate commerce? Because that is what a Constitutional Law classes covers. Please. For non-lawyers, that is irrelevant. Non-lawyers are not going to need nor remember that information.
You realize calling it a "living document" means that it is not clearly defined nor is it terribly specific. Spoken like a third-rate political scientist impressed by a faculty member who called it a living document once. Just because you can amend it, then it must be this special living document that we should cherish. BS. If it's a living document, it's living in hospice care since it's rarely ever amended. The first ten really don't count since they were the result of a compromise with the anti-federalists.
Calling it one of the most important documents ever created and neglecting the innovations in governmental design since 1787 demonstrates a clear bias in your thinking. It's only important historically in the sense that it put a governmental design down on paper. It's not important because of HOW it designed government. You should spend some time looking at governmental designs elsewhere. But I guess you're happy with gerrymandering and policies thwarting the desires of the public, probably still thinking the public cannot be trusted (which many authors of the document changed their mind about), and the such. Geez, you have a document that the SC says doesn't even allow a line-item veto on budget bills. Some work arounds get floated by lawyers, but Congress is so inept because of partisan distrust they cannot even seriously consider it. Yeah, that's a great government. I'll get a tea and watch this unnecessary drama about avoiding a government shutdown in 45 days. You realize we're one of the only countries that have this problem, right? Such inefficiency.
But go ahead, continue to chant "We're so great!" all while being blissfully unaware that, yes, the constitution is outdated when you look at other systems of government and compare outcomes.
@@JK-il7km"precedent" was thrown to the "four winds" by most American Judges along time ago, sadly. What is constitutional, moral, or ethical, matters little to the courts, and procecutors now. If it ever did matter to them. I disagree about all highschoolers not needing to be taught the "Commerce Clause" or many other land mark unconstitutional rulings that can directly affect their daily lives if they're not careful. Many would remember, and many won't. But as they say, "survival of the fittest", sadly. Smh.
I’ve read every single word on the constitution, the federalist papers, and into numerous numbers of writings by our founders
@@vander9678 why
@@vander9678 I will investigate that and spend some time researching it. I have looked at some other profits or I guess philosophers end of the Greek ages.
@@vander9678 It’s funny I was talking to my kids the other day I made the read the federalist papers before the graduated high school. I have to go back and take a look at that again. I brought them a couple of times.
Me: Doesn't live in America and knows nothing about its constitution.
LeagalEagle: You're wrong about the constitution!
Me: Oh no!
Same with me
ahaha same
I knew about the language because I watched a documentary that mentioned it a few years back (also where I learnt that English isn't the official language in England lol)
I know, that it contains a right to freedom of speech, which notably is not freedom of opinion, and yet the US censors curse words on TV.
Anyway
Just wanting to make it clear- Orwell was an avid socialist and fought against the Franco regime in Spain alongside the members of what he called “utopian” socialist villages; the parody was not of Karl Marx, but of Stalin and his cronies.
Orwell was also thoroughly disillusioned with his socialist allies before the end of all that as well.
if you follow communist ideology and think the end goal of communism is utopian, you’re not a very good communist. we tend to stay realistic: we want a fair and equitable world for everyone. we don’t want a utopia; we want something attainable.
He was criticising both.
@@ExperimentIV ?? The founder of communism believes in a utopia - ‘the end of history’. Pretty sure communism and Utopianism are pretty connected
@@ExperimentIV only tankies think like you
I am so glad that I came across this website. This is fascinating. I’m a British citizen who lives in the United States and this is important to me.
1:08 Just wanted to add that Soviet Union had three different constitutions enforced individually at different times (1924, 1936 and 1977). The phrase "from each according to his ability, to each according to his work" first appeared in 1936 Constitution and then reappeared in 1977 Constitution.
"From each according to his ability to each according to his needs"
Me: Everyone knows that's Marx
Legal Eagle: 72% of Americans believe this is in the U.S. Constitution
Me: 🤦🏻
45% of that 72% are commie hating Republicans... just clueless. Jk, jk, I didn't look up their party affiliation, but I wouldn't be surprised.
I thought everyone knew it was Marx too wtf how are Americans so sumb
And yet, despite believing it's in the constitution, Americans still have a problem with Socialism.
When he said that, I thought it sounded a bit too egalitarian, possibly even socialist or even *communist*, to be in the US constitution. Like, that kind of thinking has literally been called "un-American", how could people get it so wrong!
@@inigo8740 becuase people in America like to think they are the most fair and free. And it sounds like a fair concept.
The American constitution is especially frustrating as a Canadian because a lot of Canadians confuse the two. Ive heard people unironically talk about their second ammendment rights in canada
Oh no!!!!! That’s both terrible and kind of hilarious!
You sure they weren't Americans that immigrated
Well they still have those rights
Yeah, that is partially due to US lobbyists trying to "influence" foreign governments, something that should come with censured, fines etc., but you know money is power. If I remember correctly, that argument has shown up in other countries, including New Zealand and Australia. Their legal system does not have the same contextual subject matter in their 2nd amendment as the US, so it becomes clear this is external interference by a foreign agency.
@@saintwaluigi4464 There is no right to gun ownership in Canada. To even get a license the RCMP will do a background check and if they find reason to believe you might harm yourself or others, you will not be granted a license. Many firearms are also prohibited or restricted, and many modifications (e.g. high round magazines or modding a semi auto to an auto) are prohibited by law. We own guns at the government's pleasure, not by right.
Dang, I just finished my AP government course in high school and I had no idea that people actually thought those things
Congressional districts are not in the Constitution. Each State is granted so many Representatives, but by the Constitution, the States can decide how they are allocated.
Thank you for doing this, many more people need to understand the Constitution. I blame politics for throwing the Constitution around. Many have lost its meaning and value.
Lol the constitution just a piece of paper written by a bunch of slave owners hundreds of years ago 😆 i wipe my ass with the constitution they didnt even know what micro-organisms were and thought you got sick from having dirty thoughts or something.
Sorry for the rant i iust was going along with the theme of people throwing it around for the sake of justifying arguments
Well, Republicans bear the most blame in recent history, always changing the colloquial definition in order to suit their agenda, like talking about accurate US history and racism now to the idiots is "CRT", criticizing people in power suddenly is now "cancel culture", being woke is used as a pejorative etc.
@@AtomBacon It also includes the phrase "well regulated militia" so the government has more than enough justification and authority to regulate which guns are to be allowed, where are they going to be allowed and who is going to be allowed to have guns, thats what well regulated means, the 2A is not absolute, but the gun fetishists in the right wing think it is.
Much like the other guy, the second amendment is a huge one people misunderstand. The first amendment is my favorite. The Republicans always want to throw that out there. We can't be sensored. Then you have Ron DeSantis trying to prevent people from speaking (or studying about) certain words (or past events)... I mean I do believe it says the federal government can't sensor you. So he is kind of right. A bit overboard. What pisses me off is when you are at work and someone wants to say his boss can't tell him to not say derogatory things to other people. "Nope. My first amendment right says you can't limit me." Not true. That was designed to prevent the government from lying to us and being the only word we heard. Aka if our government told us a story and someone else could prove they were lying to brainwash us, that media source could shine light on it and inform the citizens of the corruption the government was trying to pull. 1st amendment doesn't give me the right to go around and call people nigg..... what's that mom. Hold on. BRB.
@@AtomBacon And Russel has no idea what he's talking about. When the Constitution was written private citizens had the same weapons as the government. And the people should have that same weaponry today.
I wish public servants had to pass an exam on the constitution. We expect more from nationalized citizens than we do lawmakers.
Can you imagine if they had to have CEUs to stay in power?
If us citizens were more educated and attentive to our own government, perhaps that would be a requirement. But we aren’t so it isn’t.
Then again, if it was a required test, I can think of some politicians, in office now, that would cheat on said test to obtain office.
I wish people who want others to read the constitution would do so themselves.
@@kennethtaylor964 💯
So glad I found your channel. Refreshing to getting real (not imagined) facts!😊
It scares me that with such a "small" (7 articles + 20+ amendments) constitution, most US citizens didn't got around to read it and be up to par on what their constitutional rights are. Over the years in Brazil we got a trend of people actually reading up on their rights and understanding what they are (or aren't) entitled to by constitutional right, despite our constitution being 250 articles long + 120 extra articles made back when we were still transitioning from the 1967 constitution, covering some bases that weren't properly covered before + 125 amendments made over the years (the last one dating from july 14 2022).
I wholeheartedly believe that in every country, constitutional law should be taught in schools when students are in their young teens or even younger than that if they're able to grasp the concepts of the rights being taught to them.
"Taxation without representation" as a Puerto Rican I felt this one
and yet you guys keep voting to not become a State, and yet also don't want to be independent. Quite the interesting mess you guys have.
@@matts1166 much like Americans in the mainland or even in the same state or city can vary widely on certain issues, so can Puerto Ricans both within the island and abroad
If you're a bona fide resident of Puerto Rico during the entire tax year, you generally aren't required to file a U.S. federal income tax return if your only income is from sources within Puerto Rico.Jan 3, 2022
In 2016, Puerto Rico paid close to $3.5 billion into the US Treasury in the form of Business Income Taxes, Individual income tax withheld and FICA tax, Individual income tax payments and SECA tax, Unemployment insurance tax, Estate and trust income tax, Estate tax, Gift tax and Excise taxes.
According to the Consolidated Federal Funds Report compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau, Puerto Rico has received more than $21 billion annually in federal expenditures from the United States.
Congress has also allocated $42.5 billion to disaster relief for Puerto Rico after the 2019 hurricane.
Free money without taxation and representation.
@@matts1166 Puerto Rico voted for statehood in 2020.
So if you take voting rights away from inmates, should that mean that if you are convicted felon, you should not pay taxes?
Back when I was a sports bar bouncer I ejected plenty of people. All I had to say was "We refuse to do business with you and require you to leave the premises." If that didn't work I just had to call the police and state we had an '86' refusing to leave. A place of business is private property open to the public in a limited manner for the singular purpose of doing business. You can't make me do business with you (coercion) nor can you stay on the property (trespass). This is true even if you feel I am violating your protected status. You do have the right to try to convince a judge that "obnoxious drunk" is a protected status or any innate part of one. The bouncer will be attending that hearing, with witness statements and recordings and a lawyer. You will undoubtedly be representing yourself, as such cases make both lawyers and judges roll their eyes and say "Get on with your life."
I wish more people would understand that since so many seem to think that you can kick anyone out at any time regardless of protection. It is just that you can't kick them out/ deny service if they are protected. So you can't stop a disabled person from entering the bar due to their medical equipment or even just that you don't like the way they look. However, if that same person gets too drunk and causes problem then they can be kicked out.
It really isn't all that complicated yet so many people don't understand it. A few years ago there was a group of people who were working with their service dogs in a halloween store. They were all either protected under the ADA or a state law that gives in training dogs the same rights as fully trained service dogs. The manager had to call the police because they weren't buying anything and were actively getting in the way of other customers. It wasn't just a little in the way either but they were significantly blocking shelves and walkways.
They tried to act like the business owner kicked them out for having service dogs and posted everywhere about it only for later information to come out showing that they were causing issues. The store owner then became the protected class instead of the people since the ADA includes the right to kick out a disabled person's service dog if they cannot control their service dog. You do need to then give them a way to access your services whether that is letting the person come back in alone, or letting them place their order and have it brought out by an employee
Thanks for posting this. I'm quite certain that nothing in the US Constitution gives anyone the "RIGHT" to enter private property against the owner's will. Even the owner has to give a certain amount of notice before entering a tennants property.
@@surferdude4487 I think there is one exception, but it's most likely not in the constitution but just general law.
You are required by law to allow anyone access to your private property to give them the chance to introduce themselves. After which you can of course tell them to leave and they have to oblige, but the first thing is still there.
I think this is mostly in place to give public servants like mailpeople the right to enter your private property, even though you have signs on the door that state you aren't allowed access. I think it's called something like 'seeking consent', but I don't remember the exact wording. There are probably many caveats to it...
@@Shade01982 IMO, if you don't want the mail carrier entering your property, you might consider putting the mail-box out at the edge of the property. I'm sure there are also exceptions under the law where people such as police officers and meter readers can enter your property whether you want them to or not if they have official business. I wouldn't know because I haven't read the US constitution yet.
@@surferdude4487 It's been a while when I looked at this, so I don't remember the details, but it was very much like that yeah.
@10:25
The fundamental rights are sourced to line of text in the Constitution at Amendment IX
"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."
Thomas Jefferson said of our unalienable rights,
"but rightful liberty is unobstructed action according to our will, within the limits drawn around us by the equal rights of others.
I do not add ‘within the limits of the law’; because law is often but the tyrant’s will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual."
honesty, from a law abiding perspective, this only affirms my belief that cops are not friends. that federal agents will go out of their way to condemn you. the constitution is not designed to protect your rights, it is to curtail the rights of the government infringing upon YOU
Cops are being used and are to arrogant to see it
I was told in highschool, "you have no constitutional rights until you're 18"
Been carrying a pocket Constitution around since then.
Think where most get confused is what the constitution grants vs what is left to the states. In other words what is not specifically granted to the federal government remains the states to regulate. The most common decision on this is abortion.
@@cameron398
I think where most people get confused is thinking that the constitution grants rights. It doesn't. It limits the government's power. The problem is we are the ones that are the check and balance against that, and the country's full of a bunch of pussies.
Must of been in public school
@@ablahday2558
Private. Technically "quasi public"
Board of directors instead of board of ed, but gets extorted money.
I tell my daughters this all the time. It's a joke and they know it.
"No taxation without representation!"
Supreme Court to territorial citizens: well actually...
*Sad Puerto Rican noises*
The opinion that allows this is one of the most disgustingly racist pieces of writing I have ever read. It's shameful that it's still part of our laws.
The territories of the US today were not part of the US back then. Also, originally, only the white male owner class was allowed to vote. And even that was for many founding fathers a compromise as they thought people are idiots who can't be trusted. Which is why you got the electoral college.
@@SkiDaBird ya they say that they should seek legislative remedy while also reminding them that they're 2nd class citizens with no legislative remedy.
And that's not inherent in a federal system. Australia's two major territories have two federal senators each (to the 12 of a state), and minor territories get assigned a major territory to be part of for voting purposes. And we don't even have the issue where there are 'territories' with greater populations than some 'states'. The ACT (our DC equivalent) is only some 25% less than Tasmania, but it is still less, and Tasmania is the only state so close to a territory in population.
If I have learned anything from reading Magic the Gathering and Yu-Gi-Oh cards, it's that length does not necessarily correlate with complexity. I have seen cards with 3 lines of text that take several minutes and a judge to figure out what they actually do, and I have seen 10 lines of text that clearly do precisely one thing and only that one thing. Being 7 pages does not mean that the constitution is simple to understand.
My wife’s grandmother was one of those native kids put into a mission school before WWI. She was beaten for speaking Ojibway.
A common language that everybody learns in addition to their native tongue is not a bad idea. Forcing people to abandon their native tongue is horrific. Speaking as an Inupiaq here; I never really learned the language, despite living my early years in my home village, and that was because the language was attacked so completely. I can’t even count to ten 😢
I agree that it's not a bad idea, but it shouldn't be mandatory. Perhaps we agree on that.
Well said. We're still grappling with the repercussions of doing that on a national level here in New Zealand. (And we have a legally binding treaty that says we wouldn't do shit like that)
Thankfully, we're slowly putting things right and teaching Te Reo Maori in schools, as well as many other acts to help repair that wrong.
Can you learn it now?
My 70 yr old Navajo friend Rose was illegally adopted by Mormons at birth. It really messed her up because she is not grounded in either culture. She lives 2 blocks from the Indian Hospital which is just making her sicker. What she really needs is a medicine man, tho her religion won't allow it.
@@redmoondesignbeth9119- The ya'taali would need a good block of time. Sounds like she needs a number of ceremonies, but without a grounding in her birth culture they might not do any good.
I imagine this video is the result of Devon hearing too many incorrect descriptions of the Constitution and he just finally snapped.
To be fair, professionals of almost every field of study would be annoyed at how people frequently get things wrong.
Pretty much everyone that thinks the first amendment means they can do and say whatever they want to anyone they want anywhere they want without consequences.
These are weird incorrect descriptions though, I've never heard any of these. Are people really that dumb that they think Marx' communist quote is a part of the Constitution?
@@SeraphsWitness How many even know who Karl Marx is?
@@brodriguez11000 Sad but true probably. Fair enough.
Maybe that's why his ideas are regaining popularity, as if they're somehow fresh and new.
“It’s !SEVEN! Pages long and has like TWO DOZEN amendments”
😂😂god I love you
This is a great channel. It’s interesting and the host is engaging.
I took a Constitution Class my last year of high school, and I’m so grateful. You’re right, most people don’t really know what it says. And… it’s really short in the grand scheme of the law. We really should be learning it in school on a widespread basis.
In my country, the Constitution is so long and so committed to tasks I have never thought they existed
I was in a law and justice based academy at my high school. Was made to read and take tests on the Constitution. Very useful nowadays.
State constitutions are the ones that require lots of caffeine.
I mean we already complain about needing to memorizing the amendments, I think kids would chafe quite at memorizing what all the articles talked about lol
When I was in high school in the 1990s we had a required American Government class, but it was sadly only half the length of other required classes.
As a naturalized U.S. citizen, my first government handout was a pocket-sized U.S. Constitution. Yay!
As a born-American citizen, I wonder if the government would give me one.
Honestly, I’m of the mindset that every household should be given a free law library, in print, provided by the government, with replacements for outdated materials every few years. If we’re supposed to know and follow all laws, then we should all be supplied with them, legibly in print, as not to disenfranchise people without computers.
I get a lot of pushback on that, generally saying that everyone can’t be lawyers, but that’s part of why I worry, since everyone is expected to follow the law like a lawyer, yet few WANT to follow the law “like a lawyer” except the people that want to become a lawyer.
The law must be as fair to the citizen that uses the internet, goes into public often, and watches the news as it is to the people who do not use the internet, do not go into public often, nor watch the news.
Anyway, Stanley, I hope you enjoy America. It is not perfect but it is my home, and it sounds like it may just be your home, now, too. Happy to have you here! Sorry for the rant, but this has always been a big issue for me, and if you’re excited by a pocket constitution, maybe you’d have an opinion on my opinion of giving everyone a law library.
Would probably also help us cut down on our ever more complicated laws, too, if the government was forced to put them all together on paper and give them freely to all, maybe we’d get rid of some of the extraneous laws that have added up over time.
As a naturalized US citizen, you probably understand the thing better than 99% of natural-born US citizens. As I understand it most of us would have trouble passing the citizenship test y'all have to go through.
@@krissisk4163 I personally believe anyone who runs for a US political office should have to pass the citizen test to qualify. If you can't pass that, you shouldn't be in charge of any part of the government.
@Stanley Tweedle I assume you are from Canada and/or the Commander of the Lexx …
@@jlaakso1706 but I mean what about people who can remember "Woman. Man. Camera. TV." five minutes later? I mean surely there should be exception for intelligence on that level!
"constitutional right to a dinner reservation" lol
On restaurants (or any other place of business) requiring "proof of vaccination" before someone can enter... what about HIPPA?
How can they have any legal authority to demand someone's medical records, and therefore the ability to deny service based on a person's refusal to give up their privacy rights under HIPPA?
It’s almost like the Constitution is a framework for how the government works, and what limits it has, and not a list of things that ordinary citizens are allowed to do.
After I finish shifting your entire convoy of truckloads of sarcasm, I have to say "Thank you Captain Obvious!" and then politely ask you to move over in the lifeboat of wisdom so that others might also take a seat.
and now, cue up the snowflakes with the hate at someone who just states the obvious, while utterly undermining whatever gripe they have with how "The System" is just out to get them.
Sort of, it gives the framework for our government, primarily limiting the governments control over the public. Free speech, right to bear arms and so on.
Not "almost like." It is.
its a list of what the gvmt can not do
It's not "almost like" ...
It's Exactly what the Constitution is
The constitution does too say That, the word 'that' occurs 16 times in the text, 24 if you count the amendments.
You forgot to say objection
That's very important to keep in mind.
You are technically correct which is the best kind of correct!
One should count the amendments
objection! you didn't say objection!
In most states one of the requirements to get a high school diploma is to pass a test on both US constitution and your state constitution. At most about 90% have to retake it.
To answer your question about who has the time to read the Constitution, I have read it from start to finish.
The Constitution does not give you any rights it limits the government's power to trample those rights that already existed.
This is basically sophistry. Those rights are only rights insofar as they are stated to be rights by the constitution. There is no fundamental law of the universe that makes them rights. They are rights for Americans because the constitution declares them to be rights.
@@TheLobsterCopter5000 they are inalienable rights. They are universal, they are real, go ahead and try to test out your theory by taking them away from someone.
You are correct though - your statement is basically sophistry, thanks for being honest.
@@leeknivek if that was true every country would allow the people to arm themselves.
@TheLobsterCopter5000 they are rights fundamental to life. That is why the US Constitution was written the way it was. To make it as hard as possible for the government to trample on and take them away.
But hey if you want the US army in your house by all means don't let me stop you.
i tried to say that and couldnt find the words .
When someone starts ranting about "constitutional" and such, the fastest way to shut them up is to hand them a pocket copy of the Constitution and Amendments and say "show me"
There is a need for more individuals like you out in public.
Whenever making a claim always ask for proof.
I dont think the ability to point out a right within a wall of text should be the standard required for the general public. People need to be better educated on the relevant rights they have and do not have, and should not have to know all of them or point them out in the constitution.
The ability to use google should cover that requirement though lol.
@@alisilcox6036
Agree with much of what you wrote, except the portion where you indicated, "and should not have to know all of them or point them out in the constitution."
To clarify, the Constitution does not grant rights - it restricts the authority of government to limit rights.
People become confused on this point which is why James Madison did not want a Bill of Rights in the Constitution. He feared the people would come to believe these were their Constitutional Rights - their only rights. They are not.
@@thefederalist6786 that's fair, I considered writing "rights and freedoms" but decided against for simplicity. Im just as irritated as I expect you are by the sentiment that people have, for example, a right to free speech, which in fact is simply a freedom from government curtailment of speech, not freedom from private or public consequences of speech. I'd also say this comment isnt restricted to the US public but a statement on what people should have expected of them globally - knowing and pointing out positive OR negative rights (as a "freedom from" is indeed still a "right to freedom from" after all) in the specific, whether in the constitution or other piece of legislation, shoudn't be nescessary to protect yourself or express your rights or freedoms. This might not seem just or fair to some people, but it's an unfortunate reality that the people whose rights are trampled most often are the same groups who are systemically not educated on them.
And they go to page zero and show you there is nothing in the constitution about abortion. But plenty on right to life.
The basic idea of what he's saying is, just because the constitution doesn't specifically say something doesn't mean it's not a right and constitutional rights are not absolute; most US states have laws that limit or infringe upon constitutional rights, the 2nd amendment is the most obvious example where you're required to have a license and/or permit to own and/or carry a firearm, I can't think of any other rights where you're required to have a license or permit to have that right, the whole point of a license or permit is that you don't have the right to do it. Have you ever heard someone say, "After I renew my freedom of speech license, I have to renew my right to remain silent permit"? The government gave us these rights (at least until they site sources from which they came) but they can restrict and manipulate them or even take them away completely, whatever makes them happy.
I wish more people understood the 9th and 10th amendments, and the concept of negatively defined governance.
This really gets to me, as it seems like the people who have many of the strongest political opinions are among those who are most ignorant of what it does and doesn't say in that very short document. Citizenship is a responsibility as well as a right, and knowing the basics of American governance should be your first responsibility before spouting off about it.
Dunning-Kruger Effect to an extent: those who know the least are the most confident in what they think they know.
@@ZhangtheGreat Yep, but more people need to shout in their faces that they don't get to call themselves "patriots."
!!!!! This
Everyone should have to pass a us citizenship test to vote. Dark history of testing to vote be damned
@@TeslaHaxz Well, the first question should be why that's a bad idea. What we need is actual civics education back in schools.
The language section reminds me of a shirt I saw - "English doesn't borrow from other languages. It follows other languages into dark alleys and rummages through their pockets for loose grammar". Even if someone just wants to learn English, knowing the languages that English as we know it came from is important and interesting. Knowing other languages on top of that helps as well, especially if you ever want to work with folks who came from other countries/cultures, or even those who just have different accents than what you might otherwise be used to. Regional terms and accents have history to them, and that can lead down all sorts of interesting learning rabbit holes that can become useful later on.
English is a mutt language in my opinion as it picked everything from other languages.
Yes, that shirt is spot on. I can spot some of the places where French is lurking but that's just a fragment of the history of the language.
I have always loved etymology! It's interesting where some words came from...
Now all I can think about is 'Dubya allegedly saying that the French have no word for "entrepreneur". The day I heard that is the day I learned what "facepalm" is, and also the day I became curious about etymology.
I remember read a history of English language and the writter said the Celtic languages of the Birtish islands influence exists in a hand full of words and the word DO. and that it came form a small celtic kingdom in Wales, and that English liked to dress up as a Celt on lonely Saturday nights..
April 2024--Oregon has just passed a law outlawing gun sales in the state. No One can import a gun across the state boundaries either. Water now belongs /to Oregon and that includes your personal well as well. No one can use State water for farm or garden uses either.
Your opening snark about "who has time" reached my heart, as a former English/Latin professor.
Must be nice to have your entire constitution fit on to a 14 page pdf instead of a mash up of countless documents, royal proclamations and treaties that predate your country.
Sincerely, a Canadian
The collation is nice, but sometimes the brevity is a double-edged sword. There's a lot of parts that seem like they were tired of arguing about how the government was going to work, and just said "we'll fill in the details later". 250 years later... still working on that.
We gained our independence through "Hey, what if we kept doing things the same...but did it without you?"
That means we started with a hot mess, and arguably made it hotter. Rather than start from scratch.
@@Zraknul Despite all the ideas it borrowed and how many Amendments eventually needed to be added, the U.S. Constitution was remarkably advanced for its day. Nowhere else at the time did you see ideas like complete religious freedom with no official religion, the ability to criticize the government with very limited consequences, abolishment of royalty and all forms of nobility, voting rights granted to all adult, white male citizens, three separate branches of government with a complete set of checks and balances, etc. directly implemented into the government itself. That's why it's managed to last well over 200 years without ever having any widespread sense of dissatisfaction among the people.
@@Compucles The Civil War could be described as a really bad dose of dissatisfaction
@@standard_gauge The dissatisfaction wasn't over the constitution per se; the common misconception is that the civil war was fought over "states' rights," which is only _technically_ true, but an obfuscation that distracts away from the fact that one of those rights the states demanded was the ability to own a person - it comes up by-name at least a dozen times or more in the Confederacy's official secession.
In the Philippines, a lot of college courses have an elective that just spends an entire semister to study the Philippine Constitution, regardless if their major is not Political Science. It helps a lot to teach us to understand what our rights are to better protect ourselves against authorities who abuse the law.
In 1986-87 my High School political science class (which they no longer have) covered the same thing as this video.
@mikelmacrichard4772 that sort of thing should be taught in high schools... it's a shame they stopped.
@@victoriarodriguez9981we need to join PTA & enforce it, demand it, petition for it, we need to get it back in instead of letting Rockefeller choose every bit of info we learn, like he’s done with what sort of health care is considered standard
Excellent. Shd be mandatory for h.s. grad in every country.
5:03
I hear the tears of sorrow from District of Columbia from the other room.
I would like to hear more about the separation of church and state.
There is not “separation of Church and State”. We have a right to religion freedom not a freedom from religion.
A phrase that is taken entirely out of context these days. The separation means "churches" no longer "dictate" to the masses or the state as though they have legal authority. But Americans should select and prefer Christians as leaders if they want this nation to remain a free republic. "Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." ~John Adams, a founder of USA.
Too many people think that this means no one is allowed to make a law that is similar to a religious view and that is not what that means. We have plenty of "religious" laws. Some are unjust and others are not. It really depends on a few things. One of the most basic ones that most folks agree with is... no murdering folks. This is a very old religious law and even non-religious folks can see the good sense in having it.
So there are a lot of laws we pass that will match up with one religion or another and they not be in violation of the Separation of Church and State as you put it, because it is not the church enforcing the rule, but instead the state. That is what the separation means.
@@CD-vb9fi bs
Anytime I get into a discussion with other people about the Constitution, I’m constantly correcting misconceptions other people have. It’s a very simple read and isn’t actually that hard to understand and can be read by most people in about 30 minutes ( I know a lot of slow readers). I always try to get as many people as possible to actually read it instead of just listening to what other people say about it.
It takes me about an hour to read through it and I have a pretty high reading level. It’s just dry.
I'm tired of people thinking the constitution is perfect, should never be changed and should be the "be all end all" of US law.
The constitution is great, it has alot of great core concepts but it was written before toilet paper existed, when people died of diseases that we eradicated and it was considered an acceptable loss.
There is an express reason why the founders allowed for amendments, because they knew things would change or that they might have missed something.
I would read it over the Australian Constitution any day!
Oh my goddess, those creating a parliamentary system had to be some of the most boring people alive. I flicked over said constitution once more just to refresh because I have read it like... once, ever... and I regretted it immediately. Rules on what to do if so-and-so isn't present, rules reminding people that a year is 12 months, and all sorts of other little things that I guess should be noted down if you want a consistent government. None of which containing any flowing text what so ever, which to be fair I hate seeing in a Constitution but still makes the whole thing so tiring to read.
Well, in reality, much is ambiguous and requires critical thinking. It is a guide, in many/most cases, outlining the general form of government and configuring levels of responsibility.
@@coachhannah2403 It can also be pretty much ignored if the rulers, interpreters, and enforcers decide to
"I prefer the person who burns the flag and wraps themselves in the Constitution than the person who burns the constitution and wraps themselves in the flag." Molly Ivins
Sadly too many of our politicians do the latter and we as a people lose a few more I.Q. points in the process.
You referring to the politicians and their lobbyists that are trying to implement hate speech laws, gun control, codify Roe, and those rioting because they're upset with the independent judiciary or the police cleaning up the streets? Ambiguous.
There are people who burn both.
@@pollytix7271 Im referring to the ignorance of far too many people about the Constitution and how politicians use that ignorance to incite and inflame "Faketriots" into believing that less Freedom and the deconstruction of the Constitution is some how Patriotic.
@@radosawbartoszewicz7247 Libs burn the flag. Repubs burn the Constitution and use the flag as cover.
@@art2736 It is impossible to wrap yourself in a flag without a constitution, just as it is impossible to wrap yourself in constitution without a flag. Those who burn either of them, love neither.
BTW, the constitution is not Seven pages long. It was either known as one pager or a whole book. The original constitution can fit on one page, the version if you order today would be a book.
I signed up for Curiosity streaming site. But Nebula was not offered as you stated??
My school district required us to pass a Constitution test to enter High School. I think that everyone should have such a test.
My School district did the same thing but we also had to pass the Constitution test to graduate high school as well
Barely have to pass a drug test today.
I know that the Civics Teacher at a school that I taught at butchered the Constitution's content. When questioned, he stated that they would get a more accurate coverage in college. The problem with that was probably more than three quarters were either uninterested in even high school subjects, or never attend any college, junior or four year; meaning his over simplification or out right inaccurate comments are all that they would ever hear. I saw the same thing with history classes.
Agree. I taught it in Middle School. My students were not enamored at first but in my survey at the end of the year the VAST majority said their favorite part of my class was learning the Constitution and being able to understand it. They always said it helped them understand the rest of American history better. I have no idea how anyone can really understand American history without learning the Constitition.
@@kathynj6479
Good teacher!
One of my favorite classes I ever took was US Law. We covered some basics of civil and criminal law.
But the majority of the class was going line by line through the constitution and discussing everything in it. Plus discussing how the various parts of the constitution affect our lives and what rights they give. It was soo much fun and entertaining every period.
I wish every single American had the fortune to learn the constitution through Professor Dickey.
What school did you go to?
This might be my misconception but isn't the constitution supposed to be about what rights the government isn't allowed to take away from the people and not a list of the rights we have?
@@the3nder1 you’re thinking of the bill of rights, the first 10 amendments to the constitution. The constitution is the document that says how the US government will run, the bill of rights are amendments stapled onto the back of the constitution to outline some rights that citizens of the US have in terms of governance.
Most of them are just things that the government can’t do, but like the 6th amendment does provide things that the government must do for you during a trial.
I would highly recommend reading at least the bill of rights, if not the entire constitution/amendments. The bill of rights can be read in about a minute.
@@the3nder1 and yeah the 9th amendment basically says “just because a right isn’t in here doesn’t mean that somebody doesn’t have that right.”
You can’t say somebody in the US doesn’t have a right just because it isn’t covered by the constitution or amendments, you’re right.
@@MotorcycleWrites the amendments are in fact part of the constitution.... they are ya know... amendments.... to the constitution.
DC has not set aside to be a residential area. It was setup as an independent area so no one had home field advantage or that decision would be made to favor an area.
2:18 was what he said accurate at the time?
I love this channel, I'm an admitted attorney of the High Court of South Africa and its so interesting to see the parallels and difference of our legal systems.
This guy is biased. He's got a political agenda to push.
@@Sal3600 which guy?
Yes, but the South African constitutional framers had the good sense to take parts of the US constitution and add any important cases that have been strongly debated and resolved and added them explicitly. It also has a far more sensibly explicit and comprehensive list of protected rights so that there is far less chance that modern rights have to be interpreted in by the courts.
Imagine if every complicated US Supreme Court Case forced a constitutional convention that didn't allow the delegates to leave or eat anything except bread and water until they definitively settled the issue by constitutional ammendment, and you might have as comprehensive a set of protections as the SA constitution
@@blumoogle2901 that's a bit unfair in the US constitution, we had the benefit of decades of real world experience when our constitution was written by some of the finest legal and philosophical minds, the US constitution was written by the 12 guys who could write, all things considered it's not too bad.
Thats the most lawyerly way of telling everyone you're an attorney. 😂
Why use one word where you can you use 8.
Who did you bill for telling us?
I love this. To encourage my high school students in U.S. Government class to read the whole U.S. Constitution - I let them purchase and use a pocket Constitution of the United States on their exams.
That's a fantastic idea
There is an important note on that "First Amendment" that I feel should be in this video. It states that CONGRESS should not make a law prohibiting free expression, which constitutes certain government people like Senates and House of Representatives. It does not, however, include individuals or companies, which means a restaurant does have the right to refuse services based on certain situations (not the racial ones mentioned, of course), like not having a reservation.
I just reread the Constitution, yesterday. It is a good idea to refresh your memory, maybe on the 4th of July.
I've read the US Constitution several times and never held these misconceptions, although I have to say that the 9th amendment makes room for more natural rights even if they are not listed.🗽
Some have insane Ideas about the Constitution.
"Lauren Boebert Completely Gives Up On The Constitution" by 'Telltale Fireside' shows that well, just like his other videos of this kind.
I knew that about the 10th.
@@slook7094 The 10th too actually, for rights not delegated to the federal nor prohibited by the states.. Maybe we could take out one provision in the 5th though, and get more information from certain witnesses...
Natural rights aren't real; the 9th amendment says that any power not granted explicitly to the federal government is maintained by the states. The Constitution is primarily focused on the relationship between federal and state governments. It doesn't really grant you rights, so much as it commands the states not to make certain laws. States are the ones who decide what's allowed for the most part.
You don't have that misconception because you've read it. You are in a very minority. Ponder that fact and think of how often we hear people say: "we need to get back to the constitution."
Excellent presentation - very informative and interesting, thank you. The Constitution contains many 'implied rights' - nowhere in Bunreacht na hÉireann 1937 is the word 'privacy' mentioned - rather it is an example of an implied right - recognised by the Courts here fadó fadó.
Ohh Nebula is on Roku? Ive only seen Curiosity Stream!
Thank you for talking about residential schools, even if just briefly. We need to normalize people discussing the more distressing parts of history when it's relevant!!!
This! Especially with the first part of that landmark report about them being released this week.
Yeah I found it strange when the U.S. was shitting on Canada for their terrible residential schools while not talking about their own at all.
But when you try to, half of the cou try calls it "woke liberal propaganda" even though it's just facts. They want certain facts ommited.
Just watch as youtube channels mentioning the unpleasant parts of American history are eventually getting banned and burned like some books, lol.
@@austinhernandez2716 how would they convince people to kill and die for their country if they knew the full history?
And this is why "if it's not enumerated specifically in the constitution, it doesn't count" is REAL dangerous.
And even if a right IS enumerated in the Constitution, the Supreme Court always finds a way to undermine it or get around it.
Particularly because the 9th Amendment specifically says that unenumerated rights are a thing American citizens have.
That's why we got the 9th amendment. But Republicans justices pretend that doesn't exist.
@@edwardmiessner6502 That or states will claim “states rights” and proceed to imprison people for pursuing happiness.
The 9th Amendment specifically states that any right not enumerated in the Constitution is something all American citizens have.
My father said he would get spanked at public school when he would speak Spanish. I think that was in the 50s. And my family is from Texas for generations. Which is strange because people been speaking Spanish in Texas way before it became a state . Can't imagine letting a teacher hit me for speaking Spanish in Texas. The government needs to downsize. Way too many departments that are not in the constitution. They violate the constitution every day. They shouldn't even exist. They are the reason why we have so many problems. They are never held accountable. That's the biggest problem with our government. They get away with breaking the law every day. How many Rico charges do you think you could find across our government? If we are honest about it. How many government officials take bribes? How about money laundry? Kick backs? With criminal intent? How about war crimes? Like going to war without going thru congress? How many presidents do you think should be charged with war crimes? Legitimately? So yeah we need to get rid of several departments in our corrupt government.
The fact that survey choices were "english is the official language in the Constitution" and "I don't know/no" would have made me so angry in would lie to deliberately screw up their results 🤷♂️
Summary
0:16 "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs"
1:29 "English is the Official Language of the U.S."
4:39 "No Taxation without Representation"
7:22 "The Right to Enter a Store or Restaurant"
9:36 "Presumed Innocent Until Proven Guilty"
11:50 Promo for continued video on Nebula
Thank you!
Should talk about the right to privacy too
@@WarlordM
Oh man, please.
That's so interesting. Especially with current technology.
In my "legal issues with IT" class. We spent at least a month talking about this very issue.
@@WarlordM I know next to nothing, but isn't there an amendment regarding unlawful searches?
@@ryansgameing6961 - I've wondered about this. In companies that I've worked for, there've been degrees of privacy/sensitivity of information, from "Do not share with anyone and destroy when you're finished with it" through "can be shared within the company", to "can be shared with anyone". But in wider culture, we seem to want to be able to make do with "public" and "private", even though I don't think that's really how many of us live our lives.
Some people would argue that, if you can eavesdrop on a conversation, that conversation is public, but... is it? And likewise, some people will insist that a photo shared on a social media platform has at that point become "public", but would that mean that we'd accept its use in any and all possible forms? Legally, we might be stuck with saying "yes", but culturally, we know a shitty thing to do when we see it.
Classification of levels of privacy seems essential if we want a system that matches the reality of how people communicate, and I'm hoping that it will evolve beyond the binary notion that is often implemented.
I see what you just did there, LegalEagle, especially the bit about "innocent until proven guilty" not actually being in the Constitution, but nevertheless a fundamental part of our jurisprudence. Nicely done.
This just reminded them that it's a right they can take away...
@@Halinn wait so are we with or against Alito on this “deeply rooted in history and tradition” thing? I guess it depends on the issue, huh?
Don't see anything about causing corporations republicans happen to be lobbing for to spontaneously explode either 👀👀
Weird huh? You'd think they'd put something like that in there...
@@seal869 well it’s not really if you’re for or against Alito, the entire court has used that test long before he became a justice. And it’s also been used to overturn anti-sodomy laws such as in Lawrence v. Texas. It’s not that it’s a bad test necessarily, but framing of the issue is most relevant. Broad framing generally = fundamental right. Narrow = no fundamental right
@@Hprost1 you’ve made a real mess here. No need to comment on subjects you don’t actually understand
Hey if you notarize a letter claiming the estate and then send it into the clerk of courts from prison to try and become a sovereign and say your just a man and friend of the court to end the what is your name game while in a court room during a court case but then turn around and sign a plea deal in a commonwealth state to which then your very own attorney ask you under the constitution to wave your trial rights away while taking that plea deal in the court room of a commonwealth state what does that then mean like as in what just happened to that client of that attorney who just did that to them at that very moment in the court room?
Around 3:50 there is a little thing, that was probably unintentional, concerning the native american boarding schools. You said they were "bullied" by their educators. I think we can agree that in such a case, a caretaker physically harming their wards, it is abuse we are talking about. Furthermore as these caretakers were employed by the government you can freely use the term "torture".
I think as a lawyer you easily understand the proper use of terms to not misrepresent events.
That's such a crazy story about Irish people being automatically "more guilty" of treason than other Britons
Yeah, it's one of the reasons I don't give them a hard time. They weren't giving a pass just because...
I love the gall of charging someone as more guilty of treason against somebody else’s king. That’s not what treason is
The Irish are/were no more treasonous then any other segment of the British Commonwealth, and don't let anyone tell you they were!!!
Nor is it the last time Irish have been persecuted. Something, something, “no Irish need apply”…
My pocket constitution has yet to fail me.
My pocket constitution has failed me numerous times as I only carry a copy of the Irish constitution. One day, it will be useful though and then I'll be laughing.
IT'S YOU!
Now, Oz and Devin is a crossover I would love to see, mainly because of how little sense it would make.
Oz, unless you and Mini discuss your pocket constitution (as well as to which places you take it with you) I will have no choice but to believe you are not telling the truth.
Oh, no, of course this isn't a deliberate attempt on my part to have done influence on the videos you create! I just want to know which pocket on your avatar's green suit contains the Constitution.
Considering the SC defines it differently than you or I might is the difference
The most shocking videos to watch are those 1st amendment audit videos. The wild things the police say will make your jaw drops. Literally dont even understand the technical difference between public and private lol. Its scary.
I am a bit surprised you did not mention US territories in "no taxation without representation." Puerto Rico and the Northern Mariana Islands are US Commonwealths, meaning that they have the same political status as the District of Columbia: all three have a non-voting delegate to the US House and no representation in the Senate. Guam, American Samoa, and the US Virgin Islands are "unincorporated territories" and so do not get even a delegate. Residents of all five territories (six, if you count DC as a territory) are US citizens, subject to US laws, and protected by the US Constitution's guaranteed rights. Most (I believe Puerto Rico is the only exception) pay federal income taxes.
I wrote a book on methodologies for interpreting the Constitution a few years back, and in developing that I was surprised what was actually written down in the Constitution. It is a remarkable document, and it is now frustrating to me how many people have no clue what is in there.
are there cats?!
@@stanleytweedle467 There are at least four cats in the constitution
@@z-beeblebrox I'm glad, 4 is the least amount to form a purrfect union
It's a chore to be in parts of the US where a nakedly misinterpreted constitution is brought up constantly; its significance exaggerated and fashioned into a club to rule them all. Political conversations usually end in a disagreement about the reality of this document.
It doesn't help that the document is so unhelpful. It says nothing about so much, too much about things it shouldn't have (that regrettable 3/5 compromise), and is vague on the rest.
It's in noway exaggerated.
@@kordellswoffer1520 It's significant to the degree that we currently use it to structure our government. I don't see how it's any more permanent than the constitution of Rome.
The paper itself is a fetish for wackos who misconstrude and weaponize it to legitimize irrationality.
It has many groundbreaking ideas to carry forth but to assume it'll last for generations in a tech-savy world is absurd.
@@QuesoCookies It definitely has a regrettable history. It would seem a good majority of the arguments against a constitutional convention is that it exposes itself to corruption and its for the best to not touch it. What a wonderful foundation for a superpower! We expend so much energy and money fighting over its structural interpretation, all while lives are being thrown away from the lack of resolute law.
@@Wbjpen what the hell are you talking about. The mere fact that it is used to structure our government makes it significant and inherently hard to exaggerated its importance. It also has a very large cultural impact, it helped form the values of the right and helped form the values the left likes to fight against. You can go off into nonsense about Rome as if it has any form of relevance.
Who are these wackos and what are they being irrational about and what has been misconstrued by them. All you're doing is asserting things with nothing but vague words.
I has lasted for generations in a tech savvy world, it's at least lasted for about 2 generations by this argument.
Also why wouldn't it, what does technology have to do with the core aspects of the constitution from free speech to guns to private property and so on. As technology doesn't make these rights any less or wrong or put any doubt upon them, a tech savvy generation should be perfectly fine with these exceptional rights if they were themselves rational. Are you saying they aren't or are you saying the rights set out in the constitution is wrong.
"I mean, it's SEVEN pages long...". I see you immediately go for the jugular. LOL.
@legal eagle, if you havent already, i think a video talking about what the process of law school and starting a career in law is like would be interesting. For instance, im studying mechanics, and it occurred to me that mechanics have it much easier because although there is quite of bit of memorizing involved as well, ultimately the things we have to learn obey the laws of chemistry or physics so once you understand how they work, they become intuitive. Its harder to forget something thats intuitive. But it seems like learning law would be more like memorizing and maintaining a working understanding of every single plot point from 8 seasons of Game of Thrones as well as the context and implications of those plot points. And then maybe 50 other shows too. Crazy.
I always assumed that "innocent until proven guilty" was due to the fact that the prosecution must provide irrefutable, or at least very convincing, evidence that the jury can then use to make a decision. A decision that must be unanimous. Any lack of proof could, therefore, stir up doubt in the jury, resulting nondecision or innocent due to lack of convincing evidence(proof).
another reason i’ve heard cited for why the us runs by innocent until proven guilty is because the ‘prosecutorial mind can make anything seem suspicious’ so it *HAS* to be the government’s burden to prove guilt. at least, that’s what attorney tom says!
12 angry men
There are states where it certainly doesn’t need to be unanimous… so that’s not part of the constitution
@@timschultz1928 Just looked into it, this is currently under discussion and is going to the supreme court for cases in Louisiana. States can interpret the Constitution in any way they want to.
in 2018 Colorado removed the part of the 13th amendment that states labor can be used as punishment for a crime from the state constitution. Yet, somehow, agencies can still sentence people to "community service", which is labor, for their crimes.
But the point is that none of that (that the prosecution must present convincing evidence to the jury, that a jury verdict in a criminal case must be unanimous, etc.) is expressly stated in the Constitution.
One thing I’ve learned after taking Constitutional law is the answer is either John Marshall or Article I, Section 8.
OMG! So true!
I had to learn our constitution and the common law that it was interpreted into.
Constitutional law; derives from the civil action end that you are under the interstate commerce clause as a subject to the United States Authority.
United States common law "is" more useful not of that construction.
The common man of common law "is" of the United States Authority and defined within article 1 section 9 in part.
No titles of nobility shall be granted by the United States.
Interpretation; no social or political groups may take privilege within or upon the United States Authority.
If you do you are subject to common law and those within his Authority.
That is where constitutional law comes into place, after you are already subject for taking privileges.
The civil rights act "is" that action under the interstate commerce clause.
Really great to listen to people who know what they are talking about. Thanks you!!!
If tax bills originate from a legislative body how can we be taxed without representation?
I first read the constitution in its entirety when I was in high school and again in college. I recommend that everyone in the USA read it. You'd be surprised at how little our political leaders and local law enforcement agencies know about this document.
I did it in Junior High because it was in the back of the Social Studies book and I was intrigued. I later found out it was later one of the requirements for the Citizenship of the Country Boy Scout Merit Badge.
Reading it is hardly enough though. As with most texts, it can't be fully understood on its own.
@@rickhodges4808 it's actually pretty straightforward. The only reason why someone would need a translation is if they don't understand written English.
@@AnarkeeSoundVibes, or because they want it to say something else.
@@AnarkeeSoundVibes I didn't say "translation" - seems you are the one who doesn't understand English. I said understand - and that's entirely true. One cannot simply read the Constitution and think they are suddenly a constitutional attorney who fully understands it.
A saying I wish would catch on is, "No Representation Without Taxation," so that tax dodging rich people and corporations couldn't bribe our government.
A bribe is just a tax the rich pay to avoid laws
I get the sentiment, but that would also stop the very poor and the elderly.
Yes. The rich should not be allowed loopholes. It's basically legal tax evasion.
@@austininflorida Just another example of "to each according to their need." Not being able to pay taxes is not the same as dodging taxes with loopholes.
It's the government that offers tax incentives to business owners, not the other way around. State governments offer those incentives because large businesses moving into their states means more jobs for the people and a better economy for the state.
The idea that rich people and corporations don't pay any taxes IS A MYTH, so stop spewing it everywhere.
Hey, Puerto Rico pays Federal Tax and doesn't get to vote for Congress or President. You would think people would know that. I'm an Irish man living in Ireland and it took me less than 2 minutes to find that out.
Guam, America Samoa, and U.S. Virgin Islands fall in that category too.
Depends which constitution you're reading, the original one (for the people) or the one enacted in 1871 (of the people).