I'm afraid I cannot help but step into this constitutional mess of a debate. I have to most politely disagree with debris, as it seems his understanding of the constitution and what it represents is slightly flawed.
The US constitution is a document that states inalienable rights of every US citizen. It is a scripture that stands as the foundation of the principles by which the US government abides by. To say that the "will of the people" will always surpass that of the individual (and of the constitution, by implication) is wrong. Removing "inalienable" rights left and right as it so pleases the majority is not something to be taken lightly, and not something to be strived for. The constitution is there for a reason, it is the very backbone that the United States of America stands on, without it, there can be no United States of America. It would just not be the same.Quote:
...which violates the clauses of the US constitution, and even if they have, the will of the people will always surpass that of the individual in the free world.
Even when the majority is against a certain thing, this does not mean that they are in the right. Remember segregation? The US government gave the rights to black students to study in previously white-only schools. Some states were angered and were totally against this. They invoked the NATIONAL GUARD(!) to bar these black students from their studies. The federal government had to bring in the army to counteract these rogue state troops. They then nationalized the national guard troops, so as to prevent this from ever happening again. The point is, that the majority do not always agree with the laws written, it is naive to believe such.
You speak as though "majority-rules" is the only type of governance to be had in the free world. What of anarchist-like systems of government?
