With apologies to the men who drafted and adopted the U.S. Constitution, I have to point out something that’s not especially popular: There’s no such person or entity as “We the People.”
I frequently see political groups — from every orientation — claim to be “We the People.” Democrats used it to attack the Bush administration. Republicans use it now to attack the Obama administration. (The Tea Party groups seem to especially love the phrase.) Libertarians and various fringe groups do it at times, too.
In all cases, these groups are trying to claim that their views are the legitimate will of “the people.” The problem is that “the people” don’t speak with one voice. For instance, activists demanding gay marriage in the name of “We the People” have a very different thing to say than a religious group demanding recognition of the traditional definition of marriage, even though they also claim to speak for “We the People.”
There isn’t one big collective voice of “the people” speaking. There wasn’t one when the Constitution was adopted. There’s no such thing as a collective will — and there’s no moral way to impose One True Way on everybody in the name of “We the People.”
Dishonesty runs rampant when partisanship matters more than truth
Why fixate on nationality, religion and ethnicity of some mass killers?
When the state turns you into a criminal, friends become enemies
I’m more afraid of sanctimonious smart people than of stupid people
These aren’t revolutionaries; they’re nothing but thugs and looters
I struggle to fix the imperfection in myself and world around me
I want to help out of pure love, but human motives are messy
Without courage to take action, day will come when it’s too late