On Constitution Day, a reminder that the supreme law of the land requires
citizens’ participation in order to remain strong
Andrew Guthrie Ferguson
The Atlantic
Sept. 17, 2013
According to federal law, September 17th is Constitution Day – a day that all
federally financed educational and governmental institutions must teach about
the Constitution.
When is the last time “We the People” read the Constitution—all 4400 words?
How much do we “citizens” know about its original history, the need for a Bill
of Rights, or the impact of the Fourteenth Amendment? And, perhaps most
importantly, what is the document’s influence on our daily lives? If you are
like most people, the answers are likely disheartening, as is evidenced by
embarrassing test results about civic knowledge and a general ignorance that
borders on constitutional illiteracy.
This constitutional illiteracy, and the apathy it seems to indicate, is odd,
because the United States Constitution defines our national identity. In fact,
this document’s pride of place in our cultural heritage is part of what makes
the country unique: Constitutional values, and not race, ethnicity, or religion
bind us together as a nation. We are “Americans” because of a shared belief
system, and that belief system begins with those first, inspiring words etched
in the Constitution.
Read more
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
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