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Today, December 15, is Bill of Rights Day!

kingfisher

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The current state of our rights: "It’s a disturbing snapshot, to be sure, but not one the Framers of the Constitution would have found altogether surprising."

Even though I'm not Jewish, I joined JPFO at a level ($40) that they gave me a Bill of Rights Day pin, and I like to wear it as a conversation-starter to help educate the citizenry.

Today I got this email from Cato Institute (I have not recreated all of the internal links that show examples of everything stated... see ending comments if you want that):

Posted on December 15, 2015 by Tim Lynch

Today is Bill of Rights Day. So it’s an appropriate time to consider the state of our constitutional safeguards.

Let’s consider each amendment in turn.

The First Amendment says that “Congress shall make no law… abridging the freedom of speech.” Government officials, however, have insisted that they can gag recipients of “national security letters” and censor broadcast ads in the name of campaign finance reform and arrest people for simply distributing pamphlets on a sidewalk.

The Second Amendment says the people have the right “to keep and bear arms.” Government officials, however, make it difficult to keep a gun in the home and make it a crime for a citizen to carry a gun for self-protection.

The Third Amendment says soldiers may not be quartered in our homes without the consent of the owners. This safeguard is one of the few that is in fine shape – so we can pause here for a laugh.

The Fourth Amendment says the people have the right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures. Government officials, however, insist that they can conduct commando-style raids on our homes and treat airline travelers like prison inmates by conducting virtual strip searches.

The Fifth Amendment says that private property shall not be taken “for public use without just compensation.” Government officials, however, insist that they can use eminent domain to take away our property and give it to other private parties who covet it.

The Sixth Amendment says that in criminal prosecutions, the person accused is guaranteed a right to trial by jury. Government officials, however, insist that they can punish people who want to have a trial—“throwing the book” at those who refuse to plead guilty—which explains why 95 percent of the criminal cases never go to trial.

The Seventh Amendment guarantees the right to a jury trial in civil cases where the controversy “shall exceed twenty dollars.” Government officials, however, insist that they can impose draconian fines on people without jury trials.

The Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishments. Government officials, however, insist that a life sentence for a nonviolent drug offense is not cruel.

The Ninth Amendment says that the enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights should not be construed to deny or disparage others “retained by the people.” Government officials, however, insist that they will decide for themselves what rights, if any, will be retained by the people.

The Tenth Amendment says that the powers not delegated to the federal government are reserved to the states, or to the people. Government officials, however, insist that they will decide for themselves what powers they possess, and have extended federal control over health care, crime, education, and other matters the Constitution reserves to the states and the people.

It’s a disturbing snapshot, to be sure, but not one the Framers of the Constitution would have found altogether surprising. They would sometimes refer to written constitutions as mere “parchment barriers,” or what we call “paper tigers.” They nevertheless concluded that having a written constitution was better than having nothing at all.

The key point is this: A free society does not just “happen.” It has to be deliberately created and deliberately maintained. Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. To remind our fellow citizens of their responsibility in that regard, the Cato Institute has distributed more than six million copies of our pocket Constitution. At this time of year, it’ll make a great stocking stuffer.

Let’s enjoy the holidays (and remember many of the positive trends that are underway) but let’s also resolve to be more vigilant about defending our Constitution.

To learn more about Cato’s work in defense of the Constitution, please Google them and sign up for their newsletter or go here.

May the force (Bill of RIGHTS) be with you!
 
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Many people don't realize that there is a "Bill of Rights Day," and I'm bumping this because it was posted so late yesterday that most people who read NES at work probably didn't see it.

Bill of Rights Day should be a major holiday in the United States (who else has one?), but that would take lots of people to get behind the idea and make it happen. The Bill of Rights is more important to me than Christmas.
 
Nice. I am sure the pols don't care as they continue to crap all over our rights.

The latest is this BS with the "no fly" list. Both parties are joining in on this assault!
 
Nice. I am sure the pols don't care as they continue to crap all over our rights.

The latest is this BS with the "no fly" list. Both parties are joining in on this assault!

Exactly, because they don't live under the same rules.

If the average American cared about their Constitutional rights at all, we'd be in much better shape, but most people are too busy to be bothered and don't even know about the dismal state of their rights (as outlined in the Cato article above) until some gross infringement happens to them personally.

If Bill of Rights Day were actually celebrated, it would be at least one day each year that people would think about these things, and that would be a huge improvement in general awareness (a good step toward getting our rights back because the more people involved, the better).

Some couples only say "I love you" with a card once a year on Valentine's Day, and that's pretty sad, but it's still more love and respect than the U.S. Constitution gets!
 
"It's not the Bill of Needs. It's the Bill of Rights!"

That's the response when someone asks, "Why do you need an AR-15?" (In other words, I'm not required to show a "justifiable need" that anybody else agrees with.)
 
"It's not the Bill of Needs. It's the Bill of Rights!"

That's the response when someone asks, "Why do you need an AR-15?" (In other words, I'm not required to show a "justifiable need" that anybody else agrees with.)

Rights mean that you need not ask permission!
 
Many years ago (~10?) I filed a citizen bill with my local state representative to have 15 December declared annually as Bill of Rights Day. With enough phone calling and encouragement I actually got the bill through the legislature and signed by the Governor. I know I have a copy of the law with the Governor's signature somewhere at home. As the author of the law I can unequivocally sate that an 'appropriate manner' would involve taking your favorite gun to the range for some celebratory shooting. Enjoy...and I hope to see you there.

From the MA General Laws:

Section 15AAAAA: Bill of Rights Day
Section 15AAAAA. The governor shall annually issue a proclamation setting apart December 15 as Bill Of Rights Day, in respect for the first 10 Amendments to the United States Constitution, and recommending that the day be observed in an appropriate manner by the people.
 
Many years ago (~10?) I filed a citizen bill with my local state representative to have 15 December declared annually as Bill of Rights Day. With enough phone calling and encouragement I actually got the bill through the legislature and signed by the Governor. I know I have a copy of the law with the Governor's signature somewhere at home. As the author of the law I can unequivocally sate that an 'appropriate manner' would involve taking your favorite gun to the range for some celebratory shooting. Enjoy...and I hope to see you there.

From the MA General Laws:

Section 15AAAAA: Bill of Rights Day
Section 15AAAAA. The governor shall annually issue a proclamation setting apart December 15 as Bill Of Rights Day, in respect for the first 10 Amendments to the United States Constitution, and recommending that the day be observed in an appropriate manner by the people.

Nice! Now if the Governor and all of our other elected officials in MA (this includes YOU, Maura) would start respecting the BOR, not just on 12/15, but on every other day of the year, MA might be a state worth living in!!
 
Many years ago (~10?) I filed a citizen bill with my local state representative to have 15 December declared annually as Bill of Rights Day. With enough phone calling and encouragement I actually got the bill through the legislature and signed by the Governor. I know I have a copy of the law with the Governor's signature somewhere at home. As the author of the law I can unequivocally sate that an 'appropriate manner' would involve taking your favorite gun to the range for some celebratory shooting. Enjoy...and I hope to see you there.

From the MA General Laws:

Section 15AAAAA: Bill of Rights Day
Section 15AAAAA. The governor shall annually issue a proclamation setting apart December 15 as Bill Of Rights Day, in respect for the first 10 Amendments to the United States Constitution, and recommending that the day be observed in an appropriate manner by the people.

It's awesome you did that! Reps to you, sir.

I'm not aware of the governor ever issuing a proclamation, though. Have you (or anyone) ever seen it done?

Here is the governor's proclamations page, and it's not there for this year or for last year: http://www.mass.gov/governor/constituent-services/recognition/issued-proclamations/
 
Kingfisher,
I'd never seen an annual proclamation, nor was I aware of that web page you cited. I don't know that a BoR day proclamation ever happened after the initial bill signing into law.[sad]
 
Bill of Rights, eh? It would be a shame if someone....





...reinterpreted it

images
 
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