Gents,
Help me out and please set me straight where I’m making a mistake. Not trying to stir the pot, just trying to be a good American.
Background: I believe that outside of the Bible, the chain of command, so to speak, goes from Declaration of Independence to U.S. Constitution to State Constitution. In other words, if a law violates the COTUS, it’s obviously not valid. But I believe, and I might be wrong, that if a law violates the Declaration of Independence, then it negates the purpose behind our revolution and is therefore also not valid.
Here’s my first question: In our Declaration, the founders said that rights come from our Creator. The implication is that what God (Creator) gives (rights), government has no authority to take away. I think JFK also said that. Did the founders intend to communicate that the rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights are unalienable? I believe the answer is “yes,” since the Declaration says so about other rights.
Second question: How did the title “Bill of Rights” come to be? I could google these questions but I’d prefer to learn from people who love America, not those who want to “fundamentally change” her, or believe that the COTUS is a “living document.” I don’t care to hear what Bill Ayers thinks. Don't think he's a member here.
If these questions have already been answered by our founders, please point me to the appropriate references.
Thanks in advance for your replies.
God bless America
Scarface26,
I will not take the time to address your answer fully, but will offer a brief opinion. If you would like to have a more lengthy explanation, we might set up a time for a phone call. I have been a college history professor for over 30 years, and my major area of study has been the Formative Years (roughly from 1763-1800). I have read the various documents mentioned by others more times than I can count, and I often think that I was born 200 years too late.
The most often quoted book of our founders during this time was the Bible. BUT the philosopher they had read most and from whom they adopted the bulk of their political thought was John Locke. Jefferson in the Declaration was channeling Locke and his Social Compact view of human government. Locke, in the tiniest of nutshells, said that God wanted people, the most marvelous and beloved of His creations, to live in a society and under a government that would protect their God-given (natural) rights. If that government failed to do that it may have broken the compact and "the people," if it did not respond to their proper appeals. had the right "to alter or abolish it." The Declaration of Independence is NOT the organic law of the land...that is the Constitution. However, it IS part of the foundation on which the Constitution rests, and no one, not evoen the Supreme Court, can rightly adjudicate cases before it without a proper understanding AND acceptance of the philosophy contained within the Declaration.
OK----20 years later---Constitutional Convention (the legality of which is still debated by history geeks) was dominated by "nationalists." They devised a brilliant document that has been copied for 230+ years. The problem---WHERE was the protection from an over-reach of authority from the new federal government. After all, the GREATEST threat to our natural rights was, and remains, strong, centralized big government.
These opponents, billed as Anti-Federalists, opposed the ratification of the Constitution and demanded a Bill of Rights be added if it WAS ratified. Virginia actually reserved the right to secede if this was not done.
Fast forward (the writing, debate, and ratification of the first 10 amendments can be discussed elsewhere)--10 amendments were ratified b y Dec. 17, 1791, and called, collectively, the Bill of Rights. They RECOGNIZED our GOD GIVEN NATURAL RIGHTS, they DID NOT GIVE US RIGHTS. Sorry that I am shouting in all caps, but this is vital (and opens the door to wonderful and good-hearted debate with those who say there is no God).
The first five words of the 1st amendment offers the key--Congress shall make no law....! It is a limit on the exercise of power, first and foremost, by the Federal government.
The 9th amendment explicitly recognizes we have rights not mentioned in the Bill of Rights, and the 10th explicitly states that those enumerated powers not specifically given to the Federal government are retained by the states and the people.
Sorry for the wall of text. I will not get into the so called "incorporation" of the Bill of Rights on the states by the 14th amendment and the myriad of Supreme Court cases which give the Federal Government more power at the expense of our God-given and Constitutionally protected rights.
Summary--we have rights, given by God, that the government must protect. This government is limited by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.