New Constitution? What was changed? I thought it was only changed once and that was in 1884 for the worse.
http://www.twincities.com/opinion/ci...nclick_check=1
CONSTITUTIONALLY BULLISH
We are glad that the U.S. Constitution is being read in Congress and debated by the people sworn to uphold it. What's not to like? While one side — the conservatives — claims its policies are supported by a close reading, who's to say liberals couldn't make a similar case?
We're bullish on Constitution talk. And we offer these fun facts from the U.S. National Archives, where the original founding documents are stored, preserved and displayed.
# Deputies to the Constitutional Convention assembled in Philadelphia in May of 1787.
# There were about 55 deputies representing 12 states; Rhode Island did not send a deputy. They came and went; there was never a vote of more than 11 states.
# Benjamin Franklin was 81 but the average age of the delegates was 44.
# George Washington presided, James Madison was regarded as a pre-eminent author and Thomas Jefferson was serving as Minster to France.
# The Constitution was drafted in fewer than 100 working days.
# It contains 4,654 words, counting signatures.
# It became binding upon the states upon ratification by New Hampshire — the ninth state to ratify — on June 21, 1788.
# Washington was inaugurated as the first president under the new Constitution on April 30, 1789.
# Our constitution is considered "rigid" because it cannot be changed as easily as an ordinary law, as can the constitution of Great Britain.
# W.E. Gladstone, 19th century British prime minister, called the U.S. Constitution "the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man.''
# The United States government possesses only such powers as are granted to it by the Constitution.
# Only one amendment — the 18th, which prohibited the manufacture, sale and transportation of "intoxicating liquors'' — has been repealed.