Sunday, July 4, 2021

Independence Day: stopped by a filibuster?

Because it's a holiday weekend and hot and humid as Hades outside, today's posting will be short and  sweet, or not, depending on your political perspective.

According to the history.com website:

From 1774 to 1789, the Continental Congress served as the government of the 13 American colonies and later the United States. The First Continental Congress, which was comprised of delegates from the colonies, met in 1774 in reaction to the Coercive Acts, a series of measures imposed by the British government on the colonies in response to their resistance to new taxes. In 1775, the Second Continental Congress convened after the American Revolutionary War (1775-83) had already begun. In 1776, it took the momentous step of declaring America’s independence from Britain. Five years later, the Congress ratified the first national constitution, the Articles of Confederation, under which the country would be governed until 1789, when it was replaced by the current U.S. Constitution. ...

... The Congress was structured with emphasis on the equality of participants, and to promote free debate. After much discussion, the Congress issued a Declaration of Rights, affirming its loyalty to the British Crown but disputing the British Parliament’s right to tax it....

Betsy Ross flag

Now, I ask you to consider a hypothetical. If the Congress had adopted rules that included or allowed for the filibuster, would we now be a United States of America? I suspect not, if those in the Continental Congress had put political party and ambition ahead of country. My suspicions are, at least in part, confirmed by The Brennan Center for Justice, which  found, more than a decade ago:

 Founding Fathers Would Like Reconciliation, Not the Filibuster

There is little question that routine use of the filibuster, a de facto 60-vote requirement that inevitably leads to stalemate, defies the intent of those men in powdered wigs who carefully crafted our Constitution. This is not what the Framers had in mind. 


Fourth of July



Freedom is a rocket,
isn’t it, bursting
orgasmically over
parkloads of hot
dog devouring
human beings
or into the cities
of our enemies
without whom we
would surely
kill ourselves
though they are
ourselves and
America I see now
is the soldier
who said I saw
something
burning on my
chest and tried
to brush it off with
my right hand
but my arm
wasn’t there—
America is no
other than this
moment, the
burning ribcage,
the hand gone
that might have
put it out, the skies
afire with our history. 


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