The
preamble to the United States Constitution proclaims to protect the rights and
liberties of “we the people”, but for much of this nation’s history “we” was
narrowly defined within a context of patriarchy and white
supremacy. Under these conditions marginalized groups have agitated,
demonstrated, and died in their endeavors to force the United States to live up
to its ideals. While the achievement of full democracy has not been fully
realized, the struggle to obtain it may not have begun had the Constitution’s
authors not at least laid a framework for democratic governance. Although
the framers’ notion of democracy was flawed—they protected the institution of
slavery failed to enfranchise women —they did intend to create a government
that was revolutionary and democratic for its time. Their intentions
are best evidenced by the ability of some citizens to participate in government,
the Bill of Right’s protection of civil liberties, and Jefferson and Madison’s
tendency to lean toward majoritarianism and the expansion of the
franchise.
"The land of the free and the home of the
brave." When Francis Scott Key penned those famous words, he captured the
feelings of generations of Americans to come: that the United States is a land
of unparalleled rights and freedoms. And while Mr. Key did share in these
great rights and freedom, many in this new nation were intentionally excluded
from these self-evident natural rights, which are believed to be protected by
this nation's revolutionary founding documents. It is in these documents
that the founders’ intent for our nation’s government can be found, and the
truth can be rooted out. While this nation's framers fully intended to
create a revolutionary and democratic government, they failed due to the deeply
embedded biases of the time. This failure is most obvious in the
treatment of women, the poor, and anyone not considered white.
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