Constitution and Bill of Rights
The US Constitution is "increasingly out of sync with an evolving global consensus on issues of human rights" according to David Law and Mila Versteeg "the U.S. Constitution is increasingly far from the global mainstream among nations' expectation of a constitution or bill of rights. "The fact that the U.S. Constitution is not widely emulated raises the question of whether there is an alternative paradigm that constitutional drafters in other countries now employ as a model instead" Law and Versteeg surmise. It should be remembered that rights are considered to be given, and that no one should have go work for anything. As well, Law and Versteeg argue that "there are growing suspicions, however, that America’s days as a constitutional hegemon are coming to an end" In a word, the American Constitution is dead (not the living document that the Left says it is, but rather a document that is slowly losing its force and usefulness as a template for other nations and countries. In the US there is a growing movement to eliminate the freedom that the Universal Declaration of rights supposedly stands for; its language is double-speak or lies. A Declaration of Rights really becomes a declaration of of dependence; a document that supports the idea of the right to take others' wealth and to be lazy with it and to expect governments to move wealth in order to establish equality. This reallocated funds, moved by the government, then becomes the folly of those who do not know how to use it for their benefit. A constitution that expects one to work for their keep, or sustenance is one that allows for certain freedoms to be earned. In the United States there is the need to work because the government will fall under the weight of its debt. People in this world need to earn their keep in order for their countries to compete in a world ordered by liberal democracy and capitalism. An alternative would be a one world government that supports everyone in the world, go for it and see how much wealth, power, and control will be distributed . . . .
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