I'm listening to Horace Silver's "Song for My Father," and although I'm not willing to classify it as the "Album of the Week" yet, I would nonetheless highly recommend it.
I'm taking Constitutional Law this semester, and I have to say I do enjoy it. I've always had a bit of a soft spot in my heart for early American history. I think it'd be great to have dinner with James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, so long as they wouldn't kill each other across the table. The Constitution is such a fascinating document, and there's just so much thought that went into it. Too many people nowadays just see it as the civic religion would have you see it, as some kind of infallible "Yay us!" sort of charter. The reality, of course, is much more complex. Anytime you proclaim that your goal is to achieve a "more perfect union," while simultaneously counting a black person as 3/5 of an individual, you know there are some serious issues.
It's interesting to see how conceptions of the United States as a nation have evolved throughout the two-odd centuries since 1789. If someone asks you your nationality, I'm assuming that if you're from the United States, you'll probably say that you're American. We're so used to conceptualizing the United States as a single entity, of which the states are more or less units of administration. However, go back to 1795, and ask a citizen of the US what their nationality is, they would probably say Virginian, or New Yorker, or something to that effect. You couldn't say Minnesotan, because it didn't exist yet. To the founding generation, the "nation" was a group of sovereign states who agree to be identified as a single entity. And there was a lot of genuine fear of what would happen if the single entity would grow to become larger than the sum of its parts.
A lot of these Constitutional issues from the late 18th/19th centuries seem so obscure to us in 2009, because the Civil War settled once and for all the issue of how the country would identify itself. Sure, I'm Minnesotan, but I'm equal parts American. The federal government is a tangible element, for better or for worse, in all of our lives. We don't worry so much on whether Washington is infringing on our rights as Minnesotans. If they do, we throw a little hissy fit about local government. More often than not, we want Washington to give use money, after our dumbass governor decided it would be a good idea not to raise taxes. Funny how you end up with a $5 billion budget deficit when you put a strangle hold on income...
I mean, I'm not fully employed or anything, so maybe I'm missing something. But I get paid for my job, I see how much money is going to taxes. And to be frank, it really doesn't outrage me at all. For the good of society, that money taken from me is going to provide health care to those who need it, or to fix our crumbling national infrastructure, or to buy a laser-guided tank. Now, I don't necessarily agree with the tank, but a lot of that money is going to admirable causes. There's this cult of individualism in this country that often times is taken to the extreme. Call it socialism if you want, but everyone in the NATION should be required to collectively raise the quality of life for all.
I digress.
Point is, I love Constitutional issues, because at the heart, it's really a question of how do we live in community as free individuals. What freedoms are willing to give away for security and the good of the whole, and what are we determined to keep for ourselves? Really tough questions, when you get down to it. For example, right now, I have the freedom to laze about all night and watch TV, should I choose. But I've also committed to giving up that freedom in order to join Hamline University School of Law. That community demands I give up some of my freedom in order to contribute productively to an end goal of thoughtful legal education. To live under a constitution of any sort necessarily demands this sort of tension in everyday life, the tension between freedom and responsibility.
Now that we've established that, I have to go brief some cases.
But for your viewing pleasure, here are a few fun-filled Constitution-related photos of my brief time spent in Philadelphia this summer.
Here is my senior paper, which talked about the persistence of anti-federalism following the ratification of the Constitution in 1789, with Independence Hall.
Here I am, with said senior paper, in front of Independence Hall.
Here is the room in Independence Hall where the Constitution was signed.
Cannot get enough.


