It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
The Congress, whenever two thirds of both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose Amendments to this Constitution, or, on the Application of the Legislatures of two thirds of the several States, shall call a Convention for proposing Amendments, which, in either Case, shall be valid to all Intents and Purposes, as Part of this Constitution, when ratified by the Legislatures of three fourths of the several States, or by Conventions in three fourths thereof, as the one or the other Mode of Ratification may be proposed by the Congress; Provided that no Amendment which may be made prior to the Year One thousand eight hundred and eight shall in any Manner affect the first and fourth Clauses in the Ninth Section of the first Article; and that no State, without its Consent, shall be deprived of its equal Suffrage in the Senate.
This week, the Convention of States resolution is pending in multiple state legislatures. Many state legislators are standing up and calling for an Amending Convention under Article V. These brave legislators are fighting to take the power from the federal leviathan and return it to you, the sovereign citizen. But they can’t do it without your help.
United States Constitutional Convention–Democracy Amendment FOR the purpose of applying to the U.S. Congress for an amendments convention called under Article V of the U.S. Constitution, on the application of the legislatures of two–thirds of the several states, to propose an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that affirms every citizen’s freedom to vote and restores free and fair elections in America;
This resolution urges the United States Congress to adopt a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution of the United States or to call a constitutional convention for the purpose of proposing a federal balanced budget amendment for ratification by the states.
Snarl
reply to post by MisterMandlebrot
I'd be willing to take the risk of a con-con ... if we could just have a bunch of armed 2d Amendment supporters standing around.
The US is in a bad way right now. The same flexibility which made the Constitution a platform for the country to succeed from is being used to undermine the low information voters of this era. Not sure about the timing of this (e.g. getting the minimum # of states to approve), but I hope it holds until after 2017.
If, as you suspect, there is a hidden agenda ... maybe that'll be the spark.
S&F for old school ATS style threading.
Why do you support an Article V Convention?
JBRiddle
Its seems to me as if none of you understand that what is decided at a Constitutional Convention does not make it LAW. Read your history, the Original Constitutional Convention was in 1787 the US Constitution did not have enough States ratify it (to make it law) until 1789). The US Constitution you needed 9 of the 13 States to Ratify or 3/4 of the states. And along the way many changes were made to the Constitution to get States to sign on, The Bill of Right was one such change.
Now with a Con-Con you can propose what ever the hell you want, However if you can't get 38 of the 50 States (3/4) to agree nothing happens, and the US Constitution remains as is. Getting the original 9 states to ratify was a pain in the ass (I should know my ancestors helped get it ratified the first time). But today you need 38 states to agree an extremely difficult task, when you consider we play hell just trying getting the US Constitution Amended. Which is one reason a Con-Con is often talked about but never attempted.
If for instance if a Con-Con were held and they say want to ban the people right to keep and bear arms, and eliminate the Second Amendment, it would fail (people like their guns ).
So for arguments sake say the Con-Con wanted to set congressional term limits, require a balanced budget except during time of declared war, revoke the governments authority over healthcare, education and limit the EPAs authority. And for #s and giggles any "Official that is caught taking a bribe or anyone caught tampering with a Federal Election will be put to DEATH And you get 38 states to ratify, boom its now law! And the Supreme Court and US Government can't do # about it because the states say so.
So fear not, just because something is proposed and comes out of the convention does not mean it will happen.
It would be interesting to see how things play out, we could see who is for the people and who is just bat # crazy and out to screw us all over.edit on 29-3-2014 by JBRiddle because: (no reason given)[/quote
How was it decided it take three fourths of the states to ratify? The convention decided that. Did it take three fourths of states, or unanimous approval to decide that? No. Rhode Island didnt even attend the convention. Can a new convention choose for ratification to be done by only half of the states? Yes. Can a new convention choose that is both chambers of congress approve of new amendments without any states approving? Yes.
Government interference in health care and education. The EPA. Both of these things are already unconstitutional. It only takes 218 representatives and 51 senators and zero states to end all of these things. It takes 292 representatives and 67 senators to make an amendment, with 3 out of 4 states ratifying.
Instead of seeing a balanced budget, lets see a constitutional budget.
JBRiddle
Its seems to me as if none of you understand that what is decided at a Constitutional Convention does not make it LAW. Read your history, the Original Constitutional Convention was in 1787 the US Constitution did not have enough States ratify it (to make it law) until 1789). The US Constitution you needed 9 of the 13 States to Ratify or 3/4 of the states. And along the way many changes were made to the Constitution to get States to sign on, The Bill of Right was one such change.
Now with a Con-Con you can propose what ever the hell you want, However if you can't get 38 of the 50 States (3/4) to agree nothing happens, and the US Constitution remains as is. Getting the original 9 states to ratify was a pain in the ass (I should know my ancestors helped get it ratified the first time). But today you need 38 states to agree an extremely difficult task, when you consider we play hell just trying getting the US Constitution Amended. Which is one reason a Con-Con is often talked about but never attempted.
If for instance if a Con-Con were held and they say want to ban the people right to keep and bear arms, and eliminate the Second Amendment, it would fail (people like their guns ).
So for arguments sake say the Con-Con wanted to set congressional term limits, require a balanced budget except during time of declared war, revoke the governments authority over healthcare, education and limit the EPAs authority. And for #s and giggles any "Official that is caught taking a bribe or anyone caught tampering with a Federal Election will be put to DEATH And you get 38 states to ratify, boom its now law! And the Supreme Court and US Government can't do # about it because the states say so.
So fear not, just because something is proposed and comes out of the convention does not mean it will happen.
It would be interesting to see how things play out, we could see who is for the people and who is just bat # crazy and out to screw us all over.edit on 29-3-2014 by JBRiddle because: (no reason given)