The Uniting Amendment |
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The Uniting Amendment is the comprehensive amendment to the Constitution of the United States written by the people. The document establishes a new foundation to help rebuild our country. Our congressional representatives have the lowest approval rating in history, and it's well-deserved.
Political instability results from a dormant Constitution November 19, 2014 – Today the Uniting Amendment released a new study on the correlation between a dormant constitution and political instability. According to the study, when we allow our Constitution to become stagnant, it causes political instability. However, whenever we amend the Constitution to increase liberty or correct an injustice, political stability soon follows.
New report on the causes of our nation's failure October 30, 2014 – Today the Uniting Amendment released a report that details how the country has devolved into a state of corruption, divisiveness, and ineffectiveness. The report highlights the events that have contributed to an erosion of liberty, democracy and justice, and have increased political instability.
A new revision of the Uniting Amendment was released on Constitution Day (Sep. 17, 2014), to coincide with the 227th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution.
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Historical events 1836 — Alexander Twilight is elected to Vermont's House of Representatives, the first black person in the country elected to state office.
Our common values
We all share the cherished values that have endured since our nation's inception: justice and liberty. Everyone in the United States has those values. If someone in the U.S. doesn't believe in liberty and justice, they're living in the wrong country. Liberty and justice define our national creed and the Uniting Amendment is guided by those common values. Integrity and compassion are two other widely held values, but they are nearly absent from
“The lesson is: don't start overthrowing governments with the idea that nothing could be worse. They'll always come up with something worse. Let's wait until we have a blueprint and we know where we're going before we start setting processes in motion.”
What is privacy? The answer to this question seems obvious until you actually try to answer it. Why do we value it? Where does that instinct come from and how does it effect the way we form our government and society? Should we trade privacy for security or is that a false choice?
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