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Authors: Eric Lane

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The Genius of America

BOOK: The Genius of America
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THE GENIUS OF
AMERICA

How the Constitution Saved Our
Country—and Why It Can Again

Eric Lane and
Michael Oreskes

 

 

 

BLOOMSBURY

 

 

 

To Joyce Talmadge and Geraldine Baum,
whose love and encouragement made this
book, and much more, possible.

CONTENTS

Introduction
: An Extraordinary Accomplishment

Part One:
The Invention

1.
The More Fatal Problem Lies Among the People Themselves

2.
Approaching So Near to Perfection as It Does

3.
That Poor Little Thing—the Expression
We the People

Part Two:
Thank God, It Worked

4.
To Meet Extraordinary Needs

5.
The Right to Alter the Established Constitution

Part Three:
The Challenge

6.
A Mandate for Vigorous Action

7.
Government Is Not the Solution, Government Is the Problem

Conclusion
: We

Appendix
: The Constitution of the United States of America

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations and Bibliography

Notes

Introduction

AN EXTRAORDINARY
ACCOMPLISHMENT

America! America!
God mend thine every flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-control
Thy liberty in law!

—K
ATHARINE
L
EE
B
ATES
, 1893

T
HE
U
NITED
S
TATES OF
A
MERICA
is an extraordinary accomplishment. It is the richest, most powerful nation that has ever existed. From a handful of farmers and merchants on the edge of the known world, it has grown, endured, agonized and prospered. Millions have flocked to its shores, and millions more continuously hope to come. Saying that this has become something of a cliché does not make it any less true. Nor does the fact that some people in other parts of the world have come to resent the way America asserts its wealth and power make America's rise any less remarkable or significant. Even America's fiercest critics don't argue that.

But why did this success visit itself on the United States? Certainly it is a land blessed with enormous resources and intrepid people. They have been celebrated many times. But there are other nations with great resources and excellent people. Our purpose is to focus on something so apparent it is often underappreciated. America's extraordinary success is directly related to its unique form of government. Not just to its freedom or its democracy, but to its singularly American form of democracy.

Indeed, one of America's first and greatest inventions was the United States of America itself. This was something wholly new in the annals of government. There had been democracies before. There had been republics before. But what the framers invented was something no one had ever seen before.

They built a system of government entirely self-contained. They looked to neither God nor king for higher authority. This was, as they said, a government of “We the people.” Every piece of it represented the people and drew its authority from the people, not, as for example in England, where the king or queen owed their power to the will of God, and the then powerful House of Lords to the lineage of its members.

But for government of the people to really work, the framers had to recognize what people were really like and then design a government around that reality. Through trial and spectacular error, they came to understand that anything less realistic was doomed to fail.

This, then, was their radical breakthrough: their recognition that government had to be designed around a cold-eyed acceptance of men as they really are, not as we might wish them to be. What was that cold-eyed view of human nature? They recognized that people pursue their own self-interests. And in this pursuit, they often regard what is good for them as good for all.

Other political thinkers had, of course, noticed this from time to time before the American Revolution. But before America, proponents of democracy (when they could be found) generally solved the problem of selfishness by suggesting that citizens could rise above their own interests to join in achieving some larger good that they would recognize through reasoning together.

This is an attractive thought. It was nice to believe—it is still nice to believe—that we each have this capacity for public virtue. Indeed, in the heady first days of the Revolution (but neither before nor after, as we describe in Part One), the founders themselves by and large believed this. They generally thought that the simple act of breaking with England would free Americans in their new land from the corrupting values of the old world. In April of 1776, Tom Paine described America as “a blank sheet” on which a freed people could and would script a new start. All that was needed to make government work was virtuous Americans doing the right thing in their new land.

But in the first disastrous years of their independence they came to understand that they had been hopelessly naive. Of course, there were individual examples of self-sacrifice for the larger cause. Yet overall, the framers found, the people could reliably be counted on to do what was best for themselves as individuals, not for some abstract larger whole. As a result, the people had nearly let their army starve in the field of battle. They had competed, one state against another, for the upper hand in trade. They had profiteered and stolen and refused to work together.

The American experiment in self-government was on the verge of failure.

“We have probably had too good an opinion of human nature in forming our confederation,” George Washington wrote in 1786.

Then, a quintessentially American thing happened. A group of men, chosen by their states, got together in the sweltering late spring of 1787 to try to fix things. They locked themselves in a room and haggled and brokered and compromised. They went way beyond any instructions they had been given by the states, which had sent them, or by Congress, which had belatedly endorsed their gathering. But they did not do it to impose an ideology or test some social theory. In that pragmatic American way that people all around the world still admire, they were just trying to make it work.

And out of that sweltering room in Philadelphia, out of that crisis of the early American nation, emerged a blueprint for government that was designed to let the people govern themselves despite their imperfections. They called it “this Constitution for The United States of America.” It did not count on people to be selfless or somehow bigger than themselves. “If men were angels, no government would be necessary,” wrote James Madison, one of the heroes of our story.

Indeed, the Constitution recognized that the great strength of Americans was their drive and ambition. For most, that is what got them to the new world (and still does). The Constitution would make a virtue of this “vice.” This new idea for government presumed that people would pursue their own interests. Indeed, it counted on them to do just that. And it created paths for others to disagree, and resist them, or argue for something different.

The framers' invention was a government designed to channel these struggles. To impede change until enough people supported it. To force people to the middle. To encourage compromise. To spread power around so that, in Alexander Hamilton's succinct vision, the few could not oppress the many, and the many could not oppress the few. A lot could get done if people worked together in this system. But if they refused to compromise, it could all grind to a halt.

In other words, what they sent out from Philadelphia was more than just a piece of parchment. They created a set of ideas about government and democracy. Twenty years ago, the scholar Michael Kammen published a marvelous book on the Constitution in our culture. He described both the importance to us of the document itself and of the values and options that surrounded it, what he called
constitutionalism
. At the heart of constitutionalism is an acceptance of “conflict within consensus.” Conflict over issues, within a consensus that we are bound one to another by our shared belief in our Constitution and its principles. This crucial tension has both held our country together and driven us forward. For conflict within consensus to be constructive, rather than destructive, Americans had to accept in their political bones several other ideas crucial to the Constitution. One was compromise. The Constitution was a set of compromises and assumed the vital need for compromise for the new government to function. Another crucial idea was representation. The political philosophy of the framers assumed that Americans would accept compromises because they felt properly represented in the branches of government. For a long time this promise of representation was considerably greater than the reality, as we discuss in Part Two.

All of the Constitution's ideas taken together—conflict within consensus, compromise, representation, checks and balances, tolerance of debate—became part of the political conscience of each American. We therefore call this set of ideas, these core political values, the
Constitutional Conscience.
This book describes the development of Americans' Constitutional Conscience and its vital role. Every nation has a set of political values. But ours are, by comparison, more vital to us, as Americans, than a similar set of values would be to the people of many other nations. Ours is not a country “defined by blood, clan, land origin or religious belief,” observed the journalist Ray Suarez. Indeed, said former Harvard president Derek Bok, “more than any other leading democracy, America is a country that preserves its unity through a shared belief in its Constitution, its institutions of government, and its democratic principles.” So it is particularly important that we pay attention to our connection to our Constitution, institutions and principles.

We wrote this book because we worry that in recent years Americans have been losing touch with some of these basic constitutional values, most particularly a commitment to compromise and a tolerance for competing ideas. To say it the way Professor Kammen might, conflict has been increasing, and consensus has frayed. Americans' faith in their system is not what it once was. “Our conviction about American greatness and purpose is not as strong today” is the way William J. Bennett describes it on the very first page of his history of the United States,
The Last Best Hope
. Bennett said he wrote his book in part to remind Americans of their debt of gratitude to those who built the country. We share that worthy goal. An antidote to our frustration and cynicism is to remind ourselves from time to time of the principles behind what the framers invented.

Professor Kammen urged Americans to remember “that the founders did not expect their instrument of government to achieve utopia: ‘merely' national cohesion, political stability, economic growth, and individual liberty.”

They had no idea how effective their work would turn out to be. Many thought the Republic would last for only a couple of decades. Of course, it has not only lasted much longer but thrived. It has not been perfect, of course. Even the best design for government cannot prevent all error of human judgment. One of the central compromises the framers themselves made, to put off to the future the issue of abolishing slavery, nearly tore our country and their intricate design for the national government to shreds.

We linger on this in Part Two. Since we strongly embrace the values on which our system is built, and want to encourage other Americans to do the same, it is important to stare straight into the teeth of the unpalatable element of a system based on compromise. Compromises are by definition imperfect to the people involved. If it is truly a compromise, no one participant is getting everything he or she wants. The more the issue has a moral dimension, the more potentially awful the compromise can look. One of the reasons our politics has become so brittle is that we seem to be seeing so many issues through a moral lens and therefore find it hard to find common ground for compromise.

So it is valuable to remind ourselves that nothing we are struggling through now compares to the dilemma of slavery, which so dominated the nation's first seventy years. It is simple for us to look back and say slavery is wrong and the framers should not have compromised. But the issue for them was far more complicated, both because our age has made the moral judgment about slavery their age was struggling with and because we have the nation they were trying to build. We have no way to know what would have happened had they refused to compromise on slavery in 1787, or at any of several other moments along the march to the Civil War. Perhaps we still would have one nation. Or perhaps we would have two, both ultimately having abandoned slavery. Or perhaps the framers' greatest fear would have been realized, and America would have become a set of feuding, little republics, preyed on and dominated by the great powers of Europe. History is fun to play “what if ” games with. But we do not get to rerun history. All we have is the testimony of the participants themselves.

BOOK: The Genius of America
4.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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