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They are too stupid to figure out how to do that.
Have the Teabaggers read the Constitution? Most of them have not read it in its entirety, that's for sure.
They have heard little quotes from the Constitution here and there, but that's usually the extent of their knowledge.
Do the Teabaggers understand the Constitution? No. Understanding the Constitution is a full-time job.
Why is it a full-time job? Because the Constitution is a very short document that was written over time beginning over 200 years ago. Because of its brevity, the Constitution has to be interpreted and applied. The Supreme Court has taken on the task of interpreting and applying it.
The interpretation of the Constitution is ever-changing.
Why? First, because the Supreme Court is composed of human beings who have, over the course of time, made mistakes and changed the institution's mind. For example, Sandra Day O'Connor was the first female justice on the Court. Although Roe v. Wade was decided by an all-male Court, in the decision Casey, Sandra Day O'Connor explained why a woman must have the right to make decisions about abortion at least up to a certain point in pregnancy. It will be difficult for any Court to overturn Casey because O'Connor's argument reaches into the very deepest part of the experience of being a woman -- the intimate and uniquely feminine joys, pain and risks of childbearing.
Second, because our country is ever changing. Did the Constitution specifically permit President Eisenhower to construct the interstate highways back in the 1950s? No, not in so many words. Did the Constitution state explicitly that the federal government would include a Food and Drug Administration? No. The Constitution grants authority to Congress, the president and the courts in very broad terms, and the Supreme Court ultimately decides whether certain federal actions or activities are within the Constitution.
I could go on and on about why the study of the Constitution is a full-time job. The Teabaggers, or most of them, are not experts on the Constitution. They repeat what their political heroes tell them about it.
Again, no. The Teabaggers have not taken away my Constitutional rights. But then, as far as I can tell, no one has taken or is taking away theirs either.
George W. Bush violated people's constitutional rights with his illegal wiretapping scheme and by depriving prisoners of the right to habeas corpus and permitting them to be tortured. I don't know to what extent Obama is continuing Bush's programs that violated people's constitutional rights.
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