The Fourteenth Amendment declared that anyone born in the United States or naturalized in it is a citizen of the United States, and that no State can take away their rights as a citizen without due process, nor deny them equal protection of the law. This was written to stop certain States from declaring former slaves to not be citizens, and therefore not eligible to vote. An interesting tidbit is that there is a “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” clause in that Amendment. If someone is subject to another jurisdiction, or a subject of another nation, are they a citizen of the United States? Many say no. Those who ignore this clause generally support birthright citizenship to children of foreign nationals born in the United States.
It took us another six decades to get to the Thirteenth Amendment, and it was simple. No more slavery. And involuntary servitude can only happen if you are duly convicted of a crime. And just in case anybody thought they were joking, Congress declared that they had the power to enforce it. And as the old joke goes, the Democrats never forgave the Republicans for liberating their slaves…
The Twelfth Amendment to the US Constitution detailed new rules for electing the President and the Vice President. Each Elector originally cast votes for two people and the man who got the most Electoral College votes, as long as it was a majority, became President. The next greatest vote getter became Vice President. This system worked until 1800, when the Republican Party gave Jefferson and Burr the same exact number of votes for President. That sent the tie-breaker to the House of Representatives where the Federalists tried to sabotage the works by electing Burr over Jefferson. Jefferson won in the end, but only after much chaos and bad feelings. Under the Twelfth Amendment, each Elector now casts one vote for President and one vote for Vice President.
The Eleventh Amendment to the US Constitution states that no Citizen of one State or Subject of any Foreign State can sue any other State government. This was the first Amendment ratified after the Bill of Rights, and was directly in response to a Supreme Court ruling that a Citizen of South Carolina in this case could sue the State of Georgia over funds promised for goods and upon delivery the funds were never received. The States did not wish to be sued like this, and both Congress and the States moved quickly. It was ratified within two calendar years of the ruling in question, and is part of what we understand as Sovereign Immunity to this day.
I think we all learned an important lesson over Father’s Day. Never trust a Democrat politician’s barbeque plans. Seriously. This guy thinks this looks appetizing…

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