12/12/2025 lewrockwell.com  10min 🇬🇧 #298772

Constitutional Talk and Actions

By  James Anthony
 American Thinker 

December 12, 2025

Politics is "full of sound and fury, signifying  nothing." Constitutional government, though, is designed to be full of sound and fury, securing freedom. Officials are to promote the general welfare by  severely limiting themselves and other officials.

At the time the proposed Constitution was up for ratification, the American people had for a long time lived singularly free and had grown considerably more prosperous than the English people. The Americans were determined to keep this good thing going by continuing to  severely limit governments. And unless people supported the proposed Constitution, their representatives wouldn't ratify it.

To gain people's support,  the Federalists of the constitutional convention had already proposed to separate and offset powers. Each separated part of the government created using the Constitution would be given strong power and the duty to  severely limit itself and others. Each power's tasks would be simple and intuitive.

But even that explicit limiting wasn't enough to satisfy the people. Representing the people's rational distrust of governments, the so-called Anti-Federalists pushed the Federalists of the ratifying conventions also to make a gentlemen's agreement to draft and ratify a bill of rights that would explicitly provide  added protections.

Most of the talk and actions nowadays are  Progressives' distortions or fabrications. Very little of the talk and actions are what the Constitution requires. Even though we know this intuitively, it's eye-opening to see what talk and actions the Constitution requires laid out in black and white.

Summarized below is a substantial fraction of the talk and actions that the Constitution requires. Notice that the Constitution requires very little talk but lots of simple actions.

Oaths

Officials other than presidents swear or affirm to  support the Constitution. Presidents swear or affirm to  protect the Constitution.

Processes

Congressmen keep  house journals. Congressmen meet at least  once a year. Presidents may convene both houses or  either house.

Vice presidents  preside over senates. A simple majority of congressmen can do business. A small number of congressmen may compel absent members to attend and  penalize absence. Congressmen determine  house rules. Congressmen judge their house members'  elections, returns, and qualifications.

Congressmen admit new states. Congressmen plus state legislators separate parts of states, or join parts of states or whole  states.

Senators advise on appointments, presidents nominate candidates, and senators  consent.

Congressmen make  exceptions and regulations to  supreme courts' appellate jurisdiction. Congressmen constitute  inferior courts.

Congressmen must pass a single total appropriation that limits the overall takings from people. Presidents must then allocate line items to best enforce the whole body of  rules and sanctions.

Presidents recommend that congressmen consider  necessary and expedient measures. Congressmen pass bills. Presidents sign bills, return them to the originating house with  objections, or hold them for ten days (not counting Sundays), and by doing so in effect sign them if congressmen stay in session or veto them if congressmen  adjourn.

Senators  advise on and consent to  treaties, nowadays essentially passing this  external law. Presidents make treaties, nowadays essentially signing this external law.

Presidents, who collect revenues and spend the appropriation, from time to time publish  a regular statement and account of receipts and expenditures. Presidents from time to time give congressmen information on  the state of the national government.

Congressmen punish members for disorderly behavior, and  expel members. In impeachments of any congressmen or executive or judicial officers, house congressmen  indict and senators try,  convict, and  punish. In impeachment trials of presidents, chief justices  preside over senators.

House congressmen and senators each can't adjourn their houses for more than three days without  the other house's consent. When they disagree about adjourning, the president can adjourn both houses until  the time he sets.

Scope

All officials independently interpret constitutionality and use their powers  accordingly.

Congressmen pass rules and associated sanctions that together constitute laws - including  criminal laws, civil laws,  republican-form-of-government  laws,  invasion protection laws, domestic violence protection laws,  territory rules and regulations,  district laws,  military  laws including  rules-of-engagement cards, and  war declarations. Senators pass  treaties. On all this law, presidents sign or object.

Presidents  execute constitutional laws. Part of this job is to  take chief command of the national army and navy and the state militias.

Judges opine on  cases and controversies between specific parties.

Lessons

So then the Constitution, in this  one lesson so far, consists of oaths, processes, and scope.

Above all, officials each independently must  do what's right.

Report by keeping journals, recommending measures, publishing receipts and expenditures, and reporting the state of the national government. Don't report the state of the nation.

Act by passing rules and sanctions, executing constitutional laws, and opining on cases. Don't do  oversight or  constituent service.

This  parchment barrier is not  self-enforcing; enforcement flows from the people's actions. The highest priorities are the following actions:

We need to elect enough officials who are full of sound and fury, severely limiting other officials. We are the people we have been waiting for. Freedom is calling  us.

This article was originally published on  American Thinker.

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