Saturday, November 7, 2009

APHOTHUS, A Kind of Revolution, page 99

The Constitution became even more acceptable to the public at large after the first Congress, responding to criticism, passed a series of amendments known as the Bill of Rights. These amendments seemed to make the new government a guardian of people's liberties: to speak, to publish, to worship, to petition, to assemble, to be tried fairly, to be secure at home against official intrusion. It was, therefore, perfectly designed to build popular backing for the new government. What was not made clear–it was a time when the language of freedom was new and its reality untested–was the shakiness of anyone's liberty when entrusted to a government of the rich and powerful.

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