Introduction
This is the
unedited paper I wrote for my senior seminar back in 2007. I am posting it as a sort of trip down memory
lane during our current apocalypse.
I have
become a better writer since creating this.
I have
become much better informed since writing this.
I am a very
different person than when I wrote this.
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The Theory
The last instance of the United States being
in a constitutionally defined war came to a close in the forties at the end of
World War II, since that time numerous armed conflicts throughout Asia have
called on the United States to serve in a military capacity. At no point was War actually declared with Viet
Nam, Korea, Iraq, or anywhere else in the latter half of the 21st
century. Since no war was declared,
there were no treatise signed or in anyway approved by the United States
Congress. Aside from the American
people’s participation as soldiers they had very little impact as far as
democratic participation. The primary
decision maker in all of the conflicts of the latter part of the 20th
century was the President of the United States.
The growing number of potent assumed powers by the
office of the President, the incredible nimbleness of the President’s political
strength, and fewer and fewer effective checks on the power of the office has
taken on the appearance of reality. The
United States no longer declares war; the United States no longer signs peace
treaties; and the United States Congress has consistently failed to find a
politically viable way of placing checks on the White House. This is a Constitutional catastrophe, and
needs to be reevaluated to find an effective way for the system to maintain its
speed and effectiveness, while at the same time not degrading
democratically. The United States needs
to start declaring war again.
The Problem and Some History
In place of wars police actions and
operations have become the vocabulary for furthering the international politic
of the United States. All of that power
now flows to and from one person within the United States government, the
office of the President.
Article 2, Section 2 of the United States Constitution
begins with: The President shall be Commander in Chief of the
Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States,
when called into the actual Service of the United States.[1] To be the Commander and Chief of the United
States is the first duty of the President, that much is undeniable, but if the
United States government is to have effective checks upon all aspects of it,
leaving enough military power to destroy all of humanity at the discretion of
one man does not seem conducive to that end.
Part 2
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[1]
Constitution
of the United States
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