Constitution 2050
By Raymund Eich
()
About this ebook
In these five stories, Raymund Eich posits new amendments to the United States Constitution.
Amendments written to better bestow the blessings of liberty on the American people and their posterity.
Amendments that those same American people, ranging from common men and women to Presidents, try to evade for personal gain.
The Twenty-Eighth Amendment
President Archer faced a Middle East crisis. The audio-visual recording crew following his every public move limited how he could resolve the crisis. Or did they?
The Twenty-Ninth Amendment
It didn't matter if Gretchen Archer knew what her father had done. It mattered if she should have known.
The Thirtieth Amendment
Born to an illegal immigrant, Gonzalo had a chance to live and work in the United States. If he demonstrated fluency in the English language. Others had the same chance… and would pass the test by hook or by crook.
The Thirty-First Amendment
Empowered to pass a law restricting the practice of any religion other than Christianity or Judaism, Congress passed the 9/11 Memorial Act forbidding the practice of Islam. But if devout Muslims may eat Jewish food, what's a kosher butcher to do?
The Thirty-Second Amendment
By chance, President Edward Slovachek could appoint three Supreme Court justices. Enough to tilt the Court to uphold a controversial law he supported. In the halls of the Senate, he could force through his appointments—but at what price?
Raymund Eich
Raymund Eich files patent applications, earned a Ph.D., won a national quiz bowl championship, writes science fiction and fantasy, and affirms Robert Heinlein's dictum that specialization is for insects.In a typical day, he may talk with university biology and science communication faculty, silicon chip designers, patent attorneys, epileptologists, and rocket scientists. Hundreds of papers cite his graduate research on the reactions of nitric oxide with heme proteins.He lives in Houston with his wife, son, and daughter.
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Constitution 2050 - Raymund Eich
CONSTITUTION 2050
Raymund Eich
CV-2 Books ● Houston
Foreword
When I grew up, my family wasn’t politically active, though my dad had strong opinions he frequently expressed by yelling at Walter Cronkite during the nightly news. We had a lot of books around the house, including some early 1960’s civics class textbooks my parents acquired during their immigration and naturalization process. As a child, I read voraciously and put too much effort into impressing teachers and authority figures, so I read those textbooks. And learned a lot. Did you know that, under a literal interpretation, the United States Air Force is unconstitutional? (But the World War II-era US Army Air Corps wasn’t). When a friend asked me how the Electoral College worked, thanks to those books, I explained it and he said for the first time he understood it.
Around the same age, I started reading Clarke, Niven, and Analog magazine, and my life-long interest in science fiction started. Science fiction has long been a sandbox for political speculation, going back five centuries to the proto-science-fiction of Sir Thomas More’s Utopia. Closer to home, you can see science fiction examining political concepts in every other episode of Star Trek, when Captain Kirk reforms or topples corrupt and incompetent regimes with a couple of right hooks and the self-confident optimism of the New Frontier era.
Written science fiction has been set under all sorts of governments, from the UN-one-world-governments of Poul Anderson’s Polesotechnic League future history and Larry Niven’s Known Space series, to the Victorian throne & altar empire of Jerry Pournelle’s CoDominium universe, to the anarchic socialism of Iain M. Bank’s Culture series and the Trotskyite anarcho-capitalism of Ken MacLeod’s The Star Fraction and its sequels.
Hence, early in my aspirations to write science fiction, the knowledge I could use the genre to tell stories touching on government and politics lodged in the story factory in my subconscious.
Decades passed. 9/11 happened. It was the first time foreign forces inflicted mass casualties on U.S. territory since Pearl Harbor, and it came after about a decade when respectable thinkers told Americans that history had ended and Western civilization had won. In times when a society’s opinion leaders are proven horribly wrong, people don’t just want information, they want a framework to make sense of that information. And the Internet, a relatively new medium at the time, gave the microphone to new thinkers and new voices. Thus, like many other people with libertarian mindsets in those months and years, every day I followed blogs like Glenn Reynolds’ at www.instapundit.com.
From Reynolds’ blogroll, I found other bloggers whom I read off and on in that era. One of them, perhaps Tyler Cowen at www.marginalrevolution.com, posted a blog entry asking his readers to propose new amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
Although I never posted it at the time, the Twenty-Eighth Amendment—meaning the concept behind the speculative amendment, not the story by that name you’re about to read—came to my mind as a result.
Inventing other Constitutional amendments became a game my subconscious played for many years. Inspiration could pop up from anywhere. I’m not the first to propose limiting Supreme Court justices to staggered eighteen-year terms. That amendment makes sense as a way to recognize political realities that the founders didn’t contemplate, much like the Twelfth Amendment recognized the ways political parties gamed the original Electoral College. Complaints made by a legal immigrant of my acquaintance about anchor babies inspired another. A third emerged in part from a factoid I heard from science fiction writer Benjamin Rosenbaum, that kosher food is halal (religiously acceptable for practicing Muslims). And the most outlandish amendment you’ll read about in this book is an attempt to put into words the difficult-to-articulate feeling shared by a lot of the working-class middle Americans I grew up with, that something in Washington went very wrong, and it will take a drastic change to set it right.
But the concepts behind the amendments themselves weren’t enough to generate the stories you’re about to read. There’s a very strong reason why nobody these days reads More’s Utopia or any of a hundred other stories set in perfect
societies. It’s the flip side of the reason why 1984, Brave New World, The Hunger Games, The Handmaid’s Tale, and numerous other dystopian books remain popular.
There’s never a satisfying story about when things go right. Stories are only enjoyable when they show things have gone wrong.
In stories about governments and politics, how can things go wrong? Though he