Motley Constitutionalism: a labyrinthine aphorism

Abstract
  Constitutions and their interpretation and enforcement are critical sociocivic and economic tools, but the concepts involved are virtually misunderstood and ignored and thus fail to attain their objectives.  In part, that is a consequence of the manner in which constitutional law is practiced and adjudicated, an extremely subjective process where it ought to involve and objectively scientific methodology.  In one sense, constitutions are the political framework in which juridical processes are supposed to be carried out, thus, constitutionalism is of a higher order than a mere legal system; however, that requires a broad and specialized understanding of the complex of concepts involved and that is sadly lacking, not only among judges, lawyers, political leaders and the citizenry, but among those charged with participating in the process through which constitutions are created, amended and replaced.  This reflection seeks to address such deficiency, albeit in a summary fashion, more of a survey than a treatise, but in the hope that it will lead to discussion, criticism, research and more profound related studies.
 
Key Words
  Constitution, democracy, liberty, pluralism, federalism, “separation of powers”, “constitutional review”.

Introduction

Constitutions should be essential instruments in conjunction with collective governance but they are little understood, either with respect to their creation and modification or their implementation and enforcement, and tend to be used more for political sloganeering and polarization than for anything else.  Especially among the jurists and legal professionals charged with their enforcement.  And that seems to be the case everywhere.

In the United States, the Constitution of 1787-89 et. seq. is revered in the manner that Abrahamic “sacred” texts (Jewish, Christian and Muslim) are revered (Bellah, 1967) and with good reason.  All are hodgepodge motleys so often patched as to have utterly distorted whatever original meaning they had[1].  None are functional thus, while they’re all honored, none is really adhered to.  Criticizing them, however, is anathema, thus, repairing them is virtually impossible.  Still, as an adjective, “virtually” leaves a sort of loophole.

As I was taught and then as I taught United States constitutional law I eventually realized that I was merely dealing with a summary and analysis of often incoherent and disorganized decisions by jurists that dealt with “constitutionalism” as a synonym for the Roman concepts of stare decisis and res judicata, without any framework in the study of theories concerning the nature of legal concepts, and specifically, the nature of constitutions.  I was fortunate, however, that several events in my life[2] led me to seriously question constitutional premises, hypotheses and theories, and that, in turn, led to a series of epiphanies I share here.

This “personal reflection” [3] analyzes relevant historical, theoretical and practical concepts involved (or which should be involved) in constitutional studies and arrives at some personal observations, conclusions and suggestions perhaps useful to students, constitutional lawyers, politicians and voters.  It’s a bit long so it’s not really fit for casual reading unless one finds the topic fascinating, or perhaps, if one seeks a cure for insomnia.  It’s a sort of constitutional study for dummies but perhaps, with a bit of luck, it may useful as a reflection that will pique the curiosity of others much younger and better positioned to delve into these topics in a more detailed and more academic manner than am I.

Theoretical underpinnings concerning constitutions in general

Generally, purportedly “liberal” constitutions primarily seek to reconcile contradictory tendencies, dressing them up in noble sounding platitudes but are, by their nature, antidemocratic, at least in a democratic context.  That seems oxymoronic and, well, it is.  But it’s also accurate, as oxymorons tend to be.  Constitutions are fundamental charters meant to be frameworks for governance, establishing parameters and institutions necessary to limit the chaos inherent in mob rule through the imposition of order, but also, seeking to bind future generations to past ideals, not trusting those in charge of future “presents” to make wise decisions.  They are shackles imposed on future leaders by elites who lack faith in their progeny and in majorities which, left unbounded, too often act based on ill thought out temporary expediencies.

Democracy, liberty, pluralism and rights[4]

The three most important albeit antagonistic premises involved in constitutional theory are democracy, liberty and pluralism, each opposed to the other two but all deemed essential and, the first step in making them functional, or at least, less dysfunctional, is understanding what they really involve in a functionally accurate manner rather than in the politicized form of propaganda through which accuracy and thus, functionality has been destroyed:[5]

  • Democracy is majoritarian rule, pure and simple, one more than half of the whole, without any of the unrelated contradictory positive platitudes[6] with which it is always presented and thus vastly different than rule by a plurality, which is rule by the largest block, although less than a majority.  Majoritarian rule requires massive participation as any non-participation must be counted as a vote against.  Hence, for example, in a democratic system comprised of a thousand members, action can only be taken if 5001 members are in accord.  If only 600 participate, 400 are in accord and 200 against, that is not a democratic majority, rather, it is a participatory majority.  Similarly, if everyone participates but there are more than two options, and the vote is 490 in favor of option (a) 300 in favor of option (b) and 210 in favor of option (c) that is not a democratic majority but rather, a pragmatic pluralistic “decision”.  Of course, attaining a democratic majority, even a massive super democratic majority, e.g., a vote of 999 versus 1 does not mean that the decision is morally, ethically or even pragmatically correct.
  • Liberty is pretty much the opposite of democracy.  It is based on the primacy of inherent individual autonomy as the source of sovereignty and thus, of decision making.  It is not granted and thus may not be conditioned, even if conditions are not only reasonable but essential.  It is, in a sense, the triumph of chaos over order, and is a fundamental component of the concept of rights, “rights being the quantifiable and qualifiable tangible expressions of liberty, e.g., the purported rights to life, free expression, etc.  Since all purported rights are in fact subject to conditions, the concept is not only dysfunctional and incoherent but inexistent.  What we refer to as rights are aspirational priorities on the use of government power and resources, assuming qualifying conditions are met, priorities rarely consistently honored, priorities coupled with undertakings by governments to either honor them or to provide a measure of relief for their violation.  Thus what pass for rights are granted by superior authorities (e.g., the state) rather than inherent and neither unconditional nor eternal.
  • Pluralism is based on the antidemocratic and antilibertarian concept of collective minority “rights”, subject to all the qualifications mentioned above concerning rights.

Constitutions are essential to reconcile the foregoing antagonistic principles by prioritizing and conditioning them through use of a purported monopoly on the use of force.  Constitutions thus have three fundamental functions: (1) reconciliation of democracy, liberty and pluralism through undemocratic restrictions; (2) creating, defining and providing for the implementation of institutional organs through which a collective is to be governed by application of the monopoly on the use of force; and (3), by providing specified forms of prioritized “constitutional legislation” not subject to modification through the ordinary mechanisms established for promulgation of more transitory legislation.  Constitutional concepts do not operate in a self-created vacuum, but rather, answer (or should answer) to universal, supraconstitutional principles based on, … take your pick: divine law, natural law, ius cogens, etc., all relatively futile given the absence of legislative institutions to identify and define them, executive powers to enforce them or real judicial power to reconcile them.

There is an interesting argument to be made that constitutions should be written and self-contained, and that certainly makes them more manageable, but, for example, neither the United Kingdom, Israel nor New Zealand have traditional written self-contained constitutions[7].  Rather, they have organic statutory laws and “traditions” that simulate constitutional functions, the foregoing based on the premise that past generations lack the right to bind present or future generations, especially with respect to the concept of parliamentary sovereignty.  Interestingly, it may be that in those three cases, the de facto constitutions are more closely adhered to than de jure constitutions elsewhere.

Sources of constitutional authority[8]

The source recognized for constitutional authority[9] in any given case has (or more accurately, should have) a huge impact on the operation of the constitution promulgated and on its subsequent modifications or even replacements.  Recognized potential sources, from autocratic lo less autocratic basically follow the following sequence: divine, autocratic, state, national, popular and individual[10] but, in essence all are either imposed by an elite of some sort, or represent the crystallization of normative mores that percolate over time from popular practices.  An interesting observation concerning the theory that the state is the source of constitutional authority, the platonic version, is that it is the foundational premise for fascism and other authoritarian and totalitarian systems, i.e., the belief that what is good for the state is ultimately good for the majority of its citizens.  In a non-pejorative sense, state-source-based-constitutionalism sees the state as using its monopoly on the use of force to actively coordinate all societal institutions in order to attain maximum efficiency, exalting neither liberty, democracy nor pluralism, only efficiency and meritocracy.

Elitism is involved in the theories based on promulgation through divine intervention, monarchic auto-limitation and through the state as a quasi-living entity.  Percolation from below is involved when the purported source of constitutional authority is derived from the nation as a whole (each member being the owner of an undivided interest in the whole), from the People (a majoritarian concept were each person has an individual percentage ownership of the whole) or from the individual (an anarchic concept).  However, notwithstanding theoretical underpinnings, constitutions tend to devolve into autonomous, self-perpetuating memeplexes controlled by activist elites who do everything possible to consolidate and maintain political power for their own welfare, with real modification or replacement available only through populist revolutionary action in the form historically defined as tyrannical.

Rigidity versus flexibility

Constitutions are also classified on the basis of their relative rigidity versus flexibility.  However, only the rigid variant actually qualifies as a constitution, although being rigid does not equate to permanent, merely that constitutional amendment requires a process equivalent to the original constitutional adoption.  Flexible constitutions, in essence, involve the illusion of “organic interpretation”, i.e., the theory that a constitution has no independent meaning and must be interpreted in the context of changes in societal values, hence, formal amendment is not necessary.  That is the crux in the constitutional confrontation in the United States between strict-construction-originalists and advocates of creative organic constitutionalism.  As is the case above with respect to “democracy”, neither hypotheses (really a range of different hypotheses) determines whether or not a constitution adequately serves to assure equity, justice, governmental efficiency, meritocracy or to attain its principal objective, the common welfare.

On the nature of confederalism, federalism and unitarism[11]

Understanding confederalism, federalism and unitarism is essential to understanding the United States and other confederal or federal constitutions[12] and the political systems they seek to impose.  The three related concepts, are, of course, important with respect to governance in any country and also, with respect to evolving international organizations endowed with supranational personality.

Confederalism and federalism are fundamentally based on the concept that the subjects of the composite entity involved are its component states.  Both subjects and objects are impacted by law, but only subjects have the capacity to act within the associated legal and judicial frameworks on their own behalf.  Thus, for example, an automobile, a slave, and in less enlightened times, a woman, were objects of laws, that is, impacted by them, but they lacked standing to force enforcements of laws that benefitted them, although they could be protected if their case was taken up by a subject, e.g., the owner of the car or slave, or the father, husband, brother or son of the woman.

Both confederalism and federalism are conceptually related to a similar theory of international law[13], one now not as respected as it once was, to the effect that status as subjects of international law was limited to states (countries), a status later somewhat expanded in a hybrid fashion to include international organizations endowed with supranational aspects, but excluding individuals who, while objects of international law, were the concern of states where they might be objects or subjects depending on the nature of the state (e.g., whether the state was confederate, federal or unitary[14]).[15]

The difference between a confederation and a federation lies in the balance of power between the central government and its component states, with component states being more powerful in a confederation and less so in a federation.  Thus, under the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, all principal central decisions required consensus among all the members, i.e., unanimity, and the central government had no autonomy to act on its own.  In a federation, the central government is at least as powerful as its components and has autonomous capabilities.  Confederalism and federalism are thus governmental mechanisms designed to fracture sovereignty along geographical and thematic lines, but sovereignty, even fractured, is a permanence-based concept.  In confederate and federal contexts, the states are the only subjects of the confederation or federation, while individuals are the subjects of unitary systems.  The United States of America purports to be a federation comprised of unitary states, thus individuals should only be subjects with respect to the states, although objects of both.  That, of course, as discussed in detail below, is no longer the case.

A unitary system, as in the case of most governments, has no fragmentation of sovereignty although it may have division of functions between a central government and regional and local governments.  Because fragmentation of sovereignty is not involved, the allocations of functions and related authority can be unilaterally modified by the central government, an essential aspect of the unitary structure.  There are gradients of unitary governmental structures based on the allocation of administrative responsibilities among a central government and its administrative subdivisions so that a unitary government sometimes smells as though it were federal, but the absence of fragmented sovereignty is a critical difference.

Separation of powers versus separation of functions

Separation of powers involves a concept made popular by Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu (“Montesquieu”)[16] in his seminal treatise, The Spirit of the Laws, pursuant to which the abuse of power facilitated by its autocratic and dictatorial concentration was ameliorated through its fragmentation into coequal but separate components (usually referred to as “branches”), each with separate, independent albeit complementary powers and responsibilities, so that the powers of one branch are not in conflict with those of the other branches. Inherent in the concept is the requirement that no individual have authority in more than one such branch, which differentiates it from Westminster (parliamentary) systems where there is a fusion of legislative and executive functions in the figure of the chief executive (usually a prime minister, premiere or, in certain monarchies, a president) and a cabinet comprised of members of parliament, and possibly a fusion of legislative and judicial functions as well, for example, in the judiciary committee of the United Kingdom’s House of Lords.  The latter should be referred to as “separation of functions” but is unfortunately, frequently conflated in diverse constitutions with “separation of powers.  The original division was into three segments, the legislative, executive, and judiciary, but in modern times, especially in Latin American, additional branches have been added, including branches that control the electoral system and that monitor and discipline corruption in the other branches.

In my analysis of related systems, I have come to conclude that the doctrine of separation of powers leads to political deadlock and inefficiency but generally fails in its mission to curb authoritarian governance.  Instead, it seems to lead to continual intragovernmental conflict and usurpation of power, especially by the “executive branch”, something less common but not absent in parliamentary systems.  The defect is not theoretical but rather practical, based on the nature of political power and the inherent participatory deficiencies among the electorate in systems that purport to be “democratic”.

Background to constitutional governance in the United States of America

The Declaration of Independence signed by representatives of thirteen of the British Monarch’s North American Colonies on July 2, 1776 but promulgated on July 4, 1776, together with the subsequent Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union adopted by the resulting thirteen sovereign North American states through their Continental Congress on November 15, 1777 and ratified by the thirteen sovereign states effective as of March 1, 1781, were the founding documents for the United States of America, originally known as the “Perpetual Union”; not the subsequently adopted constitution of 1789.  The latter constitution was adopted by an unconstitutional constitutional convention that assumed power in defiance of the requirements of the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union[17] and presented the final draft of a new constitution on September 17, 1787, having exceeded the authority granted by the thirteen sovereign states to the constitutional convention.  In contravention of the unanimity requirements of the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, the new constitution was adopted upon ratification by nine of the thirteen sovereign states on June 21, 1788, and adopted as “the law of the land” by the Congress of the Perpetual Union on September 17, 1788.  That body then passed resolutions setting dates for choosing the first senators and representatives to the new Congress, the first Wednesday of January (January 7, 1789); electing the first president, the first Wednesday of February (February 4); and officially starting the new government, the first Wednesday of March (March 4), when the first Congress would convene.  In essence, the Congress of the Perpetual Union committed suicide and took the Perpetual Union with it.

The Counterrevolutionary Constitution of 1787-89

The Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union were revolutionary documents while the constitution that went into effect on March 4, 1789 was a counterrevolutionary instrument revoking most of the principles on which the Declaration of Independence had been premised.  It had nothing to do with democracy as none of the institutional organs it created, the Senate, the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, the Electoral College or the Presidency were based on the one person, one vote majoritarian concept underlying the institution known as “democracy”, hence, the frequent albeit incoherent refrain, neither accurate nor wholly inaccurate, that the United States is a “republic” and not a democracy.  The new constitution made a mockery of the Declaration of Independence’s claim that all men were created equal by not only guaranteeing the continuation of slavery but also of the slave trade for a minimum period.  It granted the right to vote only to the formerly sovereign states which could then delegate it to such individuals as they saw fit, primarily white male landowners.

No provision was made in the Constitution for resolution of conflicts between the different branches, other than with respect to the presidential veto and provisions for its override, nor, for responsibility for constitutional interpretation or review.  However, that is not entirely accurate.  Plans for constitutional review were considered and rejected at the constitutional convention, which instead opted for the presidential veto to deal with such issue.  In the common law, that was a responsibility ascribed to the legislature (parliament).  In the United States however, that was a power usurped by the Supreme Court, a usurpation only finally resolved through the Civil War of 1861-65.  Alternative theories until that time insisted that each state, as a contracting party, had the right of Constitutional review (the theory of nullification) or that every federal official who took an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution had a right and duty to interpret it when doing so (a view espoused by President Andrew Jackson and others).  Consequently today, the branch of the Federal government that the members of the constitutional convention deemed the weakest, and thus the branch most in need of protection through isolation from political considerations through appointment rather than democratic election and through life tenure, has instead proved the strongest, evolving into a non-democratic politburo and super legislature, and that in turn has turned selection of the president, into a contest over who will appoint the federal judiciary and resulting in politicized justices and judges who make their most important decisions passed on political considerations, thoroughly corrupting both institutions.

Ratification of the Constitution was hard fought with truth an irrelevancy, much the way politics functions today. The biggest concerns with the proposed constitution involved how it would impact two essential principles: the equality and rights of the sovereign states and the liberty of the citizenry. Those who supported ratification of the Constitution, the “Federalists”, guaranteed it would never function the way it does today, the way those who opposed the Constitution, the Antifederalists feared it would; i.e., the Antifederalist feared that the federalist form of government being proposed, a compromise between the loose form of confederate government that existed under the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union and the centralized form of unitary government that existed in the United Kingdom, would all too soon become unitary, with state rights minimized and autocracy replacing liberty.  The Federalists promised to immediately add a bill of rights to assure that would not occur but, notwithstanding such adoption, the anti-Federalist fears became our reality.

Governance under the Constitution of 1787-89

The new form of government devised under the Constitution of 1787-89 sought to create a synthesis between the confederalism of the prior constitution and the unitary form of government used in the United Kingdom, linguistically problematic when it was explained in the so called Federalist Papers by Messrs. James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay (se discussion of confederalism, federalism and unitary forms of constitutions above) as the terms confederation and federation were frequently used as synonyms.  The novel hybrid, “federalism”, was deemed to involve a great experiment as each state could experiment with different modalities of governance, as long as they were republican (non-monarchic) in nature, it being anticipated that the most successful innovations would be replicated in the other states. 

In addition, in order to minimize the abuse of power (erroneously referred to as “tyranny”[18]), Montesquieu’s concept of decentralization of power into three separate but purportedly equal branches, legislative, executive and judicial (Montesquieu, 1748, Chapter 6 of Book XI), was adopted, a transition from the Westminster concept of legislative supremacy.  The three branches were designed as follows:

The Congress[19]

The Congress, like the parliament of the United Kingdom, was bicameral and based on single member constituencies designed to promote a two party system, but with distinct differences.  First and foremost, the Westminster system’s combination of legislative and executive functions and provisions for dissolution (either by royal prerogative or in the event of deadlock) with new elections accelerated, was abandoned, as was the concept of parliamentary sovereignty, wherein parliament was supreme over other branches of government.  Terms were to be fixed and sovereignty was to reside in the amorphous concept of “the People”.

The upper house (the Senate) would not be representative of the aristocracy but rather, of the individual component states, on an equal state by state basis, and the Senate would be vested not only with legislative power[20] but with power shared with the executive in the selection of judicial and executive officials (other than the president and vice president, in first instances, which would be allocated to a special electoral college).  It would also be vested with the power to remove federal executive and judicial officials by a two thirds vote of its membership, provided they had first been impeached (in essence, indicted) by the lower house.  The Senate was also granted special powers in the treaty making process through the requirement that all treaties be ratified there.  In contravention of the concept of separation of powers, the presiding officer of the Senate was to be from the executive branch, i.e., the vice president, a strange figure with little function other than in case of the president’s demise, in which case the vice president would assume the presidency.  While the vice president ordinarily had no vote in the Senate, he (or eventually she) was granted the power to break voting deadlocks involving tie votes.  In the absence of the vice president, the Senate was to be presided over by a president pro tempore elected by the Senate, also important because in the event that neither the president, vice president nor Speaker of the House of Representative (see infra) were available to exercise the presidency, that function would devolve on that official.  In the event that the Electoral College failed to elect a vice president, that function would devolve upon the Senate.  In consequence of all of the foregoing, the upper house was more powerful than the lower house (the House of Representatives). 

The House of Representatives was to represent the citizenry more directly through election by voters deemed qualified by the states, but with more limited, strictly legislative functions, and with primacy solely in three areas: first, financial legislation had to originate there; second,  in the event that the electoral college could not agree on the selection of a president then, acting through state delegations with a single vote per state, the House of Representatives would select the president; and third, in the event of the demise or incapacity of both the president and the vice president, then the speaker of the House of Representatives would assume the presidency for the remainder of the term.  The number of members in the House of Representatives was not premised on the comparative populations of the states (a democratic concept) but rather on a three part formula.  First, each state, regardless of population, was to be allocated at least one member.  Second, the population of each state was to be determined based on the number of free citizens plus a number equal to 3/5ths of its enslaved population.  Representation in the House of Representative was then to be determined, on a decade by decade basis, based on the resulting qualified number.  Oddly, the Constitution overlooked the issue of whether or not the population to be counted would include only citizens or everyone present at the time of the census, including those who were in the state illegally.  Persons entitled to vote for the election of its members were to be determined in the sole discretion of each individual state, thus, initially, all women and most other citizens were excluded from the privilege of voting.

Collectively, the power to declare war was vested in the Congress but was soon usurped by the presidency through the president’s role as commander in chief of all the armed forces (i.e., through a presidential declaration, formal or informal, that an armed conflict or armed intervention did not “technically” involve a war, e.g., the Korean and Vietnam “conflicts”, but much earlier, during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson, the “conflict” with the Barbary Pirates).

The Executive[21]

The executive branch was headed by a president with a standby vice president elected in order to replace the president when the president was either permanently or temporarily unavailable.  The executive branch was comprised of the president, as both chief executive officer and chief of state (functions divided in the Westmisnter system among the monarch as chief of state, and the prime minister as chief executive), the vice president and a number of designated executive departments, including foreign affairs (promptly renamed State), treasury and war, as well as an attorney general and postmaster general.  No constitutional provision was made for a cabinet as existed in the Westminster system but, by tradition, the heads of the executive departments immediately coalesced into a cabinet for practical purposes.  The president was granted a supervisory role over the legislature through a power to veto legislation which could be overridden by a two thirds vote in each House, it being anticipated at the constitutional convention that the veto power would be used as the principal form of constitutional review of legislation, a function quickly usurped by the Supreme Court.  The president was also made commander in chief of the armed forces.  Of course, presidential power amorphously encroaching into legislative functions through the issuance of decrees quickly occurred.

The Electoral College[22]

The Electoral College was and is a “virtual” institution created in conjunction with the executive branch, virtual because it has no location and has never actually met, acting solely by correspondence between its members in each state and their respective secretaries of state, and then, between the respective secretaries of state and the presiding officer of the Senate, either the vice president or, in his or her absence, the president pro-tem of the Senate.  Its function was to select the president and vice president through majority vote of its membership, members to be appointed by the States in such manner as they deemed appropriate (initially, though state legislative action). 

States were allocated varying voting rights based on a formula designed to dilute representation based on population by requiring that, in addition to a number of electors allocated on the basis of the national decennial census, two additional members be allocated to each state, notwithstanding its population.  Election requires an absolute majority and failure to attain such majority results in removal of the electoral process to the Congress, albeit voting by state, with the president elected by the House of Representatives and the vice president by the Senate.  Initially, the Electoral College was premised on the exercise of personal discretion by each elector based on his own experience and judgment, but political considerations and promises to support one candidate or another quickly politicized the process, which perhaps, with the exception of the initial two presidential elections, never operated as envisioned.  That was made obvious in 1800.  Originally, the runner-up in the election in the Electoral College was to become the vice president, meaning that the two front runners had probably been opponents, but the tie in the fourth such election between Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr led to an amendment calling for the president and vice president to run as a team, with roles specified, at least in the Electoral College.

The Judiciary[23]

The third branch, perceived as the weakest at its inception and thus requiring reinforcement, was the federal judiciary, which was to complement rather the compete with the judiciaries in each state, and was expected to limit itself to federal matters and to issues of substance involving citizens of separate states or disputes among the states.  It was not an appellate body but rather one, in most cases, entitled to pick and choose which matters it wanted to consider through a process known as certiorari, although in limited instances it had original jurisdiction.  Nothing in the constitution granted it the discretion, power or authority to interpret the constitution, to override decisions of the other branches of government or to decide matters reserved to the states; however, under the leadership of John Marshall, Thomas Jefferson’s cousin and rival, such power was usurped, and such usurpation was ratified by the victorious North in the Civil War.  In order to avoid its politicization and assure its neutrality, objectives which utterly failed, its members were to be selected for life tenure (on good behavior, removable only through the impeachment and conviction processes for high crimes and misdemeanors) on nomination by the president and ratification by the Senate.  Unfortunately, the result was an aloof, insensitive and antidemocratic institution that promptly usurped prerogatives of the other branches as well as of the states through assumption of the power to interpret the Constitution, to declare acts of the other branches inconsistent therewith, and then, to command other branches and the states to take actions the judiciary deemed appropriate.[24]

Checks, balances and usurpation

In the system devised by the Constitution of 1787-89, as with many other things, the concept of separation of powers was adopted but concurrently violated through what is known as the system of checks and balances, pursuant to which each branch invades the prerogatives of the others, either formally, or by usurpation of functions.  For example, the Executive Branch has the right to exercise the veto power over legislation, to preside over the Senate, to appoint members of the federal judiciary, subject to senatorial ratification, and to pardon infractions of federal laws.  The Congress has the power to remove members of the executive and the judiciary through the impeachment and conviction process and to control executive action through the allocation of fiscal resources with the Senate also participating in the selection of executive and judicial officers through the ratification process.  The Judiciary had no formal right to intervention in the affairs of the other branches, collectively referred to as the “political branches” due to their required participation in the purportedly democratic electoral process, but informally, the judiciary appropriated the unfettered capacity to intervene in any and all functions of the other branches, either through prohibitions (injunctions) or affirmative commandments (e.g., writ of mandamus).  The presidency also quickly adopted informal means to expand its powers, legislatively through decrees and executive orders and executive agreements circumventing the legislative and treaty processes, through selective prosecution and plea bargaining, circumventing judicial functions and, through participation in numerous undeclared wars and military interventions.

Deconstruction of the Constitution of 1787-89

The deconstruction of the Constitution of 1787-89 started almost immediately but its culmination involved the Union victory in the Civil War as a result of which the concept of a league of sovereign states was dashed and federal supremacy firmly established.  Deconstruction was predictable given two series of factors: First, the lack of national identity inherent in the state created involved a multinational entity with incompatible interests, a protectionist industrial north, an internationalist agricultural south with aspirations to absorb the Latin American republics to the south, and an expanding apartheidist frontier society spreading west.  And second, a scheme of government based on expedient but incoherent political compromises without agreement on essential priorities and especially, without an understanding of what the term “perpetual” involved with respect to the right of secession implied in the Declaration of Independence or with how determinations concerning conflicts between state and federal policies and laws were to be resolved (see, e.g., Calvo Mahé, 2020).

Related conflicts raged during the first half of the eighteenth century with the New England States being the first to attempt secession (during the War of 1812), and Thomas Jefferson to espouse the rights of states to reject federal legislation (see, e.g., Koch, 1948).  Thus, the Civil War was not a war to free the enslaved, as is now asserted[25], but to eliminate governmental theories that predominated during the early years of the Constitutional era:

  • First, as indicated above, the right of secession first espoused by the New England States during the War of 1812 and in which most early political leaders, including Thomas Jefferson, firmly believed, it being anticipated by many of the founding fathers that the United States of America would eventually separate into three different countries based in irreconcilable regional differences: one comprised on the New England and North Atlantic States (from Maine through Delaware); a second comprised of the newly emerging states to the west of the original thirteen, the frontier states; and, a third comprising the states of the “old south plus a good deal of central and south America which they expected would eventually be absorbed into or conquered by the United States (as the Northern states originally anticipated would occur with the remaining British colonies to the north, which now comprise Canada and as in fact occurred with almost half of Mexico). 
  • Second, the elimination of supremacy of state law in all areas outside the thirteen exclusively allocated to the federal government in the Constitution and the related role of states, on an individual basis, as arbiters within their territorial jurisdiction of the legitimacy of federal legislation, the so called theory of nullification, again first espoused by Thomas Jefferson, the hypocritical author of the Declaration of Independence, in what have been historically referred to as the Virginia and Kentucky Declarations.
  • Third, the diverse theories over authority to interpret and enforce the Constitution of 1787-89, as emended, which ranged from Jackson’s theory that everyone who took an oath to defend such constitution had a duty to interpret it and apply it in accordance with his conscience (Jackson, 1832) to John Marshall’s assertion that all related authority was vested in the federal judiciary, and especially, in the Supreme Court (see e.g., Newmyer, 2013; Matthew, 2011; Koch, 1948; Kidd, 2012; Henderson, 2010; and, Calvo, 2020).

At the conclusion of the Civil War, through probably unconstitutional means (as occurred with the initial adoption of the Constitution) [26], three amendments to the Constitution (the 13th, 14th and 15th) were imposed by the victorious Union forces, which incoherently, from a legal and logical perspective, forced the states which had seceded to return to the United States of America from which, in theory, according to the victors, they`d had no right to leave, while concurrently depriving them of their constitutional role in the Federal government.  The foregoing is not a reflection on the morality of those amendments, the 13th and 15th were obviously moral, but of their constitutional validity and their impact on the nature of federalism, the federalism the Federalists swore would never be abrogated.

The second series of fundamental “unconstitutional” constitutional changes took place during the presidential administration of Woodrow Wilson and the first war “to end all wars”, each amendment profoundly impacting the federal nature of the government originally created by the Constitution; i.e., the 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th amendments (see, e.g., Wolfe, 1979; May, 2018).

  • The sixteenth amendment totally changed the balance of power between the states and the Federal government by changing the concept on which financing the federal government was based.  Recognizing that the power to directly tax individuals involved the power to control, the original sovereign states that comprised the United States insisted that such power be retained by the states, with federal taxing and fund raising authority severely limited.  However, citing the “temporary” exigencies of financing United States participation in the first “war to end all wars”, the amendment overturned Supreme Court decisions finding that a federal income tax violated the Constitution.  In sexist terms, that amendment emasculated the states.
  • The seventeenth amendment went even further, changing the nature of the Senate from one representing the individual states to one purportedly representing their individual citizens, albeit in a completely undemocratic manner that totally ignored differences in population, thus maximizing the voting power of each individual in the less populated states. Henceforth, state governments would have no direct impact on federal legislation effectively changing the United States of America from a federation into a unitary government.
  • The eighteenth amendment destroyed the concept of a federal government of limited enumerated powers by granting the federal government the right to regulate consumption of alcoholic beverages on a national basis.  Previously, such decisions were made on a state by state basis or even county by county basis.  It has subsequently led to a large number of federal prohibitions on individual consumptive rights, including the disastrous war on drugs which has resulted in the imprisonment of so many Americans, especially African Americans and other minorities resulting in the United States having more of its citizens imprisoned, on both a per capita and total basis, than any other country in the world.
  • The nineteenth amendment, as was the case with the thirteenth and fifteenth amendments, is impossible to criticize morally, but it nonetheless helped destroy the federal nature of the government purportedly installed in 1789.  It did so, following up on the 15th amendment, by eliminating one of the pillars of federalism, the exclusive authority of the states to determine voting eligibility.

Thus, while the “Perpetual Union” created by the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union and even the “United States of America” created by the Constitution of 1787-89 envisioned, indeed, specified a league of “sovereign” states, that is no longer the case in the United States except rhetorically and hasn’t been since the Wilson administration.  While the Constitution purports to create a federal system of governance, the hodgepodge of inconsistent formal amendments and informal amendments through contrary legislation and contrary judicial decisions have converted the United States into a unitary state with disperse, decentralized administration for purposes of implementing centralized decision making[27].  The two constitutional provisions most designed to avoid the foregoing, the ninth and tenth amendments included in the purported Bill of Rights are utterly ignored.

The process from federalist to unitary forms of governance had its critical points, but also a sort of careless gradualism where individual states gave up their authority voluntarily and then, momentum built to make the changes both permanent and universal.  An example involves how states lost their role in the federal legislative process.  First, some state legislatures delegated their role in selection of representatives in the Senate to the people by providing for their selection by popular vote and then, when a majority of states had done so, it was made compulsory on the rest through adoption of the 17th amendment.  That amendment obviated the rationale for the Senate, making it an undemocratic superfluity in the legislative context.[28]

A similar process seems to be taking form with respect to the Electoral College, the last “sort of” vestige of federalism remaining.  “Sort of” because it is largely illusory.  So much so that most voters are unaware of its existence or function.  Consequently, at least every four years there are demands for its elimination, or for the implementation of gimmicks to make it even more irrelevant.  In essence, the raisons d’être for the Electoral College have been extinguished.  Those were, first, making selection of the executive branch a power retained by the states, and second, that the electors to be selected would be chosen because of their personal merit, experience and wisdom, and the decisions would be their own, not as spokespeople for those who selected them.  Thus the concept of a pre-pledged electors is an anathematic oxymoron, as is their popular election, but both have taken place, thus largely eliminating the premises on which the Electoral College concept was constitutionally implemented, except, of course, for the undemocratic allocation of votes.  Sensing the foregoing, a rising tide seeks to follow in the path sowed with respect to the 17th amendment, which made the Senate anachronistic.

Conclusions with respect to constitutionalism in the United States of America

First, an observation.  For all of the loyalty demanded to the Constitution of 1787-89, pledges, oaths, ceremonies, statuary, etc., it is almost completely illusory, having been replaced by an antidemocratic, authoritarian “judiciocracy” (rule by the judiciary), where the United States Supreme Court has been converted into a dictatorial fusion of legislative, executive and judicial power, dictatorial not in a pejorative sense but in its original meeting as centralized governance without division of power into separate but equal branches, as envisioned by the Constitution.  The Supreme Court has become an all-powerful politburo encompassing not only the executive, legislative and judicial functions, but also electoral functions, effectively replacing the anachronistic constitution.  See, e.g., Hamilton, 2012 and Roberts, 1994).

The foregoing is not a value judgment on the nature of the resultant form of governance, it is no more or no less just, no more or no less efficient than the form of governance the Federalists promised when they avocated for adoption of the constitution its members negotiated at the constitutional convention in 1787, but which Antifederalists insisted would devolve into what has, in fact, occurred.  But governance through a non-elected judiciocracy is antithetical to democratic aspirations, and to functional libertarian aspirations as well.  As to pluralism, well, that seems to be a current goal, but autocracy, whether individual or institutional, tends to be whimsical and arbitrary, depending on the perceptions of the autocrats.  And the reality is that at present, our judiciocracy is an elitist instrument with elitist, self perpetuatory goals which can easily change with the temper of the times.

Personal suggestions and observations

At the time the Declaration of Independence was adopted, it was innovative and revolutionary.  The same was true with respect to the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, and perhaps, even with respect to the Constitution of 1787-89.  But even the pseudo-revolutionaries who designed all three understood that they involved experiments which should, in the future, be modified or even replaced, to reflect the revelations attained through such experiments.  That’s why the Constitution of 1787-89 has mechanisms for amendment, but our political leadership is loath to invoke and apply them, preferring to effect changes they deem convenient through the illusion of non-amendment by judicial interpretation, a much more controlled form of quasi-amendment where the People are denied their role as the purported source of constitutional authority.

Other countries have learned from the United States’ mistakes and have designed more effective and more democratic, perhaps even more libertarian forms of government from which we, in turn, might learn, were it not for a combination of our hubris, e.g., the perception of “American Exceptionalism”, and the reality that the elites who wield the real power in our society have utterly no interest in democracy, or liberty, or pluralism, or equity, or justice, but rather in the acquisition, accumulation and maintenance of power, and through their control of the economy, have acquired control of the means of communication at all levels, as well as of the bureaucracy, the military, the intelligence agencies, the Congress, the judiciary, and, with rare exceptions, the executive branch led by the presidency as well.  The foregoing virtually negates the possibility of peaceful real constitutional reform, which at least in part explains the increasing outbreaks of violent protests such as that which took place at the Capitol on January 6, 2020.  A situation approaching that which took place in North America during the second half of the eighteenth century, and then, much more seriously, in France during the last decade of that century and the first decades of the nineteenth century, and in Russia at the end of the first “war to end all wars”.

Possible reforms

If we could somehow effect meaningful constitutional reform, what might it look like, assuming the goal was to implement a model that sought to reconcile and prioritize our democratic, libertarian and pluralistic aspirations maximizing the possibility of attaining equity, justice, sustainable economic growth in an environmentally responsible fashion and the illusive common welfare?

The following alternatives each offer positive and negative aspects:

Constitutional interpretation and supervision[29]

What good is a constitution if it is not respected?  And respect would seem to require and ability to interpret and enforce it, as well as to keep its parameters in line with societal mores.  Generalizing the sources of constitutional authority, two categories stand out: one, imposition from above in the form of a grant by a superior authority, or two, percolation from below, i.e., from the “People” in an evolutionary normative process based on social mores.  Constitutional interpretation and supervision may be the determining factor in the internal balance of political power and should be coherently tied to theories of the sources of sovereignty, what is referred to as “constituent” authority, i.e., the source of authority to create constitutions.  As discussed above, the possibilities range from the extremes of the divine to the individual but in between, the predominant theories are, on one hand (the grant from above variants) divinity, autocracy and the state, and on the other (percolate from below variants) either the “nation”, the “People” or the individual.  In order to consolidate and maintain power among elites in the latter three cases, rendering them malleable and manipulable, it is posited that “constituent power” is surrendered once a constitution is adopted, and henceforth, its modification is authorized only in accordance with its terms and through authorized delegates and processes; however, that is illogical as the “constituent power, purportedly fundamental and inherent, would logically always remain at least inchoate in its source institution, thus amendment should require the same formalities as adoption, rather than being left in the hands of an elite of some sorts, for example, a judiciary.  Constitutional changes would seem to need popular ratification, even if, for practical purposes, formulation is centered in some form of representative organ.

In the United Kingdom, based on the theory of parliamentary sovereignty, constitutional authority was concentrated in parliament for all purposes, creational as well as interpretative.  In the United States, while vague, it appears that the formulation of constitutional changes was left to the Congress and the states, or to the states alone, logical if the source of constitutional authority based on federalist theory was the states, but illogical if, as the preamble to the Constitution of 1787-89 states, it was “We the People”.  Like most constitutions, that of the United States of America was and is based on constant political compromise, the political characterized by the sublimation of logic and coherence to sharing of power through compromise.  The issue was considered in the constitutional convention but several options for councils combining legislative, judicial and executive membership were rejected and instead, aspects of the power were vested in the presidency through the veto power, while, as discussed above, competing hypotheses argued that such power was vested in the contracting parties to the constitution, i.e., the states, or, as perceived by Andrew Jackson, by any person whose duty it was to enforce the constitution, while John Marshall appropriated such authority for the federal courts with ultimate authority in the Supreme Court, thereby politicizing both the entire judiciary as well as its selection process. 

Many countries have created an independent organ charged with constitutional interpretation and enforcement, as opposed to constitutional creation and amendment, usually but not always in the form of specialized judicial bodies known as “constitutional courts” while others have opted for mixed concepts similar to those proposed at the constitutional convention, i.e., through “constitutional councils” comprised of members selected from diverse state organs, usually the legislature, the judiciary and the executive.

Logic would seem to dictate that an interpretative organ is essential, but that its composition should involve broad rather than narrow social segments, perhaps combining democratic elements (some members popularly elected) with pluralism (some members representing specific socioeconomic constituencies and minorities), and still others selected by the diverse branches of government, a sort of mini-permanent constitutional commission, with initial enforcement vested in the judiciary and final ratification of the decisions of the commission vested in the People through required periodic ratification of its decisions.

Of course, logic and politics are antithetical, given that politics, in the end, seems to rest on the use and abuse of power, to some extent, balanced by negotiation, a subjective rather than an objective process, while proper implementation of legal and constitutional principles ought to exclude the subjective in favor of the neutrally objective.

Thus we find ourselves where we do.

Parliamentary systems[30]

Assuming theoretical constitutional considerations are either dealt with, or more probably ignored, we can consider the organic aspect of constitutions and specifically, perhaps review the different systemic grouping of governmental institutions, which today, tend to follow three principal models: the Westminster parliamentary systems, the presidential systems based on separation of powers, and the multi-level assembly systems common among governments with more socialist leanings.  In addition, there are outliers ranging from absolute monarchies like the Saudis, or theocracies like Iran.

Based on current parliamentary (Westminster) models, the Republic of Ireland seems to provide a parliamentary system that blends democracy and pluralism, and a constitution that provides a modicum of liberty.  Parliamentary systems such as exist in the Republic of Ireland, as opposed to presidential systems as exists in the United States of America, combine legislative and executive functions in one institution in the sense that the legislature selects the executive, which serves at the pleasure of the legislature during a fixed term, usually five years, but which, in the event of a major conflict between the two, requires new democratic elections.  A separate chief of state with important residual but inchoate rather than quotidian power is provided for with protocolary and election related responsibilities, usually elected by the legislature or an electoral college, but in Ireland, popularly elected. 

While parliaments may be unicameral, they are usually bicameral with most power vested in what is known as the lower house, or the commons, and residual power based on diverse premises (e.g., geographic, ethnic, nobility, federalist, etc.) in a so called upper house.  Members of the governing house, usually the lower house, are elected for five year terms, and in turn, select a ruling cabinet that may include members of parliament, and which includes the chief executive, known usually as the prime minister or premiere, or, on occasion, in monarchies, as the president (e.g., in Spain).  The Parliament as a whole or in some instances, only the governing lower house can be dissolved during its five year term at the option of either a majority of its members or the prime minister, by notice to a figure known as the chief of state (either a president or, in monarchical systems, the monarch) who calls for organizes and supervises the electoral process.  Thus while elected for five year terms, the legislative and executive branches can be replaced at any time.

The chief of state in a parliamentary system, usually denominated president if a monarchy is not involved, tends to have enormous potential power, rarely exercised except in emergencies, and is expected to be non-partisan.  Much of the chief of state’s role is perfunctory, sort of like a notary’s, if things are in order, he signs them, without any subjective input, but in an emergency, he or she may exercise plenary powers.

The Irish novelty mainly involves its upper house (the Senate) which, rather than being premised on democratic premises, is premised on selection of its members based on pluralistic concepts, thus different segments of society, rather than individuals, are represented through elected delegates.  The president selects a number of senators, universities others, unions, others, industry groups others, etc.  An additional novelty involves the chief of state, a president who, has less rigorous qualifying requirements if he or she has the backing of members of representing diverse political parties, a means of promoting a non-partisan presidential perspective.  Unlike most presidents in parliamentary systems, the president is popularly elected.  In most parliamentary systems the chief of state is elected by the parliament, or by an electoral college of complex composition.

Benefits in various People’s Republics[31]

Governments in socialist economies (e.g., in Cuba and in the People’s Republic of China) provide their own innovations based on a sort of multilevel electoral system that maximizes participation, and hence, democracy and pluralism, albeit at times at the expense of liberty.

Almost all governmental systems claim to be “Democratic”, even the absolutist monarchical system in place in the United Arab Emirates, but that is based on diverse definition on what “democracy” entails and a rejection of its majoritarian premise as described above.  But very few involve the level of participation required for functional (albeit not necessarily, libertarian or pluralistic) democracy.  Two that do, but lack the libertarian element, although not the pluralistic aspect involve the Cuban and Chinese models, both of which involve a form of multilevel democracy, sort of the Amway system.

In those two models, electoral participation is obligatory and starts at the local level with a form of direct democracy, at local meetings, anyone who secures nomination by ten people can be a candidate and the campaign is pretty much limited, sort of like in New England town hall meetings.  First level representatives are elected there, but their function primarily involves election of regional representatives under similar conditions in China, or directly to the national level in Cuba.  The local representatives in Cuba or regional representatives in China then elect a majority of the members to the ruling unicameral, uni-functional governing organ, the national assembly, from whose members all senior officials serving in state organs are chosen.  Other representatives to the national assembly are selected on the basis of pluralism, with different societal sectors electing members, and others are designated by the state (e.g., by the armed forces, labor unions, etc.  The National Assembly is the highest state organ and arbiter of constitutional issues, it is the highest legislative and judicial body, but is subdivided into diverse specialized commissions, the most powerful of which are the Central (or Standing) Committee, which exercises the National Assembly’s powers when it is not in session (most of the time) and the Council of State, a sort of cabinet.  The electoral role of the Communist Party is difficult to gauge because related information is heavily impacted by propaganda, both pro and con, based on the source.

The Iranian, democratic theocracy model

Robert Heinlein, a popular science fiction author whose books tend to be fascinating when one is young but tedious as one ages, was a sort of political philosopher and a whole series of his books was dedicated to an alternate future history where the United States had become a theocracy.  Something that, to a student of history, would not be odd given that theocratic tendencies have always been close to the surface in the United States.  Thus, the Iranian model seems worthwhile at least playing with.

In an anti-Iranian article, Wikipedia describes the Iranian electoral system as follows:

Iran elects on national level a head of state and the head of government (the president), a legislature (the Majlis), and an “Assembly of Experts” (which elects the Supreme Leader). City and Village Council elections are also held every four years throughout the entire country. The president is elected for a four-year term by the citizens. The Parliament or Islamic Consultative Assembly (Majlis-e Shura-ye Eslami) currently has 290 members, also elected for a four-year term in multi- and single-seat constituencies. Elections for the Assembly of Experts are held every eight years. All candidates have to be approved by the Guardian Council. See Politics of Iran for more details.

I would supplement the article by noting that all formal political parties are precluded and elections are based on multi-member districts with each voter conforming his own lists from lists of candidates conformed by those seeking election in conjunction with others.  And as a former student noted with respect to the Guardian Council: “isn’t that exactly what major political parties, the intelligence community, the judiciary and the corporate media do now in the United States???

Single versus multicandidate electoral districts

Most of the world has rejected single candidate, first past the post electoral districts as undemocratic given that first: the winning candidate need not obtain a majority of the vote, and second, that losers receive no representation, thus usually disenfranchising sizeable minorities or at times, even composite majorities.  Instead, they adopt electoral districts with multiple seats being contested.  An example would be if a state elects 55 representatives to Congress and was divided into five districts, each would elect eleven representatives on a proportional basis.  Thus, if Democrats received 40% of the vote, the GOP 30%, Libertarians 20% and greens 10%, then democrats would elect 5 of the representatives, Republicans 3, Libertarians 2 and Greens 1, and none would be totally disenfranchised.  Under the current system, the Democrats would have received all eleven.

In one candidate per electoral district systems (the US, the UK and Canada), it is almost impossible for minority parties to develop, while in multi seat districts, it is reasonable easy.  If the US electorate has been clamoring for new options, this is the only way to attain them.

New constitutional convention[32]

Of course, it is inconceivable that any fundamental electoral or government reforms will be adopted by a very satisfied Congressional and executive duopoly.  It would involve political suicide.  But the Constitution of 1787-79 does have a provision permitting two thirds of the states (currently 34) to call a new constitutional convention, a provision never invoked although a proposal has been circulating for many years and which to date has been approved by nineteen states.  Many more states would probably approve a call if it could be limited to consideration of specified proposals, and that is a possibility.  However, that was the case with the constitutional convention of 1787, the one that refused to comply with the instructions of its organizers and instead of correcting a few aspects of the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union by unanimity, replaced them entirely by a three fourths vote.  Thus, our current constitution lacks legitimacy in a manner that in the classical context of constitutional law, would have defined it as a tyranny (in a non-pejorative sense) but is nonetheless in force, and the dread is that the same thing would happen should a new convention be called.  Something which, on a global basis, is hardly rare (e.g., the Colombian constitution of 1991).  There are active campaigns to elicit support for a new constitutional convention through voter initiatives, available in a majority of states, but our citizenry is rarely well informed, thanks to the corporate media’s policies of political homicide through silence.  But if you’re interested, at least one of the sites is available through the Internet, at least right now, it may soon be censored: e.g., https://conventionofstates.com/states-that-have-passed-the-convention-of-states-article-v-application.

Conclusion

The foregoing section, “Personal suggestions and observations” lacks the objectivity and reliability of the former sections and thus, for academic purposes, much of it can be easily disregarded, yet it addresses current constitutional dilemmas we face and provides suggestions I find interesting.  Feel free to craft your own.  Or to criticize any aspect of these personal reflections, in whole or in part.  That, after all, is what these reflections aspire to.  To generate reflection, speculation, discussion, new understanding and new proposals.

If you’ve reached this point and read all the foregoing: congratulations.

And thank you

References and Suggested Readings

Albert, Richard (2015): “The Theory and Doctrine of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendment in Canada”, pp. 143-206; Queens Law Journal, Queens University, Ontario.  Available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2649447, first accessed October 22, 2021.

Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union (March 1, 1781); Miscellaneous Papers of the Continental Congress, 1774 – 1789; Records of the Continental and Confederation Congresses and the Constitutional Convention, Record Group 360; National Archives Building, Washington, DC.

Asimov, Isaac (1969): Asimov’s Guide to the Bible (vols. 1 and 2); Doubleday, New York City.

Author not provided (2017). “America might see a new constitutional convention in a few years: If it did, that would be dangerous thing“; The Economist, September 30, 2017, available at https://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21729735-if-it-did-would-be-dangerous-thing-america-might-see-new-constitutional-convention?cid1=cust/ednew/n/bl/n/20170928n/owned/n/n/nwl/n/n/la/68110/n, first accessed September 30, 2017.

Bellah, Robert N. (1967): “Civil Religion in America”; Daedalus, Vol. 96, No. 1, Religion in America (Winter, 1967), pp. 1-21; The MIT Press on behalf of American Academy of Arts & Sciences, Cambridge, available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/20027022, first accessed November 15, 2019.

Calvo Mahé, Guillermo et. al. (Jiménez Ramírez, Milton Cesar, editor, 2020): “Capítulo I. Evolución del control de constitucionalidad en los estados unidos.”; El control de la constitucionalidad en episodios: acerca del control constitucional como límite al poder; Universidad de Caldas, Facultad de ciencias jurídicas y sociales; Bogotá.

Comella, Victor Ferreres (2004). “The European Model of Constitutional Review of Legislation: Toward Decentralization“; I.Con, Volume 2, Number 3, 2004, pp. 461–491, New York, available at https://academic.oup.com/icon/article-pdf/2/3/461/2363883/020461.pdf, first accessed September 25, 2017).

Garlicki, Lech (2007). “Constitutional courts versus supreme courts“; International Journal of Constitutional Law, Volume 5, Issue 1, 1 January 2007, Pages 44–68, available at https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/mol044, first accessed September 20, 2017.

Ginsburg, Tom and Versteeg, Mila (2013). “Why Do Countries Adopt Constitutional Review?“ Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, Forthcoming; Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Research Paper №2013–29, available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=2319363, first accessed September 21, 2017.

Grant, Emily, Scott A. Hendrickson, and Michael S. Lynch (2012). “The Ideological Divide: Conflict and the Supreme Court’s Certiorari Decision“, 60 Cleveland. State Law Review 559 (2012) available at http://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevstlrev/vol60/iss3/4, first accessed September 29, 2017.

Hague, Rod and Martin Harrop (2010) and (2004). Comparative Government and Politics: an introduction; Palgrave McMillan, London.

Hamilton, A., et. al. (1787-88, 1961). The Federalist Papers. New American Library, New York.

Hamilton, Eric (2012). “Politicizing the Supreme Court“; 65 Stanford Law Review on Line 35, August 30, 2012, available at https://www.stanfordlawreview.org/online/politicizing-the-supreme-court/, first accessed September 30, 2017.

Henderson, Phillip G. (2010). “Marshall vs. Jefferson Then and Now: How the Intellectual and Political Struggle over the Constitution Resonates Today”, Humanitas Volume XXIII, Nos. 1 and 2, 2010, pp. 42–77; The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, available at http://www.nhinet.org/henderson23-1.pdf, first accessed October 23, 2016.

Herrera, Carlos Miguel (1992): “La Polémica Schmitt-Kelsen Sobre el Guardián de la Constitución“. Revista de Estudios Políticos (Nueva Época) Núm. 86. October-December 1994, 195–227. Madrid, available at https://dialnet.unirioja.es/descarga/articulo/27301.pdf, first accessed January 17, 2009.

Hyneman, Charles S. and Donald S. Lutz (1998). “Lutz’s Introductory Essay to Colonial Origins of the American Constitution: A Documentary History“, Liberty Fund, Indianapolis, available at http://oll.libertyfund.org/pages/colonial-origins-of-the-american-constitution, first accessed September 27, 2017.

Jackson, Andrew (1832). “Veto Message Regarding the Bank of the United States; July 10, 1832“; The Avalon Project, documents in law and History, Yale University, New Haven, CT, available at http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/ajveto01.asp, first accessed, September 19, 2017.

Jefferson, Thomas (1976): Declaration of Independence; Miscellaneous Papers of the Continental Congress, 1774 – 1789; Records of the Continental and Confederation Congresses and the Constitutional Convention; National Archives Building, Washington, DC.

Jenkins, David (2011): “The Lockean Constitution: Separation of Powers and the Limits of Prerogative”; McGill Law Journal / Revue de droit de McGill Volume 56, Number 3, April 2011, pp. 489-773; McGill University Faculty of Law; Montreal, available at https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/mlj/1900-v1-n1-mlj1811048/1005132ar/#:~:text=Locke%27s%20constitution%20divides%20political%20power,act%20for%20the%20public%20good, first accessed on February 13, 2021.

Kidd, Colin (2012). “The Union and the Constitution“; History & Policy, Policy Papers, September 1, 2012, available at http://www.historyandpolicy.org/policy-papers/papers/the-union-and-the-constitution, first accessed March 31, 2014.

Koch, Adrienne and Harry Ammon (1948). ”The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions: An Episode in Jefferson’s and Madison’s Defense of Civil Liberties.” William & Mary Quarterly 3d ser., vol. 5, no. 2 (April 1948), pp. 145–76; Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture; Williamsburg, Va.

Levinson, Sanford (1987). “Pledging Faith in the Civil Religion; Or, Would You Sign the Constitution?“. William & Mary Law Review. Pp. 29, 113, available at http://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmlr/vol29/iss1/13/, first accessed September 30, 2017.

Lincoln, Abraham (1861).  First Inaugural Address; The Avalon Project: Documents in law, history and diplomacy; Yale Law School, Hartford; available at https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/lincoln1.asp, first access January 12, 2019.

Lutz, Donald S. (1984). “The Relative Influence of European Writers on Late Eighteenth-Century American Political Thought”. American Political Science Review. 78 (1): 189–97. Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association; Cambridge.

Madison, James (scrivener) (1788): Constitution of 1787-89; Miscellaneous Papers of the Continental Congress, 1774 – 1789; Records of the Continental and Confederation Congresses and the Constitutional Convention; National Archives Building, Washington, DC.

Manner, George (1952): “The Object Theory of the Individual in International Law”, The American Journal of International Law Vol. 46, No. 3 (Jul., 1952), pp. 428-449, Cambridge University Press.  Cambridge, available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/2194499, first accessed April 17, 2017.

Matthew (2011). “Support and Defend: Understanding the Oath of Office“; The Heritage Foundation, January 3, 2011, available at http://www.heritage.org/the-constitution/report/support-and-defend-understanding-the-oath-office, first accessed, September 23, 2017.

May, Randolph J. (2018): “Woodrow Wilson’s case against the Constitution”; The Washington Times, Wednesday, May 30, 2018; Washington, D.C., available at https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/may/30/woodrow-wilsons-case-against-the-constitution/, first accessed on June 23, 2018.

McWhinney (1965): Comparative Federalism: States’ Rights and National Power (2d. ed.); University of Toronto Press; Toronto.

Montesquieu, Charles de Secondat, baron de, 1689-1755 (1748, 1949). “Of the Constitution of England”; The Spirit of the Laws, Book 11, Chapter 6, Translated by Thomas Nugent, revised by J. V. Prichard, based on an public domain edition published in 1914 by G. Bell & Sons, Ltd., London, pp. 220–232, available at https://www.ucc.ie/archive/hdsp/Montesquieu_constitution.pdf, first accessed October 1, 2017.

Naranjo Mesa, Vladimiro (2010). Teoría constitucional e instituciones políticas, Undécima edición. Editorial Temis, S.A., Bogotá.

Newmyer, R. Kent (2013). “Burr versus Jefferson versus Marshall”; Humanities, May/June 2013 | Volume 34, Number 3, available at https://www.neh.gov/humanities/2013/mayjune/feature/burr-versus-jefferson-versus-marshall, first accessed October 20, 2016.

Pritchett, C. Herman (1959). The American Constitution, McGraw–Hill Spalding, New York.

Roberts, Paul Craig (1994). “Is the Court Becoming the Politburo? : Following the logic of recent rulings, acts of Congress would have to be racially proportional, with quotas guaranteeing blacks their fair share of legislation“; Los Angeles Times, July 12, 1994, available at http://articles.latimes.com/1994-07-12/local/me-14528_1_voting-rights-act, first accessed September 28, 2017.

Russell, David (2017). “Politicization in the Federal Judiciary and Its Effect on the Federal Judicial Function”; New York University Journal of Legislation & Public Policy Quorum, Vol. 19 (2017 Forthcoming), 25 Pages Posted: 3 Jul 2017 (last revised: 5 Oct 2017); New York University, New York City, available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2995008, first accessed October 7, 2017.

Scharfenberg, David (2017). “Time to rewrite the Constitution?“, The Boston Globe, October 6, 2016, available at http://www.bostonglobe.com/ideas/2017/10/06/time-rewrite-constitution/Pcad5XvcYwBatcCz2UUKNP/story.html?et_rid=1759086088&s_campaign=todaysheadlines:newsletter, first accessed October 8, 2017.

Schmitt, Carl (1931). Der Hüter der Verfassung; Duncker & Humblott, Berlin, available at http://list.kphpberaubarat.info/pdf/201918-der-h252ter-der-verfassung-torrent-pdf-download.html, first accessed February 15, 2015.

Wolfe, Christopher (1979): “Woodrow Wilson: Interpreting the Constitution”; The Review of Politics Vol. 41, No. 1 (Jan., 1979), pp. 121-142; Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/1406981, first accessed November 30, 2022.

Table of relevant cases involving the foregoing:

Bush v. Orleans Parish School Board, 364 U.S. 500 (1960)

Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958)

Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 US 393 (1857)

Ex parte Crane, 5 Pet. 190 1831; 30 US 190 (1831)

Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 484 (1965)

Marbury v Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803)

McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 US 316 (1819)

Worcester v. Georgia, 31 US (6 Pet.) 515 (1832)

______

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2023; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen).  Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales.  He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review, available at Substack.com, a commentator on Radio Guasca FM, and an occasional contributor to the regional magazine, el Observador.  He has academic degrees in political science (the Citadel), law (St. John’s University), international legal studies (New York University) and translation and linguistic studies (the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies).  However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta and cosmogony.  He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/


[1] See, e.g., Levinson, 1987, Asimov, 1969.

[2] I.e., a course I took on jurisprudence while receiving my juris doctor degree; diverse courses in comparative studies I completed in conjunction with earning al LL.M in international legal studies during the late 1970’s; a series of personal chats I was privileged to have with Thomas Martin Franck (July 14, 1931 – May 27, 2009; from 1962 until his death the Murry and Ida Becker Professor of Law at New York University), one of my professors at NYU; courses on linguistics I took in conjunction with a post graduate certificate in translation studies at the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies and, later, profound questions and observations by very bright students both in the United States and  in the Republic of Colombia.  As a result of the foregoing, my curiosity was piqued and I found myself delving rather thoroughly into the topics I touch upon here.

[3] I acknowledge that, in large part, this reflection is a medley of personal hypotheses which have evolved over a bit more than a half century of observation, study, experience and mistakes from which I’ve hopefully learned, and on having taught what passes for constitutional law, constitutional theory, comparative constitutionalism, comparative politics and political systems and, international, comparative and supranational law.

[4] In general, see Hague, 2010.

[5] Linguistics are an essential element in the study of constitutions, and well, anything, and perhaps the most fundamental element of linguistics is understanding the nature of words.  Words are conventions, in the sense expounded by David Hume, involving containers for information, and ironically, the more information a word contains, the less practically useful it is.  Thus, for example, the generic word “tool” is less practical that the more specific word “hammer”.  Unfortunately, politics tends to imbue words not only with too much information, but also with contradictory information rendering the concepts involved in a word incoherent.  That is certainly the case with the term “democracy” which has been imbued with antagonistically contrary concepts such as liberty, pluralism, rights, etc., in order to make it more palatable.  More palatable perhaps but not only less useful but in fact, unmanageable and thus useless.  The following seeks to reverse that process by defining the three essential terms “democracy”, “liberty” and “pluralism” in their functional rather than politicized senses.

[6] Such as liberty, human rights, justice, equity, respect for minorities, etc.

[7] Nor are they really “unwritten, although they have tradition based components that are not “formally” adopted, fixed or reflected in definitive written instruments.

[8] In general, see Naranjo Mesa (2010).

[9] Interestingly, at least to me, I have analogized the concept of such sources to the platonic religious concept of “the one” as a first principle.

[10] The relationship to and association with the locus of sovereignty seems obvious, at least to me.

[11] Professor Edward (Ted) Watson McWhinney, late of the University of Toronto, provides a brief but excellent monogram on point (McWhinney, 1965).

[12] E.g., Germany, Switzerland, Canada, the Russian Federation, etc.

[13] See, generally Manner, 1952.

[14] In the United States of America, for example, on a state level, individuals are both subjects and objects but originally, on a federal level, they were originally only objects, which explains why, originally, the Bill of Rights only applied to the relationship between the federal government and the states.

[15] In the international context, lip service has been given to expanding subject status to individuals but with little headway, although through intermediation in the context of supranational international organizations involved with human rights, some headway has been made, specifically, with respect to the role of the commission in the Interamerican Human Rights system, and formerly, in a similar context in the United Nations Economic and Social Council.

[16] Clearly a restatement of Locke’s division of government functions (Jenkins, 2011).

[17] The final provision of which, its Article XIII, provided that the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union were to be perpetual, and altered only with the approval of Congress and the ratification of all [emphasis added] the state legislatures.

[18] “Tyranny” actual refers to assumption of power outside the prevalent, recognized constitutional channels.

[19] Article I.

[20] Legislative power deemed to include the duty to monitor the integrity of the executive and judicial branches.

[21] Article II.

[22] Article II, Section 1, clauses 2 and 3.

[23] Article III.

[24] See concluding observations.

[25] See, e.g., Abraham Lincoln’s first inaugural address where he stated as follows:  “I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so.  Those who nominated and elected me did so with full knowledge that I had made this and many similar declarations and had never recanted them; and more than this, they placed in the platform for my acceptance, and as a law to themselves and to me, the clear and emphatic resolution which I now read: Resolved, That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the States, and especially the right of each State to order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclusively, is essential to that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance of our political fabric depend; and we denounce the lawless invasion by armed force of the soil of any State or Territory, no matter what pretext, as among the gravest of crimes” (Lincoln, 1861).

[26] Richard Albert, the William Stamps Professor in Law and the director of constitutional studies at the University of Texas at Austin and others, I among them, have written concerning the concept of “unconstitutional constitutional amendments”, a concept recognized in the common law pursuant to decisions of the supreme courts of Canada and India, and in the civil law through decisions of the German Federal Constitutional Court.  I argue that it would probably apply to amendments 13 through 19 of the United States constitution because they changed the fundamental nature of the government adopted by the Constitution of 1787-89, despite, with respect to the 13th, 15th and 19th amendments, moral and ethical grounds for doing so.

[27] For a discussion of the diverse decentralized administrative options in unitary states, see, e.g., Hague (2010).

[28] Had the goal been implemented logically, albeit unconstitutionally, it would have made much more sense to have merely eliminated the Senate transferring its functions to the House of Representatives, transforming it into a quasi-democratic federal unicameral legislature; a significant operational savings with increased efficiency if democratic governance were the objective.

[29] See Schmitt, 1931; Herrera, 1992; Garlicki, 2007; Comella, 2004 and Calvo, 2020.

[30] See, e.g., Hague 2010.

[31] See, e.g., Hague 2010.

[32] See, e.g., Author not provided, the Economist, 2017 and Scharfenberg, 2017.

A Tale of Canaan and Ur and Uruk, of Three Trees in Three Gardens and of Eggs and Omelets as Well, all as Overheard by an Angry South Wind: A sort of bridge over troubled waters

Gilgamesh was not really fond of the little Canaanite wanabe storm deity, one of El’s seventy sons, one not all that important.  The kid was Baal’s shadow, always following him around, mimicking his gestures behind his back, envious and enthralled concurrently, ambivalent, apparently without much of a future (although past, present and future as well as time in general were considered irrelevancies to deities, even very minor and insignificant deities).  Anyway, in the little deity’s opinion, all of his siblings shared the ichor derived from El’s semen so, in a sense, they were all sort of avatars, a form of equality; at least that’s what the little deity kept telling himself, at least then. 

Gilgamesh was a Kengirian from the city of Uruk who loved to wander, even though as Uruk’s king he had serious responsibilities.  He had a decent, well trained staff though and they knew better than to disappoint him. 

His wanderings not infrequently took him to the lands of the Canaanites, no big deal really, but also, given that he was at least a demigod, on occasion they also took him to the divine court of El, the elder and ruler of the El-ohim.  The El-ohim were the Canaanite’s complex pantheon, in some ways, an incubator for other pantheons although certainly not for the much older pantheon of the Anunnaki to which Gilgamesh was sort of pledged. 

Gilgamesh interacted with the members of the El-ohim, perhaps a bit too proudly, but with the exception of El and his spouse Athirat, they tended to defer to him.  Sort of.  Sort of fearfully.  But with their dignity at least superficially sort of preserved.  They’d heard stories.  And it was, of course, at the court of El that he’d encountered the minor deity some referred to as “the pest” (as in pest-ilence).  If he had a name, it was too much trouble to worry about remembering.  Gigamesh just thought of him, when he thought of him (which was very infrequently), as “he-that-was-whatever-he-was”.

Gilgamesh was not a full, one hundred percent deity, that was true, although he was a son of Ninsun, a goddess, and of Lugalbanda, who although born a mortal was eventually deified.  Lugalbanda had been a great king, albeit of a small city by today’s standards, but the largest and most powerful then existing (boasting of between 40,000 and 80,000 inhabitants, depending on how its boundaries were interpreted).  Even so, Gilgamesh was and had always been (and would always be) unique.  Like his father, he tended to be the best at everything he tried.  Something the little Canaanite divinity, taken with him, unsuccessfully sought to emulate, … at the time. 

The very minor divinity (at least then), had a very vivid imagination.  While his principal role in the pantheon of the El-ohim merely involved smelting and metallurgy, not such a small thing as future events would indicate, it seemed just a craft to him, and he sometimes fantasized about eliminating his father and then his sixty-nine brothers, especially Baal, and perhaps even his mother and sisters, although perhaps the latter could serve in a divine harem.  When he was in a more generous mood, his fantasy was a bit less bloodthirsty, perhaps he might just someday dethrone them all and rule over, but not merely as a primus inter pares.  While time did not really exist for divinities, at least not as it did for mortals, he felt that someday, his time would come. “Just wait and see”.

Given his insignificance among the El-ohim, the little Canaanite deity tended to wander alone in lonely desserts in the mortal realms rather than sitting around, ignored at court.  He loved basking in the heat, learning to wield lightning and thunder, and even assuming the form of fire as a burning shrub from time to time, frightening the inhabitants.  He loved playing in the giant sandstorms that appeared out of nowhere but which did him no harm.  Indeed, he considered himself a sort of storm god rather than merely a patron of metalworkers.   Deism had its privileges, even for insignificant, minor deities.  And of course, he experimented with melting rocks and extracting the metals they hoarded, especially the shiny yellow one that seemed to capture the essence of the sun and which was so easy to mold into interesting shapes.

Sometimes when visiting the El-ohim, Gilgamesh, unobserved, would watch the pompous little deity at play and laugh to himself, recalling his own infancy at court.  And his own apparently bloated aspirations at the time as he fantasized about what kind of king he might be when his time came.  Sometimes Gilgamesh even speculated on what might become of the young and obviously insecure deity.  Insecure with good reason.  But divine insecurity tended to breed unpredictability and ruthlessness, both of which interested Gilgamesh (he was prone to neither but fascinated by both).  And sometimes, albeit not that often, Gilgamesh too fantasized, longing for the challenge of an equal, imagining that a real challenge might be fun.

Interestingly, after a time, a pretty long time for those forced to deal with that messy concept, the little deity (no longer quite so little, in fact, he’d be best referred to as a “young” deity), decided to find out more about Gilgamesh, a sort of reversal of roles, but stealthily, by following Gilgamesh to his own domain, Uruk. 

And he did. 

He was fascinated, not only by the cosmopolitan nature of the city and its people, but by all of the area that surrounded it, and he wished that rather than having been born among the El-ohim, he’d been born into the Anunnaki.  Charmed by the area, a sort of league of cities, the young Canaanite deity took to wandering there instead of in the Canaanite dessert and eventually, after a millennium or so, he started spending more and more time in a Kengirian city not all that far from Uruk, one called Ur.  And he sort of started hanging around there, but sort of incognito, especially careful to avoid being noticed by the local deities who might take it into their heads, as a sort of diplomatic courtesy, to suggest to El that he might want to have a sort of census of his progeny.  And then El might take it into his head to have proud Baal come and collect him, which would be even more humiliating than usual.  And so, while wondering around the land known to its inhabitants as Kengir (but by others as Sumer), and from time to time slipping into the abode of their local pantheon (after all, fair was fair, and if Gilgamesh, not even a full deity, could visit his pantheon, why shouldn’t he visit theirs), the young Canaanite deity learned a good deal more about his childhood hero, who, it seems, was everybody’s hero.  Indeed, much later, he would be acknowledged by many as the first superhero of the human race, although, as we know, he was not fully human.

He learned many interesting things, but a few stood out.

It turned out that Gilgamesh had had two true friends, … well sort of.  Maybe only one.  And that one for only a time.  The first and foremost had been Enkidu, called by most “the hairy man”, unkempt and uncouth, but very strong and very loyal.  He’d passed on to the underworld, and Gilgamesh had tried to save him, battling and defeating both monsters and divinities along the way, but to no avail.

The other had been Inanna, a beautiful and all too amorous goddess with a terrible temper.  She may have been a member of the Anunnaki that the young deity admired, the pantheon in which Gilgamesh played a much more direct role, but the issue seemed confusing, at least to him.  Inanna had once unsuccessfully sought to seduce Gilgamesh, then, a while later, had begged a favor only he could perform and which he’d granted.  Superficially it seemed a minor favor, one involving a beautiful but vexing tree which Inanna had found drifting in the great river Euphrates, one of the many that flowed into the nearby sea (really, just a gulf).  It was not just any tree though, no indeed.  For one thing, it was immensely thick, thicker than several houses combined, thicker even than it was tall.  And its trunk seemed made of silver, which, as a metallurgist of sorts, was of interest to the young Canaanite deity; and its leaves seemed made of gold, his favorite metal.  And rather than just one variety of fruit, it produced two, but only during alternating seasons, each large and juicy.  One was yellow and the other red.  Under the proper astral and atmospheric conditions and subject to appropriate invocations and incantations, the fruit could grant the person that consumed it either knowledge (the yellow fruit) or immortality (the red), or if, with patience, both were eventually consumed, then omniscience and immortality. 

It was a tree with its own very special name, one it had given itself (it was capable of communing, at least with deities).  It called itself Huluppu.  After salvaging it, Inanna had replanted it in her own garden and had nursed it and cared for it as her own.  For very personal reasons but not exactly altruistic reasons.  She had definite plans for the tree but needed for it to attain a specific level of maturity before they could be implemented.  Plans that required sacrifices, specifically, one sacrifice not at all to the tree’s liking.  But then, what the hell could a tree do when a deity, or even a human had designs on it?  Still, according to legend, it could not be forced to assume other shapes as long as it was inhabited.  And rules were rules.

Fortunately for the tree (at least for a while), while it was both unique and special (the two things are not exactly synonymous), there were a few beings who had, over time, nested in its branches and in its roots and eventually, for brief period, even in its trunk.  On the down side, unfortunately their cacophony robbed Inanna of the sleep which, while not something which, as a goddess, she required, was something she enjoyed, especially when accompanied.  Like the tree, the three who called it home were special.  The first, an incarnation of the South Wind, had originally uprooted the tree from where divine Enki, Inanna’s grandfather and the avatar of Wisdom, had planted it as a seedling in Dilmun, the Anunnaki’s garden by the shores of the great river.  He’d planted it and endowed it with a “backup” copy of all his vast wisdom and knowledge deeming it prudent, as he planned a sojourn to the underworld to visit his granddaughter Ereshkigal.  One never knew what awaited one there or how easy it would be to return with everything one had had when one arrived.  He recalled all the fuss when Inanna had made that seven layered trip.

As told above, Inanna had found the tree floating near the juncture where the great river flowed into a nearby sea (actually, just a gulf) and with divine prescience, recognizing that it might someday prove essential for certain rites and rituals necessary for her to come fully into her attributes, she’d rescued it, re-planting it in her own garden.  Unfortunately for Inanna, she’d done so somewhat carelessly, somehow not noticing that the South Wind had incarnated in avian form as the divine Anzu bird, and had nested along with its young in the tree’s branches.  And the Anzu bird had not been alone.  In the tree’s roots, long before it had been uprooted, resided a very special serpent, perhaps the very first serpent, one who could not be charmed and who called itself Nin-gish-zida.  Somehow, when replanting the tree, Inanna had not noticed it either.  But then again, the tree was huge!

Nin-gish-zida was not a slithering tube, as future serpents were to become, but rather, had the body of a well formed man but with chameleonic skin that blended with its surroundings making it virtually invisible.  And it was endowed with both great wisdom and knowledge, both inadvertently obtained from Enki’s backup due to the serpent’s long association with the tree.  In a sense, it was knowledge gained by physical proximity and osmosis, something lazy but creative students in the far future would unsuccessfully intend to duplicate by placing books they’d failed to read under their pillows prior to final exams.

The third and most recent denizen, she’d moved in after Inanna had transplanted it, was a beautiful virgin, at least then.  One known to Inanna.  After all, she was Inanna’s personal handmaiden.  But, seeking a secret refuge of her own, one away from prying eyes (who knew why), Lilitu (that was her name) had had made a place of her own in the tree’s trunk, a trunk (as we’ve noted) so vast that the entrance to Lilitu’s hideaway was safely hidden from even a divinity’s inquisitive eyes.

Of course, after Huluppu had been safely replanted in Inanna’s garden, the noise from the three interlopers made their presence obvious to Inanna, but for some reason, perhaps the Anzu bird’s divinity, or Nin-gish-zida’s camouflage, or Lilitu’s stealth, Inanna was unable to dislodge them, nor did it seem essential, at least for a time.  But, after many, many years (as reckoned by mortals), Inanna, determined that the time had come to harvest the tree and use its flesh for her existential, coming of age rites.  She’d finally attained the level of maturity at which she needed to undertake special rituals involving vessels made from Huluppu’s flesh (a bed and a throne to be specific), but according to the rules of the rituals involved (who knows why), she could not dismember Huluppu unless it had first been vacated. 

Unable to dislodge the tree’s tenants on her own, not yet having attained her full powers, she’d begged the assistance of her twin brother and sometimes paramour, Utu, the sun god, (as she was goddess of the moon, among other things) in ridding the tree of its “vermin (her word, not mine), something she felt would be relatively simple for him given the fact that as he circled the mortal realms, shining light on everything, everything was visible to him and the unwelcome guests would be unable to hide from him.  But for reasons he did not disclose but which we can surmise, he’d declined.

So, surmising: as we’ve already suggested, Inanna needed the throne and bed made from the wood of the Huluppu tree in order to complete the ritual required before she could fully attain her divinity, making her Utu’s equal, and perhaps that was threatening to Utu.  On the other hand, perhaps not.  The three siblings in that particular branch of Enki’s progeny did not always get along.  Ereshkigal, was the eldest and with her husband Nergal, ruled Kur (sometimes called Irkalla), the underworld and abode of those who’d passed beyond the veil.  She was usually the most difficult, being envious of Inanna’s beauty and fearful of her ability to seduce most males, and jealous of Utu’s ability to dwell in the sky, at least during the day, while she was forced to dwell beneath the ground.  On the other hand, Utu felt that while not the eldest of the three, as a male (he was a chauvinist among very feminist sisters) he should have primacy over Inanna as, in his opinion, the sun should always outshine the moon.  So perhaps it was not surprising that Inanna had been unable to seduce Utu into assisting her, although seducing him was usually not all that difficult (incest among divinities was not universally proscribed). 

Sibling rivalries often prove very problematic, even after the siblings have purportedly matured.

The young Canaanite deity had become privy to the foregoing and followed developments with interest, especially when Inanna, despite her prior history with Gilgamesh (as we’ve written, she’d been unsuccessful in attempts to seduce him), had turned to him for help after Utu had declined her request.  Gilgamesh had been taken by Inanna’s beauty, but had refused to be seduced by her because his pride was greater than his lust. And he was all too aware of Inanna’s fickle nature and reputation of disdain for former lovers (including her husband Dumuzid, the timid shepherd divinity and perhaps, patron deity of cuckolds).  To be eventually cast off by Inanna, as always occurred, would impact his reputation for invincibility in a very negative manner and his reputation meant a lot to him.  In fact, he may have been the first person to have had his own biographer, one who was working on a series of clay tablets describing Gilgamesh’s epic exploits.  There were no photographers then but Gilgamesh, somewhat vain about his appearance, also had a court sculptor who specialized in bass reliefs meant to assure Gilgamesh’s immortality, whether or not he managed to avoid eventual exile to Ereshkigal’s realm.

Anyway, notwithstanding the foregoing (as lawyers, even then, were wont to say) Gilgamesh was aware that a woman scorned was a dangerous thing and helping her in the matter of the Huluppu tree seemed just the thing to ameliorate her antagonism.  Thus, eventually, perhaps with the help of his friend, Enkidu, or perhaps alone, Gilgamesh did as Inanna had requested and not only evicted the Huluppu tree’s sort of tenants but also personally crafted both her throne and her bed (which, as we noted, he declined to share), thereby assuaging her enmity, although, in doing so, he secured the everlasting antipathy of the Anzu bird, of Nin-gish-zida, and of Lilitu as well. 

Oh well he’d thought, inventing a saying that would become famous in many different languages, “you can’t make omelets without breaking eggs”. The young Canaanite deity, who was busy taking all of the foregoing into account, especially liked that saying, and all too quickly appropriated it as his own.  Somewhere, another divinity watched and snickered, he’s known by many names, one being Murphy, and he’s a legislator of sorts, even today.  His two most famous legislative achievements are the Law of Unintended Consequences, and a more negative variant thereof which bears his name and provides that “whatever can go wrong, will.  “Snicker, snicker, snicker” (and not the delicious future candy bar variant).

The prying young Canaanite deity, well, not quite as young by that time, more a sort of an elder adolescent, being aware of all the foregoing, had already made excellent albeit somewhat duplicitous use of that knowledge, all the while chuckling about the eggs and omelet metaphor.  As we’ve discussed, he’d been very taken by the Anunnaki, and especially, by their garden, Dilmun, and saw an opportunity to start working on realizing his long held and now much more complex fantasies.  For some reason, thinking of omelets and eggs breaking led him to think about starting his very own pantheon, and he had some clever ideas now on just how to begin, although it meant “borrowing”, not only ideas, but a few other things as well.

“Borrowing” appealed to him.  He couldn’t help it; kleptomania was part of his nature, something of which his many siblings had constantly accused him.  So he started his new project by stealing (in his mind, “salvaging”) two of the shadows cast by the Huluppu tree (the morning shadow and the afternoon shadow) just before it had been felled by Gilgamesh, and from those shadows, the young Canaanite deity crafted special trees of his own, but, unbeknown to him, shades of Nin-gish-zida inhabited them both, moving from one to the other in the darkest dark of night.

The formerly little Canaanite divinity also eventually sort of “borrowed” Lilitu.  Some would claim he’d stolen her from Inanna (not all that hard as her eviction had caused hard feelings), and had eventually placed all of the foregoing in his own garden, modeled on the plans for Dilmun that he’d somehow “acquired”.  But he’d been very careful to first carefully wipe Lilitu’s memory clean so that she’d not repent of her escape and confess.  Inanna, her former mistress, was, after all, not only the patron goddess of carnal love (perhaps lust would be more accurate), but of war as well.

The no longer little (as we’ve made abundantly clear) Canaanite divinity had special plans for Lilitu, being a voyeur at that stage of his emotional and sexual development.  Perhaps he’d devolved into voyeurism, as sometimes happens with males after a divorce or two, because his own prior direct experiences with female deities had not turned out well.  He’d had more than a few unsuccessful relationships with, among others, Anat-Yahu, Aholah and Aholibah, Asherah, Anatha of the Lions and Ashima of the Doves (ones he’d married and then divorced, but, had used his best efforts to wipe away any records of the divine judicial proceedings involved).  For some reason, he preferred to be thought of as sexually abstentious rather than as a cuckold.  An aversion he perhaps shared with Gilgamesh.

It’s said that for a time, he’d gifted Lilitu to a fellow whose name was Adam who the once little deity claimed to have created from dust.  Perhaps dust from one of the dessert storms he’d so loved.  But the Anzu bird, once again in the form of the South Wind, had managed to escape his clutches, having been terrified when he kept snickering about omelets (the Anzu bird having an obvious aversion to broken eggs).  Being able to shift forms between bird and wind, by the same means it had managed to escape the avaricious clutches of Inanna and Gilgamesh too.  As would Lilitu, eventually.  Unfortunately, Nin-gish-zida’s fate was not as positive.

But that’s another tale.  A rather tall tale at that.

Anyway, the young Canaanite deity, now no longer all that young, in fact, sporting long hair and a luxuriantly full beard which he’d copied from Gilgamesh, decided to leave his garden and, like Gilgamesh, go exploring.  Attaining his fantasies still required a good deal of work and even more luck, so he decided to return to Kengir, of course, avoiding at all costs, for the time being, until he could build up his strength, returning to the court of the El-ohim.  He’d, in fact, renounced his allegiance to the El-ohim and no longer even considered himself a Canaanite.  He was out on his own, an explorer, an innovator, a revolutionary, one with the wind (albeit not the South Wind), although he was not yet quite ready to make that public.  He’d need to build up his following before his coming out party.  He still needed a bit of patience, but time (which usually did not impact deities) was on his side.

So, smiling at the term, tempus fugit, he took his time and sort of loitered in Uruk and its environs for several centuries, perhaps even a millennium, learning everything he could about the Anunnaki and the Kengirites, their histories and rites and rituals.  Carried away with his “research, the now former Canaanite divinity, still a divinity of sorts, just not a Canaanite divinity, at least in his mind (which was all that mattered to him), lost touch with his original objective, Gilgamesh, until, eventually, it became clear to him that his hero (or perhaps now, former hero), had permanently departed for parts unknown.  Most people suspected that he’d become a denizen of Kur, although whether as a subject or ruler was unclear.  Or that perhaps he’d retired to Dilmun joining the Anunnaki side of his family there, but again, whether as a subject or ruler was unclear.  The fact though was that Gilgamesh was no longer in Kengir, other kings having replaced him in Uruk.  Consequently, the now middle-aged Canaanite deity spent less and less time in the environs of Uruk and more and more in nearby Ur and, while stealthily wandering in Ur, sort of stumbled onto a pair of angry, petulant and very dissatisfied siblings.

He liked them at once, they reminded him of, … well, … of himself, .. way back when.  One was a petulant young man whose name was Abram, and the other a very attractive young girl whose name was Sarai (or something like that).  Anyway, they were very unhappy because their parents were very opposed to their aspirations for intimacy (given that they were brother and sister).  And in fact, the priests of the religion of which they were a part were demanding that they, or at least Abram, be sacrificed as a form of atonement for their amorous aspirations.  That was not something Abram was really interested in, at least not in a positive manner, nor, to be honest, was Sarai.

Up to that time, despite his success with his garden and Adam and Lilitu, perhaps because of the unwelcome intervention of that busybody, Nin-gish-zidam the wandering former Canaanite divinity had not really acquired many worshippers of his own, and worshippers were, as all deities knew, the key to increasing their power.  He had Adam, and a replacement for the escaped Lilitu, a pleasant girl he’d convinced Adam that he’d made especially for him from one of Adam’s ribs (Adam tended to be somewhat gullible), and then, after he’d thrown Adam and Eve out of his garden (one he’d named Eden) in a temper tantrum over dietary transgressions (the now mature former Canaanite deity was strict on dietary rules and rituals, although even he didn’t fully understand why).  they’d had children, all but one of whom had acknowledged him as a deity.  But the one who got away had caused quite a bit of trouble (perhaps taking after the formerly Canaanite deity), as had his descendants.  So he needed a new strategy with updated tactics, and he had what he felt was a brilliant idea.

He just needed a few new adherents to start the ball rolling (so to speak), and if he managed to talk Abram and Sarai into escaping from Kengir, hopefully collecting additional followers along the trip, hell, he might finally be able to attain the aspirations that had seemed so improbable way back when he’d been a kid (in case you’ve forgotten, supplanting his parents and siblings, perhaps even all the other deities in all the other pantheons as well).  There’s probably a related psychological syndrome associated with the foregoing, with a fancy name, or there will be when Freud, Jung and company show up.  Or perhaps Joseph Campbell, or Robert Graves.

Anyway …

Adding a touch of silver to his beard, hair and mustachios, in order to disguise himself and make himself appear more mature and more powerful, he appeared to Abram in his divine aspect (rather than in the disguised from in which he’d met first met him and Sarai), and, feeding on his dissatisfaction and fear (who really wants to be sacrificed), promised him that if he and Sarai would worship him, and only him, he’d give them and any of their family members they selected (and who’d agree with a few minor rules and conditions which the now former Canaanite deity might suggest) a land of their own.  A place where they could fornicate or do whatever they wanted to their hearts content, although, as indicated above, they’d have to adhere to his commandments and rituals.  He did warn Abram that it might take them a while to get to the land he’d promised them (and which he didn’t actually control, he was, interestingly enough, thinking of Canaan) and that they might encounter some problems along the way.  But he also promised that he’d be with them always (and that part was true; you may remember that he had a penchant for voyeurism). 

Well, neither Abram nor Sarai had ever, to their knowledge, met a deity before and thus, after Abram shared with Sarai his discussion with the former Canaanite deity, she was very impressed at the interest taken in Abram, making him even more special in her eyes, and she also felt that it was obvious that if a deity was willing to help them, then their parents’ prohibition against incest and the priests’ demand that Abram be sacrificed were just old-fashioned and incompatible with the changing mores of the time, and that neither their parents nor their priests understood anything concerning the exigencies of true love (especially when coupled with irresistible lust), and that this new deity was much more hip than the deities their parents and their priests worshipped so, after talking it over (as usual, Abram did most of the talking and Sarai the listening, plus all the real work), they both agreed to follow the former Canaanite deity and, in the dead of night, with the former Canaanite deity’s help, drugged their parents and escaped with most of their parent’s goods and flocks (not stealing they assured themselves, just an advance on their inheritances, as the former Canaanite deity had explained to them).  And as the former Canaanite deity had hoped, they’d been joined by a number of their siblings, including Haran, Nahor and Abram and Sari’s nephew Lot.  A great start to the former Canaanite deity’s plot.

And away they went, the formerly young Canaanite god snickering (sort of like Murphy), thinking, “man this is going to be fun”.  And it wasn’t really stealing he thought, not for the first time.  He didn’t steal!  He just sometimes borrowed things other deities were not really using, and Abram and Sarai certainly fit that pattern, as had the shadows of the Huluppu tree (he’d actually saved them from becoming shadows of mere furniture) and Lilitu (who, as he saw it, Inanna had discarded).  He just loved omelets!  And he had already become very fond of gardening as well.

Of Nin-gish-zida he had nothing to say.  That had proved awkward, but it involved a sort of collateral damage situation, or perhaps an “adoption”, certainly not a kidnapping.  Anyone can make a mistake he thought.  Admitting that he could err was, however, another matter.

Good thing that Gilgamesh had not been immortal though, he thought to himself.  That might have proven awkward, at best.  And that damned Lilitu, where the hell had she disappeared to?

Now to erase all those other pesky deities!  And to remake Canaan in his image.

“Pest” was he? 

They didn’t know the half of it.
_______

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2023; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen).  Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales.  He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review, available at Substack.com, a commentator on Radio Guasca FM, and an occasional contributor to the regional magazine, el Observador.  He has academic degrees in political science (the Citadel), law (St. John’s University), international legal studies (New York University) and translation and linguistic studies (the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies).  However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta and cosmogony.  He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Ramblings as I Turn Seventy-Seven

July 22, 2023, Manizales.  High in the central range of the Colombian Andes, touching the sky while playing with clouds and watching birds soar below me.  Verdant mountains, snow clad peaks and thermal springs, the tall spires of a gothic cathedral with a Christ seemingly having finally accepted the adversary’s challenge while Kumanday lies dormant, at least mostly, although it’s stirred quite a bit lately in its sleep, as though unpleasant dreams were unsettling him.

Double digits again. 

1946.  The first was the instant of my birth when I was zero-zero, although of course, that could be represented in a single digit, “zero.  Mom, la Mamita, Carola and Livia, my father, all too briefly.  The Hotel Roma.  Manizales, Colombia, the Earth, the Solar system, the Galaxy, the Universe, The Multiverse.  Divinity.  All new to me just then.

1957.  Eleven: a turbulent year spent traveling from one state to another, one country to another, one continent to another. North Carolina, where I was happy, then Florida and insecurity, then Colombia, back to roots, for a little while.  A period of extreme changes, both personally, and in the country of my birth.

1968.  Twenty-two:  Rites of passage, a Citadel man.  Things changing much, much too quickly and in too confused a manner.  Bobby Kennedy assassinated.  Susan.  On my own for the first time and not all that well done.

1979.  Thirty-three:  A great deal had been accomplished, a great deal lost as well.  Vicki.  Florida.  Hazeltine.  Rutti- tootie and kazuti.

1990.  Forty-four: Cyndi; three sons, finally, but all hell breaking out, hopes dashed.  Reality confronted and slowly understood.  Metamorphosis of sorts.  Hendersonville. 

2001.  Fifty-five: Millennium’s beginning, aliens on the moon delayed.  My world seemed all too well but that was an illusion, the calm before another storm.  Joe Radcliffe in the rearview window, Lenny Tucker in his place.  Ocala.

2012.  Sixty-six:  Manizales.  Diana Marcela for a bit.  Political science, the university, the media, nationally and internationally.  Alex, two of three in the language of the Borg, or perhaps, three of five, is with me in Colombia, but on his own, having attained his own place in the world.

2023.  Seventy seven:  Natalia.  Love and stability.  Writing.  Radio.  Tennis.  Free time.  Introspection encounters speculation and reflection.

In the good old US of A in 2023:  Orwellian dystopia rampant, censorship, perpetual war, polarization.  Inchoate nuclear and environmental devastation.  Deception.  Manipulation.  Hypocrisy.  Racism and xenophobia rampant. 

Still, I have my Citadel and EMA brethren to remind me that all is not lost and that pockets of the benign still bravely exist.

A compilation: Loads of errors, from some of which I’ve learned and become a better person.  Many, many regrets, people I’ve hurt, things I’d do very differently.  Successes, most unexpected, a few well earned; luck as much as anything else.  Legacies, in writing at least, all over the place and in diverse genres.  Former students everywhere, some coming into their own while others retire.  And my own progeny: not how I’d planned or what I’d hoped for them, but seemingly doing well, although far, far away, and even more, very, very distant.  Life seems good, better than I earned on my own.  Caesar was right, the goddess Fortuna is the one most to be feared as well as adored.
_______

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2023; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen).  Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales.  He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review, available at Substack.com, a commentator on Radio Guasca FM, and an occasional contributor to the regional magazine, el Observador.  He has academic degrees in political science (the Citadel), law (St. John’s University), international legal studies (New York University) and translation and linguistic studies (the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies).  However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta and cosmogony.  He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

A Reflection and Introspection on the Day my Mother would have been a Century Young

My mother would have been a century old today, or perhaps a century young. 

She was born on the 9th of July in 1923 to a complex couple, a sort of Cinderella and her Prince, only the prince was a French physician, albeit of noble stock, and the setting was in the Republic of Colombia, in the Department of Cundinamarca, in a small municipality near Bogota, and Cinderella was a beautiful very young woman, a bright young woman with little formal education (only her step siblings received that) but fascinated by the esoteric and by alternative spiritual philosophies, and those drew her close as the man who was to become her husband was, it was said, clairvoyant.  Unfortunately not clairvoyant enough to foretell his early death, leaving behind a beautiful young widow with two small children, one of them my mother: a little girl with a very long name: María del Rosario de Nuestra Señora de Chiquinquirá Mahé Val Buena (or perhaps Rubiano).  “Mahé” was her paternal last name.  People called her either “Rosario” or, if they were close to her, “Chalito”, but after she emigrated to the United States, most Americans called her “Rose”.  Late in life, for reasons of her own, she legally shortened her name to “Rosal”, Spanish for a rose bush, but that was something I never quite accepted.  Then again, … to me her name was always “Mom”. 

My mother was a very complex person and lived a very complex life, for some reason, usually electing to hide her myriad talents as an artist, a poet, a philosopher, a philanthropist, etc.  While she started her life as a beautiful and vibrant young woman who aspired to the stage, those dreams faded all too soon, and she lived most of her life very humbly, and all too often, very alone.  Still, she was a miracle worker who raised me as though, like my grandfather, I was a young noble and required appropriate training in history, politics, philosophy, chivalry, the arts, equestrian sports, etc.  I still can’t fathom how she accomplished it but I know that everything positive I ever became or I ever accomplished I owe to her.  The bad traits and failures are all my own.

She remained a child at heart all her life and loved watching and re-watching young Shirley temple movies and the Wizard of Oz, and was horrified when, as a teen, I went through an “objectivist”, Ayn Rand phase.  She wanted me to be a man of the people, a champion of the oppressed and certainly not an oppressor.  Fortunately, I outgrew that phase (as I outgrew many others) and slowly but steadily strove to be what she’d hoped.

She and my father were separated when I was very young.  Evidently they had a serious argument over his relationship with his secretary, a relationship he always claimed was innocent, but who knows.  And being naïve, she went for solace to my grandmother who immediately swept us up, sent my mother to the United States and apparently hid my younger sister and me among friends and relatives.  My father claimed to have searched for us, but he claimed a lot of things when I got to know him many years later, things that didn’t appear to be quite true, at least according to the trail of children he left behind, siblings I hardly knew but came to dearly love, after we eventually met.  Nevertheless, my mother loved him for the rest of her life and never said a negative thing about him to me.  Rather, she led me to believe that he’d been a paragon, a mixture of a De Vinci and a Rolando Furioso, albeit in a short, thin package.  Obviously, although saintly in most respects, veracity was not always her strong point.  It was only as I matured and aged that I came to realize that the paragon had always been her.

A century she never sought is what I’m sort of celebrating today, a day on which I’m reflecting on who she was and on everything she did, and not just for me.  My Colombian cousins practically worship her as, regardless of how little she had, on each of their birthdays and on every Christmas, she showered them with gifts, especially after her brother, their father had passed away.  She didn’t love life, but she loved me, and she loved her version of the divine.  She loved him with all her heart, and she longed to reunite with him, perhaps perceiving in the divine a father figure who she associated with her own father, he who had passed away much too soon, but had left her with a very lasting impression. 

She passed away very young as well.  Although not nearly as young as did he.  She was about to turn sixty-seven.  It was the fourth of June, 1990.  My youngest son, Edward, was born six months later.  My second son Alex doesn’t remember her, he was a wee bit more than two years old when she left.  But she bonded with Billy, my firstborn, and he remembers her well, and he remembers her stories about dinosaurs which he loved when little.  And he remembers our trips to visit her weekly towards the end; a four hour ride from Hendersonville, North Carolina, where we lived then, to Jacksonville, North Carolina, where my sister Marina was caring for her.  It was strange having four year old Billy watch her expiring but I wanted him to remember her always, and he does.  Those rides were memorable for both of us, silly rides with silly songs making silly noises in very sad times.

She’s been gone a long time now.  Thirty-three years, a month and five days.  And I think of her often.  I keep the plastic box which for a brief time held her ashes on a shelf in front of my desk, a box I’ve filled with little things I thought she might find meaningful: my sons’ baby teeth, an old bathing suit each wore in turn, my eldest son’s high school identification card, a cell phone my college roommate, now deceased, once gave me.  And taped to the box is a photocopy of a brief article in our local paper here in Manizales, I paper for which I write from time to time, an article with a photo of her, wishing her well as she moved to a new country.  An article almost three quarters of a century old.

I glance at that picture often, and I keep it close to me so that the pain of her passing lives on but morphed into something beautiful and positive, something that gives me courage and hope when I most need it, and an example to follow when I’m tempted to stray from the paths she sowed so carefully for me.

Happy birthday Mom, and thank you for being you, and thank you for everything you miraculously did to make me who you hoped I’d be.
_______

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2023; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen).  Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales.  He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review, available at Substack.com, a commentator on Radio Guasca FM, and an occasional contributor to the regional magazine, el Observador.  He has academic degrees in political science (the Citadel), law (St. John’s University), international legal studies (New York University) and translation and linguistic studies (the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies).  However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta and cosmogony.  He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Physics or Metaphysics or Just Deity’s First Day

Deity did not remember waking, ever, or having come into existence, but it had.  Its initial memory was reflecting on curiosity, difficult as, other than itself, there was nothing about which to be curious, but there was a tension between that infinite boredom that was its essence and curiosity concerning what it was and from whence it came, a curiosity insatiable because of the dearth of answers, a dearth which could seemingly never be satisfied thus imposing boundaries that bound it, the only boundaries there were, the only boundaries there had ever been. 

Fortunately, time did not exist, nor did space, so the boredom was not as overpowering as it might have been.  Reflection on introspection, somewhat vacuous at best, was all there was to entertain Deity.  And perhaps reflections on boredom, on the nature of boredom, accompanied perhaps, by speculation on whether or not boredom might not have complex components.  What if boredom was a composite of other factors, but then, Deity knew nothing of either composites or factors, or anything really.  It knew everything there was to know, which was virtually nothing, but virtually nothing was not the same as nothing, so, in that sense, it was concurrently omniscient.

Then, after forever as then defined, although there being no one to define it, it was undefinably ineffable, of a sudden, everything, which prior to that instant had been nothing, exploded.  A tiny explosion at first, but growing geometrically, growing omnidirectionally, matter and energy and radiation seemingly forming from what some might someday describe as inchoate ether, and Deity experienced surprise.  Not its first surprise; that had occurred the instant outside of time when it had attained sentience, albeit with nothing about which to be sentient.  But this was its first sort of external surprise, although external was not the appropriate concept as it had been Deity that had exploded, perhaps as a result of uncontainable curiosity meeting immovable boredom, and thus it was Deity itself that was expanding geometrically and omnidirectionally, morphing from Deity to Divinity, and wondering whether it could exercise any control over what appeared to be a deterministic phenomenon, one based solely on reaction and counter reaction, infinitely amplified; well, almost infinitely.  And the concept of volition entered Divinity’s lexicon, a very brief lexicon just then, but with a great deal of potential for future growth now that future was a concept, and past, and present.

Confusion reigned with chaos as its consort, or perhaps, visa versa, as determinism played with volition in Divinity’s imagination and boredom radiated into apparent nothingness, but apparent nothingness is not the same as nothingness, even if solely comprised of echoes and shadows playing at becoming rainbows and fireflies, well, perhaps someday. 

Reflection and introspection gave way to a struggle to contain and control the emerging expansion, but then immediately, or almost immediately, which was obviously different than immediately, reflection returned to speculate over what had happened, and whether why was relevant, or existed at all, which of course resulted in the birth of why, and curiosity broke its tensional tie with boredom.  Not that boredom disappeared, but it was somewhat subsumed, at least for a while, as eternity and infinity blossomed and grew, and Divinity entered its infancy, bereft of either a maternal or paternal influence, … at least as far as it knew.

And thus ended the first instant of unrecorded time, with many, many more instants to come, instants in diverse colors and flavors, instants with quite a few consequences, some of which, perhaps, were eventually collected into what would someday be referred to as a zeptosecond, and zeptoseconds into almost eternal nanoseconds, and then, well seconds and minutes, until finally, the temporal and spatial cumulous conformed what some would refer to as the first day, although, of course, Divinity was not among them.

But that’s a different story.
_______

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2023; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen).  Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales.  He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review, available at Substack.com, a commentator on Radio Guasca FM, and an occasional contributor to the regional magazine, el Observador.  He has academic degrees in political science (the Citadel), law (St. John’s University), international legal studies (New York University) and translation and linguistic studies (the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies).  However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta and cosmogony.  He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.

Paradise Lost or Perhaps Just Never Attained

Sequentially serial monogamy.  Or polygamy, or polyandry, or polyamory, or what have you.

Are those among the paths nature expected us to tread?  Paths that would separate and segment child bearing, child rearing, sexual intimacy, economic collaboration and companionship into different functions, each potentially involving differing relationships over time, but relationships tied together through decency and harmonious post relationship continuity?  Something I think Robert Heinlein seemed to espouse and which makes a great deal of sense, but with which, emotionally, most of us are not prepared to cope, that inability being primarily attributable to hypocritical Abrahamic strictures which insist that jealousy and possession ought to be our prime motivators.  Motivators that rule our personal lives as well as our lives as members of collectives, collectives from dysfunctional nuclear families to contending nations bent on mutual annihilation.

The concepts work well in Heinlein’s novels but not that well in real life, although perhaps they should. 

Perhaps, some day, somewhere, they may.

Paradise lost or perhaps just never attained, …

_______

© Guillermo Calvo Mahé; Manizales, 2023; all rights reserved.  Please feel free to share with appropriate attribution.

Guillermo (“Bill”) Calvo Mahé (a sometime poet) is a writer, political commentator and academic currently residing in the Republic of Colombia (although he has primarily lived in the United States of America of which he is also a citizen).  Until 2017 he chaired the political science, government and international relations programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Manizales.  He is currently the publisher of the Inannite Review, available at Substack.com, a commentator on Radio Guasca FM, and an occasional contributor to the regional magazine, el Observador.  He has academic degrees in political science (the Citadel), law (St. John’s University), international legal studies (New York University) and translation and linguistic studies (the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies).  However, he is also fascinated by mythology, religion, physics, astronomy and mathematics, especially with matters related to quanta and cosmogony.  He can be contacted at guillermo.calvo.mahe@gmail.com and much of his writing is available through his blog at https://guillermocalvo.com/.