We the people = the common man according to your quotation. Who is more common than the people living inside America?
I haven't substituted a wrong interpretation or a correct interpretation. I don't interpret at all. I stated the meaning of the words in their original context. The meaning of "We the people" refers to all of the people in the United States....the common man.
And case law is irrelevant when it comes to Constitutional discussions. Why would someone require years of studying irrelevant case law to discuss the words that are plainly written in the Constitution?
I do know and care about the true, correct, actual, and original meanings of the words in the Constitution and demand that they be taken in their original context. This is what I've been discussing. Nothing I've said is out of line with what the founders discussed when making the Constitution or with the words in the Constitution.
I've backed up everything I've said.
__________________
"I'm completely in favor of the separation of Church and State. My idea is that these two institutions screw us up enough on their own, so both of them together is certain death."
- George Carlin
|