Cart | My Downloads | My Account | Help
Audiobooks, Podcasts and Video to Learn From

LearnOutLoud

Home Audio Books History American History Constitution, Part 1
    Search
 
 
    
 

 
  Our Audio Books
Catalog
 
    Free Audio Book
  Download our free audio book for the month of May:
Great American Presidents.
 
Constitution, Part 1 on Audio Download
 
Author: Eugene Lieber
Publisher: IAB Inc
Audio Original
Running Time: 1 Hr. 4 Mins.

Buy from LearnOutLoud:

Our Price: $ 1.00


 

Click here to see what our customers are saying about us

 
 
 
Rate This Title
Click Stars to Rate: Rate it 1 out of 5Rate it 2 out of 5Rate it 3 out of 5Rate it 4 out of 5Rate it 5 out of 5
Review this title

Constitution, Part 1

Constitution, Part 1

Topics in American History Series

by Eugene Lieber




In the Beginning
1.  1776 Articles of Confederation.  The federal government is weak.  There is a one body Congress.  Fear of a strong federal government. Power rests with the states intentionally.  Chaos as each state going its own way.   1780s meetings trash Articles of Confederation replace if with the Constitution. 
2. The Constitution.   It creates a powerful federal government with a division of powers using checks and balances: a president executive branch, a 2-segment legislative branch balancing big states and small states, and a judicial branch.  The Iroquois Native Americans have the same governmental structure.  The view that human nature is negative influences the Constitution, limits popular power.  The Electoral College reflects the distrust of the common man.

Bill of Rights.
 
3.  First 10 amendments added in 1791 to protect individual rights against majority rule. 
Amendment 1.  Very broad.  Separation of church and state, right to assembly, to peacefully petition the government, freedom of speech, freedom of press. 
Amendment 2. Regulated militia, right to bear arms, volunteer militia to defend country.  New technology changes the perspective of this.  
Amendment 3.  Protections against quartering of troops. 
Amendment 4. Secure from search and seizure.  This is very specific. 
Amendment 5. Self-incrimination, double jeopardy  protection.  Not to be deprived of life or liberty without due process, nor property without due compensation.  This is relevant today with issue of eminent domain.  Role of grand jury, now marginalized, as buffer from powerful federal government. 
Amendment 6. Right to a speedy and public trial (what is speedy?) by an impartial judge and jury in a local district (not applied in Jim Crow era).  Must be informed of charges, can confront witnesses, can call witnesses.  Assistance of counsel not guaranteed until the 1960s Supreme Court decision. 
Amendment 7
.  Entitled to a public trial if civil case is over a certain value. 
Amendment 8. Protection against excessive fine, excessive bail, against cruel and unusual punishment.  The issue of today's debates about treatment of prisoners, and about capital punishment itself.
Amendment 9. Rights that are listed do not deny other rights that are not listed. 
Amendment 10. Powers not delegated to the federal government remain with the states and the people. 
4. Perspective on the Bill of Rights.  One of the great documents in all history.  Probably none but the 2nd Amendment would pass today in the U.S.  Very few amendments added over 200 years.

Supreme Court
Justices are appointed by the president, ratified by the Senate. 
5. The Marshall court.  John Marshall is chief justice for 30 years in the early 1800s.  The concepts of judicial review, federal law over state law, states cannot tax the federal government, interstate commerce is federal not state, sanctity of the contract.  The Cherokee land dispute found in favor the the Cherokees but not enforced by President Andrew Jackson, an Indian hater, ending in the "Trail of Tears."
6. The Dred Scott Decision of 1856 nullifies the line of the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and
opens all land not yet states to slavery. 
7. The Civil War.  The 1863 Emancipation Proclamation frees slaves in the North not in the South.  After the war, the 13th Amendment abolishes slavery, the 14th Amendment guarantees due process of law to all citizens (to protect ex-slaves), the 15th Amendment is passed during the period of Reconstruction, gives black males the right to vote but excludes all women. 
8.  Gilded Age Robber Barons thwart efforts of the farmers' Granger Movement for federal regulation of the railroads in 1877 who are exploiting farmers. 
9. The Progressive Era reforms after 1901 are resisted by Supreme Court holdovers.  In World War 1, President Wilson predicts intolerance at home.  During  the war Supreme Court rules that freedom of speech can be limited. 
10.  The 1920s. The Supreme Court is very conservative and pro-business. 
11. 1930s. The Court blocks New Deal laws as infringement.  In 1936 FDR attempts but fails to pack the court.  Hugo Black is the first FDR appointee, becomes a great defender of individual rights, as is William O. Douglas.  There is diversity in the quality of justices.  Cardosa and Brandeis are unexpected appointees.

 



Write a Review of Constitution, Part 1

  • Published: June 2009
  • LearnOutLoud.com Product ID: C031156
Available On Volumes ISBN ISBN-13
Download

 History  American History

 

This Author: Eugene Lieber
This Publisher: IAB Inc
 
Customers Who Bought "Constitution, Part 1" Also Bought:
What's So Great About America
by Dinesh D'Souza
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 17.50
The Lewis and Clark Journals
by Gary E. Moulton
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 31.95
Lords of Finance
by Liaquat Ahamed
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 23.99
John L. Lewis - Testimony Before Senate Subcommittee
by John L. Lewis
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 9.95
Lion in the White House: A Life of Theodore Roosevelt
by Aida D. Donald
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 16.95
Benjamin Franklin: An American Life
by Walter Isaacson
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 17.95
 

We want LearnOutLoud.com to be the most complete and accurate resource for audio and video learning titles. Please let us know if you've found information missing or incorrect on this page.

For suggestions for this page email us at: suggestions@learnoutloud.com.

 

 

Home | About Us | Contact Us | FAQ | Help | Affiliates | Advertise | Gift Certificates | Newsletter | Free Resources
How to Order | Shipping Rates & Policies | Privacy Policy | Return Policy | Customer Service
Copyright © 2005-2012, LearnOutLoud, Inc. All rights reserved.