There is nothing like finding a truly amazing opportunity. The quest to find such deals is beneficial,
provides economic security and in some cases are worth the search. They are hard to turn down and in fact we
look for them each day.
The preamble in the United States Constitution provides
one of the key foundations to our great Nation.
This is the basic belief that, “…in
order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic
tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure
the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity…” This was a
promise to all citizens.
However, since the adoption of the Constitution on
September 17, 1787 as the supreme law of the land that when into effect on
March 4, 1789, the interpretation of the constitution continues to stir up debate,
controversy and protest. Our
history is full of events in which the very essence of the Constitution and its
meaning has been put to the test. The
subjects have varied greatly and the reactions to legislation and Supreme Court
reviews have not always been widely accepted.
It goes without saying that we continue as a nation to
struggle with seeing things in clear terms, especially in dealing with the basic
rights for all Americans. This includes
the right to vote, fair housing, quality education, health care, gun control, and
immigration, employment opportunities, to unionize, to provide a safety net, equal
representation and to be judged by the content of one’s character and not by
the color of their skin. This struggle is
real.
We do not need to look far in history for a
blueprint of what a new deal look like. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1945) was the architect of two new deals and they came at a time when the nation was in economic free fall, dealing with the depression
and World War II. He created the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), to protest the deposits of people; Securities
and Exchange Commission to regulate Wall Street; the Second Bill of Rights, that
provided for a living wage, freedom from unfair competition and monopolies, fair
housing, access to medical care, quality education and Social Security, to just
name a few. At one time, FDR cited that
the “test of our progress is not whether
we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether we provide
enough for those who have little.”
Those
deals sound fair to me… Can we do better than that? What do you think?
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