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604

And we have the opportunity to make a new one much better.

In particular I think where the US Constitution went wrong was that it had to get already, non free states, to sign in on it. So there are a lot of serious provisions that could have been in that standing non free states would have agreed to. IE: disolvement provisions. IE if a currency other than gold is ever the official currency then the government is immediately dissolved, new elections are held with open ballot only and the new government starts with a fresh slate of the constitution as written.

And we have the opportunity to make a new one much better. In particular I think where the US Constitution went wrong was that it had to get already, non free states, to sign in on it. So there are a lot of *serious* provisions that could have been in that standing non free states would have agreed to. IE: disolvement provisions. IE if a currency other than gold is ever the official currency then the government is immediately dissolved, new elections are held with open ballot only and the new government starts with a fresh slate of the constitution as written.

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[–] 1 pt

Interesting idea, but the constitution already has a provision for real money. Section 8 clause 5 permits congress to coin money and to regulate its value. Section 10 clause 1 denies states the right to coin or to print their own money. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 is unconstitutional so are the The Gold Reserve Act of 1934 and The Coinage Act of 1965. We just need to follow what the framers intended, not the twisted mess we currently have.