New Video! Caldara interviews Natelson on the Founders and the Constitution

This video tells some of the Constitution’s “back story.”
The Founders and the Constitution, Part 6: James Wilson

Despite the clear wording of the 10th Amendment, apologists for federal power still use Wilson’s “inherent sovereign authority” theory.
The Founders and the Constitution, Part 5: Edmund Randolph

If not for Edmund Randolph, America’s most populous and most influential state would have rejected the Constitution. George Washington would have been ineligible for the presidency. The Union would have been smothered in its cradle.
Scholar Finds that Congress’s Power over Amendments Conventions is Strictly Limited

Dr. Wieciech is to be commended for examining an important constitutional issue and arriving at generally well-based conclusions.
Who Called the Constitutional Convention? The Commonwealth of Virginia

The Virginia legislature, not Congress, called the Constitutional Convention.
The Founders and the Constitution, Part 4: John Dickinson

Without John Dickinson we might not have a Constitution.
More Evidence from the Founding: The Vice-President could not Delay the 2020 Presidential Vote Count

Founding-Era state constitutions help explain the U.S. Constitution’s rules for counting presidential electors.
The Founders and the Constitution, Part 3: James Madison

Madison was the most important single individual in the Constitution’s formation.
The Founders and the Constitution, Part 2: John Adams

Although John Adams didn’t attend the 1787 Constitutional Convention, he laid much of the groundwork.
The Founders and the Constitution, Part 1: Introduction

Although the men profiled in this series often disagreed with each other, each played a part of which Americans can be proud.
The Other Side of the Montana Constitution

It is always the prerogative of the people to fix flaws in their government. And the Montana constitution, like any human creation, has its flaws.
New Videos Explain the Article V Convention Process

Tired of the federal government’s overreaching and dysfunction? Here’s the solution the Constitution prescribes