The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution for the United States of America
$0.99
A constitution leashes power. The Declaration names the purpose — government exists only to secure God-given rights. The Constitution fixes the limits — powers delegated, checked, and divided. Keep this booklet within reach, and you’ll know when officials outrun their commission, when policies drift from consent, and when liberty itself is at stake. Read them together, and every claim of authority can be measured against the original standard.
Range | Discounted Price |
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25 - 99 | $0.84 |
100 + | $0.74 |
Description
The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution belong together: the first states the ends of government, the second arranges the means. Reading them side by side clarifies a simple measure — are rulers securing rights, or drifting from that duty? Here are the primary texts together so readers can consult the standard without filters.
The Declaration speaks in the language of creation, equality, and consent. It names abuses, then declares the remedy: withdraw allegiance and form governments “most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.” That claim did not age out. It sets a yardstick for evaluating any policy that burdens speech, arms, worship, property, or due process. When officials answer critique with force instead of reason, readers will recognize the pattern because they have seen the list before.
The Constitution turns principle into architecture. Powers are enumerated; offices are separated; elections, oaths, juries, and federalism create friction against ambition. Article by article, it assigns authority, limits it by text, and provides lawful tools for change — representation, legislation, courts, and amendments. The first ten amendments fasten certain protections beyond ordinary politics, so that a momentary majority cannot erase the people’s reserved rights.
Use this pocket size edition in meetings, classes, kitchen-table debates, or council hearings. However you approach it, read with a pen. Mark the phrases that matter — “We the People,” “no law,” “free State,” “due process.” Then compare the words to the news of the week. Where officials govern by emergency, rule by decree, expand power by redefining terms, or sidestep the amendment process, you will have the texts to sort claim from authority.
Return to first things. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are not relics; they are criteria. Study them, discuss them, and then insist — boldly and bravely — that public servants return to their limited commission, so liberty can be preserved for posterity. (2024ed, 50pp, pb)
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