Connecticut: Formerly the Constitution State
Peter Thalheim
Connecticut: Formerly the Constitution State
Peter Thalheim
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Connecticut used to be the Constitution State. But the politicians and judges have subjected the general citizen to the State. When the United States Constitution was drafted in 1787 in the most remarkable step forward in the political history of man of the Rule of Law where the citizen would be the sovereign, Connecticut showed the way with its bicameral legislature of a house based on population and a Senate based on geographic areas, thereby inspiring the Connecticut Compromise of a the US house and Senate.
Today Connecticut is in the inenviable position of having one of the five worst fiscal conditions of the fifty states and the highest compensated state public sector in the union. This is compounded by a statist Connecticut Supreme Court that holds the State above the citizen and has shown to be ignorant of the most basic due-process requirements.
Only if Connecticut regains its constitutional balance by the citizen being sovereign and the State being instituted for the benefit of the citizen can Connecticut reclaim its future as an independent state and the Constitution State!
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