Excerpt from The American Plan of Government: The Constitution of the United States as Interpreted by Accepted Authorities
There come crises to all nations - times when actions taken or policies adopted will vitally affect the lives of future generations. At such times men are forced to think - to go back to fundamentals - to reexamine the foundations of their institutions. For the United States this second decade of the twentieth century is a period of crisis.
The United States Constitution of 1916 is not the Constitution of 1789. Outwardly, indeed, save for seventeen chronologically appended amendments, it is identical. But in its meaning, in its breadth of application, its power of adaptability to the ever increasing complexity of our national life, it is very different. A set of rules gains in meaning and in usefulness by being put into practice. A statute gains its fullest legal value only when the history of its enactment is known and there has grown up around it a body of precedent arising out of cases involving its use and out of decisions rendered under its provisions and reflecting somewhat of the personality of the men rendering those decisions.
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