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Your Weekly Constitutional

Stewart Harriswww.podomatic.com
Produced in partnership with James Madison's Montpelier, Your Weekly Constitutional is a public radio show featuring lively discussion of controversial constitutional topics, from Gay Rights to Gun Rights. Find us on Facebook and iTunes!
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Episodes

Satan Update

Beelzebub and his buds have been anything but idle lately. They have been challenging governmental religious displays and practices for much of the past year, as we discussed in our two previous episodes, "The Devil went Down to Oklahoma," Parts I and II. Join us for an enlightening discussion of the Religion Clauses of the Constitution, Satanism, and just why Lucien Greaves, the Overlord of the Satanic Temple, is such a determined trouble-maker.

Dec 19, 201454 min

Democracy Cafe

Do you believe in democracy? True democracy? This week, Stewart has a wide-ranging, thoughtful, provocative conversation with Chris Phillips, the proprietor of the Democracy Café. Chris will make you think. About a lot of things. Perhaps most fundamentally, he'll make you think about just how much democracy you can really take.

Dec 12, 201454 min

Thanksgiving: A Surprisingly Constitutional Holiday

Diana Muir Appelbaum wrote a book back in the 1980's that just recently came to Stewart's attention. But it's worth talking about, because it tells us just how American a holiday Thanksgiving really is. And we're not just talking turkey. Join us!

Dec 05, 201454 min

Two Battles in World War II

The Second World War was, at least in Western Europe, a struggle between authoritarianism and constitutional democracy. Two of the greatest battles there took place over the skies of Britain in 1940 and on the shores of Normandy in 1944. We went there. Now we’ll tell you all about it.

Nov 28, 201454 min

Fuzzy Con Law

Here's a hairy subject: the constitutional significance of beards. With the aid of our friend, Professor Joseph Fitsanakis of King University, and his fellow-members of the Tri-Cities Beard Club, Ollie and Maggie, we explore the many and surprising constitutional aspects of facial hair. And, no, we're not kidding. Join us!

Nov 21, 201454 min

Nature's God

Recognize this? “When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.” Yup, it's the very first line of the American Declaration of Independence. ...

Nov 14, 201454 min

Are Corporations People, My Friend?

Mitt Romney thinks so, and the Supreme Court agrees with him, at least in some circumstances. But others disagree. And they want to definitively reject "corporate personhood" by amending our Constitution. We'll speak with one of them, Jeff Clements, the author of a book entitled, appropriately enough, "Corporations are Not People."

Nov 07, 201454 min

Yes or No on Amendment 2?

States have constitutions, too. And sometimes those constitutions are amended. For example, Tennessee voters will go to the polls on November 4, 2014, to determine the fate of four proposed amendments to the Tennessee Constitution. We don't have time to discuss all four, so we've picked one that might otherwise be overlooked: Amendment 2, which will, if approved, change the way that Tennessee appellate judges are selected. For the proponents: Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery. For the o...

Oct 30, 201454 min

What's so Bad about Citizens United?

Citizens United is perhaps the most-criticized Supreme Court decision in recent memory. But what's all the fuss about? We'll speak with two leading critics of Citizens United, John Bonifaz and Ron Fein of Free Speech for People, who began their efforts to overturn the decision on the very day it was announced. Please note: this episode was originally broadcast as part of the WETS fall fundraiser in 2014, so you'll hear a reference or two to donations. The episode is also a bit shorter than most,...

Oct 28, 201441 min

Disaffirmative Action

Affirmative action, in various forms, has been around for decades. In a number of famous cases, from Bakke in 1978 to Grutter in 2003, the Supreme Court has affirmed the constitutionality of affirmative action in higher education admissions programs, within limits. But does the Supreme Court's approval of affirmative action mean that a state must keep such programs in place? That was the issue in the 2014 Supreme Court case, Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action. One of Stewart's st...

Oct 17, 201454 min

Marijuana Update, 2014 Edition

Of the many constitutional issues we've followed over the past several years, two stand out as the most dynamic: gay marriage and marijuana legalization. We can hardly keep up with the many changes to the laws and attitudes surrounding them. But we keep trying. And here's our latest effort, courtesy of Howard "Cowboy" Wooldridge of LEAP, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, and COP, Citizens Opposed to Prohibition.

Oct 11, 201454 min

The Mind of a Madison Scholar

How do we know so much about James Madison? Telepathy? Osmosis? Actually, our knowledge about the Father of the Constitution is the product of hard work - hard work done by a number of dedicated Madison scholars, men and women who take the time to read Madison's papers, unearth his artifacts and tell his story. One of the most important of these hard-working scholars is Ralph Ketcham, who wrote the definitive one-volume biography of Madison over forty years ago, in 1971. That's why Stewart was s...

Oct 03, 201454 min

The Drafting of the Irish Constitution

When Stewart made a reservation at the historic Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin, he didn't fully appreciate just how historic the hotel is. It turns out that the Irish Constitution was drafted there, and he heard all about the process from the hotel’s unofficial historian, Denis O’Brien.

Sep 26, 201454 min

Benjamin Franklin: the Last American Englishman

Benjamin Franklin has been called the first American. We might also call him the last American Englishman, because he was one of the last of our Founders to abandon his hope that, somehow, America and England could patch up their differences and avoid armed conflict. Indeed, our Founding Grandfather spent sixteen years in London just prior to the American Revolution, trying to keep the American colonies British. Stewart recently travelled to London, where he visited the house where Franklin live...

Sep 19, 201453 min

A Visit to Chartwell

In 1940, one constitutional democracy stood alone against the onslaught of Nazi aggression. And one man led that nation, alone, for the next year, until, "in God's good time," the New World came to the aid of the Old. That nation was the United Kingdom, and that leader was Winston Spencer Churchill. Stewart recently visited Churchill’s home, Chartwell, in the South of England, and spoke to a number of knowledgeable and helpful volunteers there. Now he wants to share that visit with you....

Sep 13, 201454 min

The British Constitution

If you want to see the U.S. Constitution, it’s easy – just take a trip to the National Archives where it’s on public display. But what if you want to see the British Constitution? That’s not so easy, because it’s not written down. Or, more properly, much of it is unwritten, and the parts that are written down are spread over many different documents. If you find this confusing, join the club. Stewart was so confused that he went all the way to the UK to get an explanation from Dan O’Boyle, a law...

Sep 05, 201454 min

Appomattox Court House

Only once in its history has the United States gone to war to resolve a constitutional issue. The war was the American Civil War and the issue was slavery. In this episode we go to where it all effectively came to an end: a small, remote town in Virginia called Appomattox Court House.

Aug 29, 201454 min

Judicial Retention Revisited

As this podcast gets posted, in the summer of 2014, the voters of the State of Tennessee are about to go to the polls to decide whether to retain three of the Justices of their Supreme Court. While judicial retention elections are traditionally sleepy affairs, this one is different: the Lieutenant Governor and others are making a concerted effort to convince the voters to "non-retain" these three Justices. Why? We wanted to ask the Lt. Governor, but, to our disappointment, he did not return our ...

Aug 01, 201454 min

The Chief Justice

Dolly Parton! Whaa? It turns out that the country music superstar is a high school friend of the Chief Justice of Tennessee. His name is Gary Wade, and he tells us some fascinating stories about how he became the highest judicial officer in his state, what his job entails, and how he now faces a coordinated political attempt to have him removed from the bench, along with two of his Supreme Court colleagues. On a happier note, he also tells us some great stories about his high-school friend and "...

Jul 25, 201453 min

Cyberespionage!

Cloaks and daggers? Old news. Now it's keypads and iPads and other high-tech spying. The United States and China both do it. But they do it differently - or so they say. Dr. Joseph Fitsanakis, the Director of the King Institute for Security and Intelligence Studies, tells us all about this secret struggle for security supremacy.

Jul 18, 201454 min

The Trial Judge - and a Visit to the Grove Park Inn

Here's the latest in our series about the judiciary. This time we speak with the kind of judge you are most likely to encounter if ever you find yourself in court: a trial judge. His name is Thomas Seeley, Jr., and he hears all types of civil cases in his courtroom in Johnson City, Tennessee. As you might expect, he's got lots of interesting stuff to say. After Judge Seeley, we get in the car and drive down to North Carolina to visit the remarkable Grove Park Inn, a five-star resort frequented b...

Jul 11, 201454 min

The Good News Club

The Good News Club is an after-school program run by evangelical Christians. A few years back, the Supreme Court ruled that public schools who had denied access to the Club for fear of violating the Establishment Clause had actually violated another part of the First Amendment, the Speech Clause. In essence, the Court said that all groups, religious and non-religious, were constitutionally entitled to equal access to public facilities - otherwise, the government would be regulating their speech ...

Jul 04, 201453 min

Reagan Revisited

Love him or hate him (and, either way, you have lots of company) Ronald Reagan was, and continues to be, an important figure in American constitutional history. We'll speak with Justin Garrison, a professor at Roanoke College in Virginia, who's written a balanced, fascinating, readable book called "An Empire of Ideals: the Chimeric Imagination of Ronald Reagan." Justin is that rare scholar who not only writes well, but also speaks well. He's even funny and charming - kinda like Ronald Reagan was...

Jun 27, 201453 min

Dirty Money

Is there too much money in politics? Ben Cohen certainly thinks so. So he and some like-minded friends have started a group called "Stamp Stampede" aimed at amending the Constitution. They want to overturn the notorious Citizen's United case and other Supreme Court cases that equate money with free speech. Never heard of Ben Cohen? Sure you have. But probably not by himself. Instead, you've seen only his first name, during some of your happiest moments, displayed beside the name of his partner, ...

Jun 14, 201454 min

The Federal Judge

Who are those guys? Those guys who sit on their high benches in federal courthouses, wielding their gavels and wearing those fancy black robes? This is no idle question. Federal judges play an important role in interpreting our Constitution. And yet we know very little about them, since most of these men (and, increasingly, women) work quietly in their courtrooms and chambers and draw little attention to themselves. In this episode, we change all that. With the help of United States District Jud...

May 30, 201453 min

The Lincoln Myth and the Second Amendment

Lots of people do a lot of writing about the United States Constitution. In this episode, Stewart talks to two of them: bestselling author Steve Berry, who has just published a new thriller, The Lincoln Myth, based upon a constitutional conspiracy, and Colin Christensen, one of Stewart's students from Emory & Henry College, who wrote his Honors Thesis on the Second Amendment. Join us for some cracklin' good tales.

May 27, 201453 min

Mr. Jackson Goes to Russia

Stewart speaks with Garrett Jackson, the Assistant Town Manager of Abingdon, Virginia. Garrett recently returned from a trip to Russia, where he discussed local governmental issues with some of his Russian counterparts. He also discussed the importance of our American constitutional freedoms. Joining Garrett and Stewart is Krisi Hayden, the State Department official who shepherded Garrett from Moscow to . . . well, we can't spell them, or pronounce them, so let's just say that Garrett went to lo...

May 16, 201453 min

The Devil Went Down to Oklahoma, Part II

Still Running with the Devil . . . . In Part II of this fascinating episode, we finish our discussion with Lucien Greaves, the Overlord of the Satanic Temple. He's the fellow who has been stirring up so much trouble down in Oklahoma with his statue of Baphomet, a winged, goat-headed demon with horns and wings and . . . well, you get the idea. It seems that Lucien's been stirring up trouble elsewhere, too, notably down in Florida, where he's held a rally hailing both Satan and Governor Rick Scott...

May 10, 201453 min

The Devil went down to Oklahoma, Part I

It's controversial enough when someone wants to put a Ten Commandments monument on the courthouse steps. But what about a monument to Baphomet, a/k/a Satan? Join us for a really hot episode.

May 06, 201453 min

Justice for Justice Diaz

The question of money in politics isn't new. But money in judicial selection? That's a relatively recent issue, and one that had a significant impact on (former) Justice Oliver Diaz of the Mississippi Supreme Court. Joins us for a cautionary tale about judicial elections.

Apr 25, 201453 min
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