Your Weekly Constitutional

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 345:36:14
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Sinopse

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!

Episódios

  • The Constitution and the Kill List

    17/05/2013 Duração: 59min

    There are lots of bad guys out there. And lots of people who could be bad guys. And other guys . . . well, we're not so sure about them.But can the President simply make a list, sit down in his big chair in the Oval Office, and decide which of these alleged bad guys to kill?We speak with David Adler, the Director of the Andrus Center for Public Policy at Boise State University, an expert on presidential power. David takes us on a fascinating journey, concentrating on the way executive power has dramatically increased during and after the Cold War, and especially after 9/11.You'll want to listen to this one. In the meantime, don't make the President mad.

  • Madison's Challenge

    10/05/2013 Duração: 59min

    James Madison knew that only an educated citizenry could govern itself while preserving its essential freedoms. He spent much of his life building such a citizenry in America.Today, the Robert H. Smith Center for the Constitution at Montpelier carries on Madison's work in a variety of ways and through a variety of media -- including this radio show. Another way is through the Montpelier Seminars, residential programs in which teachers, judges, police officers and others learn about our constitutional history and values at the very place where Madison lived and worked. We'll talk to Professor David Marion, who recently led a Montpelier Seminar on the Bill of Rights.It's a noble effort.

  • The Monster of Monticello, Part II

    03/05/2013 Duração: 59min

    Well, we spent last week beating up on Thomas Jefferson, so this week . . . we're going to beat up on him some more. We finish our conversation with Paul Finkelman of Albany Law School, who discusses not only Jefferson's hypocrisy over the slavery issue, but his deep racism and his illicit relationship with his slave Sally Hemings.After we finish our discussion with Paul, we have a first: an appeal of Constitutional Quiz! Actually, for you lawyers out there, it's more like a filing of an amicus brief by a third party, a professor at the University of Maine at Farmington, Jim Melcher. Jim thought that Eric, a contestant who failed to win a T-shirt some time ago, had actually given the correct answer to a quiz, while our preferred answer was actually wrong. After a full and fair hearing on the merits, the decision of the appellate panel was . . . .

  • The Monster of Monticello

    30/04/2013 Duração: 58min

    Who? What? Are we talking about Thomas Jefferson? You bet.There is an ongoing debate among historians (and other people, lots of other people) about old Tom's place in American history. Everyone admires the Declaration of Independence and "all men are created equal." But then there's that slavery thing. Ouch. We'll talk with Paul Finkelman, author of "Slavery and the Founders," who is among Jefferson's harsher critics. Paul doesn't pull any punches. But don't worry, this is just one conversation among many that we've had, and will have again, about a remarkable, contradictory man who is arguably our most troubling Founder.

  • The United States Attorney

    19/04/2013 Duração: 59min

    Who are those guys?You've heard of them - the United States Attorneys. They sound pretty important. But who are they, and what do they do? Quite a lot, it turns out. And a lot of what they do involves the Constitution, starting out with their appointment by the President and their extensive and arduous confirmation process before the United States Senate.We talk to two of these powerful government officials: Tim Heaphy, from the Western District of Virginia; and Bill Killian, from the Eastern District of Tennessee. Tim and Bill tell us about their duties, their backgrounds, and how they came to occupy these important positions. And, yes, they share lots of good war stories.

  • Frederick Douglas, Part II

    12/04/2013 Duração: 59min

    We continue our discussion with actor Fred Morsell, who has portrayed Frederick Douglass for 30 years. In Part I we discussed Douglass's early life and his escape from slavery. In Part II we discuss his activities as an abolitionist, newspaper publisher, advocate for women's rights, author and public speaker. Join us!

  • Frederick Douglass, Part I

    06/04/2013 Duração: 59min

    Slavery was the original sin in our Constitution. This is the story of a man who helped us to recognize that sin and, ultimately, destroy it.We'll talk to Fred Morsell, an actor who has portrayed Frederick Douglass for 30 years, and who knows so much about him that one episode of YWC is simply not enough. Part I covers Douglass's early life as a slave and his journey to freedom. Part II focuses upon Douglass the free man and abolitionist.Please join us for a poignant, powerful American story.

  • Recreational Marijuana

    01/04/2013 Duração: 58min

    D-u-u-u-de! Colorado and Washington State have legalized recreational marijuana! But don't get too excited - the feds still criminalize the wacky weed.So what's a poor Washingtonian or Coloradan to do? We speak with Vanderbilt law professor Robert Mikos about this smokin' hot constitutional issue. We also get the latest from the trenches of the drug wars from Howard Wooldridge of Citizens Opposed to Prohibition (COPs).

  • Constitution Cafe

    22/03/2013 Duração: 59min

    Maybe we should just scrap the Constitution and start all over again.Hey, before you get angry at us, consider the source: Thomas Jefferson suggested that we adopt a new constitution every 20 years or so. And Christopher Phillips, author of "Constitution Cafe," wants to take him up on it.

  • Roe v. Wade at 40

    15/03/2013 Duração: 58min

    Protestors. Editorials. Talking heads. Think you've heard everything there is to say about abortion?You haven't. The decision in Roe v. Wade, which constitutionalized the abortion debate, was handed down just over 40 years ago. So we decided to go back to the beginning. Actually, before the beginning. And we spoke with someone who was there: Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist Linda Greenhouse, who reported on the Supreme Court for almost three decades, and who has co-authored a book with Reva B. Siegel called "Before Roe v. Wade: Voices that Shaped the Abortion Debate Before the Supreme Court's Ruling."We learned a lot. So will you. Please join us for a fascinating discussion about the most controversial Supreme Court decision in the past, well, 40 years.

  • Borking Bork

    08/03/2013 Duração: 59min

    A hero of the Right, a nemesis of the Left, Judge Robert Bork recently passed away. A man of many accomplishments, he was most well-known for what he never was - a Justice of the United States Supreme Court. We'll talk to historian David Greenberg about Judge Bork's still-controversial confirmation hearings, and we'll also talk to United States Attorney Tim Heaphy, who, as a young staffer for then-Senator Joe Biden, personally witnessed history unfold.

  • Debt, Default and the Trillion-Dollar Coin

    01/03/2013 Duração: 58min

    Will we or won't we? Default, that is. On the national debt.Scary thought, isn't it? But don't panic. Instead, listen in as we speak with Eric Posner of the University of Chicago, who helps us figure out some constitutional options for dealing with the seemingly never-ending impasse over the federal budget.This episode is money.

  • Lincoln: Fact or Fiction?

    22/02/2013 Duração: 59min

    Sure, we think it's a great movie - politics, war, a constitutional amendment - who could ask for more?But is it historically accurate? Now that's another story.Paul Finkelman of Albany Law School -- the same guy who told us all about the Emancipation Proclamation -- helps us sort it out.

  • Facebook, Free Speech and Public Schools, Part II

    15/02/2013 Duração: 59min

    We finish up our fascinating discussion with Frank LoMonte of the Student Press Law Center. After finishing our tour of the major Supreme Court decisions affecting student speech - including the notorious "Bong Hits for Jesus" case - we finally get to Facebook and other social media, the new frontier of student speech cases.Join us!

  • Facebook, Free Speech and Public Schools, Part I

    08/02/2013 Duração: 59min

    Can your teacher punish you for what you post on Facebook? Even if you do it at home? On a weekend? During summer vacation? We talk to Frank LoMonte of the Student Press Law Center, who will take us through the major Supreme Court cases governing public school speech, cases which don't necessarily bode well for student rights. But before we start our discussion with Frank Lomonte, we also speak briefly with Michael Perry about his February 4, 2013 presentation on human rights for the Buechner Institute of King College in Bristol, Virginia.

  • Contraceptives, Health Care and God

    03/02/2013 Duração: 59min

    Can the government mandate that your employer's health care insurance provide you with "preventive care" -- care that includes contraceptives? What if your employer objects? What if your employer is a church? Or simply very religious? What about that Free Exercise of Religion thing?Okay, now it's getting constitutional. So it's a good thing that Professor Doug McKechnie is with us to tell us all about the First Amendment issues.

  • Fred Korematsu, All-American, Part II

    25/01/2013 Duração: 59min

    Part II of the compelling tale of Fred Korematsu, who stood up to the mass incarceration of over 100,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry during the Second World War.We won't give away the end of the story, but we will say that sometimes justice isn't done in a courtroom, but in the court of history.

  • Fred Korematsu, All-American, Part I

    19/01/2013 Duração: 58min

    Soldiers rounding up people in the streets. Innocent people. Law-abiding citizens. Children. Transporting them to remote camps surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards.No, we're not talking about Nazi Germany. Not the Soviet Union. Not North Korea, either.We're talking about the United States of America. And we're not kidding.

  • Constitution Day 2012

    12/01/2013 Duração: 59min

    What's your favorite holiday? Christmas? The Fourth of July? Arbor Day? Those are all fine choices, but here at Your Weekly Constitutional we have our own particular favorite: September 17 - CONSTITUTION DAY! Join us for good times with James and Dolley Madison on a sunny day filled with warm breezes, cool drinks and good conversation -- a party in September at Montpelier.

  • Kickin' Up a Ruckus over Gay Rights and Free Speech

    04/01/2013 Duração: 59min

    Gay Rights, Free Speech, Pro Football -- who could ask for anything more?We'll talk to Chris Kluwe, punter for the Minnesota Vikings, who wrote an open letter about these strangely-related subjects, a letter laced with inventive and hilarious profanity. It was published on the Huffington Post and became an internet sensation.Chris, who also dominates online video games and plays bass with the band Tripping Icarus, is not your average NFL player and this is not your average episode. Indeed, some of the language discussed may not be appropriate for younger listeners. But join us anyway. You've heard these words before. Well, most of them.

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