The Bill of Rights: Â On Its 225th Anniversary
December 15, 2016
By Richard Moss MD
The original constitution approved by the framers in Philadelphia on September 17, 1787 did not have a Bill of Rights. When it went out to the states to be ratified, at each of the state-ratifying conventions there was a demand for a Bill of Rights. In the very first Congress, shepherded through by Representative James Madison, 12 amendments emerged that also went out to the states for ratification. On December 15, 1791, Virginia became the 10th state to ratify what became the first Ten Amendments to the Constitution, also known as the Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights, like the Constitution of which it is a part, codified and provided a framework for the principles of the Declaration of Independence, the principles of God-given, inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It protected free speech, religious freedom, and the right to bear arms. It ensured a fair and speedy trial. It defended against unnecessary search and seizure. It safeguarded due process and private property. It preserved individual and state rights. And much more. It primarily defended against an all-powerful central government. It is a landmark of liberty, individual sovereignty, and limited government. It along with the Magna Carta, the Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution, are the loftiest achievements of mankind, the greatest documents of liberty in all of human history, a uniquely American document.
While other nations maintained international norms and tribal precepts that concentrated power in the hands of one or a few, the framers embraced the opposite – radical, unorthodox ideas such as the rule of law, personal liberty, and free markets that decentralized power away from government and to the individual.  Ours was a nation unencumbered by a history of monarchy, aristocracy, or feudalism. From its inception, our nation was founded on liberty and individual dignity. From its birth, it has been an empire of freedom. As such it became the freest and most prosperous nation on earth, the pinnacle of Western Civilization, and model for the world. The Bill of Rights ensured that it would be ever so.
We quite properly honor that document today, on the anniversary of its founding, two hundred and twenty five years ago, the Bill of Rights.
December 15, 2016
Brief Bio: Richard Moss MD is a practicing Ear Nose and Throat Surgeon, author, and columnist who resides in Jasper IN. He recently lost his bid for the Republican nomination for Congress in Indiana’s 8th district. Find more of his essays and blog posts at exodusmd.com. Also find him on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.
“Well said. It was through the election of Donald Trump that we have preserved our rights which were given to us by God and protected by the Bill of Rights.
Thank you Dr. Moss for such a wonderful and accurate assessment of the “Bill of Right.”
Would you be so kind to write a column for our “newest” newspaper to come to Evansville?
Please send reply to , and thanks for being a great patriot, and for all you do.
Be happy to do. Check email. Best.
Nicely done Dr. Moss.
“Spread love and understanding. Use force if necessary”
Leon Trotsky
Good comment. The anti-Bill of Rights. The left.
Thanks. Have a Happy New Year.
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