That Heritage Foundation document is a chilling read. Those people have so much power already and yet they are working on how to take it all. They also emanate the feeling that they are not only entitled to it but would be for the best of all of the little folk too.
They have a roadmap for how to insert amendments into the Constitution without a popular mandate. This from
@Bagginski discusses how:
ttps://alec.org/publication/article-v-handbook/
Our democracy is not secure from them. They don't even feel democracy is valid. At this time, they don't have control of enough states. Let's hope this remains true.
The link between the Heritage Foundation and ALEC is, of course, Charles Koch. Owner of pretty much the
entire ‘libertarian’ mind space, think-tanks, & apparatus. Hard core political aristocrat, wants (in effect) a government no longer listens to the populace but to the wealthy.
One truly noteworthy quirk about the power of a constitution: it has the power to replace the constitution itself, given ratification by the states in the prescribed fashion (need to freshen my data on that)
I’ve put this up before, but this is Nancy McLean, author of Democracy in Chains, talking about how she came to gain access to the office and contents of economist James Buchanan, founder of the ‘Virginia school’: the professional and private correspondence, and work product thereof, and of what she found in the process of sorting through the papers in his office which had lain undisturbed since his death.
She doesn’t tell “the story of the book” beyond that, nor does she try to synopsize its contents. It’s an important book, people should read it, and she makes a case for doing so.