Constitution of the United States Version 2.0
Preamble
We hold these truths to be self evident that a government’s sole purpose and responsibility is to protect the prosperity and well being of the citizens of the United States by doing whatever is necessary without encroaching on the individual liberty and privacy held by the people.
Article I: The Capital
The capital of the United States is to be established in the center most point of the nation.
Article II: Congress
Section 1:
The governing body of these states will be composed of one senate made up of four departments of equal representation from all states.
Section 2:
The senate is composed of four representatives from each state represented in the Union. These senate members must be over the age of 30 with a college education and have been citizens of the United States for 30 years.
Members of the senate receive payment from the individual states they represent. However, no governmental aid will be given to states that cannot afford their representative’s salaries. These salaries are to be paid out yearly.
There exists no term limits for individuals involved in Congress, nor is there any guarantee to an amount of time in congress. Failure to abide by the citizens requests results in all assets being frozen
The four departments of the senate will exist as the department of the defense, homeland security, domestic affairs, and foreign affairs. All four of these departments must be present in every congressional meeting. The head of the department of the defense exists as the commander and chief of the entire arsenal of the United States. These departments are separate but united in the law making process.
The rights of these departments are to be established as follows.
The department of defense handles the formation and preservation of the armed forces and the arsenal of the United States. The members of this department must have a military background.
The department of homeland security handles and establishes all necessary institutions to protect and provide the security of American citizens at home and abroad. They are responsible for working with the department of defense in successfully maintaining the countries borders through armed and cautionary means.
The department of domestic affairs is responsible to responding to the needs of the constituency.
The department of foreign affairs is responsible for creating policy in order to handle foreign relations with surrounding nations.
All departments are part of congress and the senate and no department is to have any exemptions to the law or the fundamentals of congress.
Section 3:
The four representatives for each state are to be nominated by the people of the states through state conventions. The constituency reserves the power to remove and replace government officials at any time through organized petition. There are no costly campaigns.
Representatives are required to live in their state of origin.
Section 4:
Legislative representatives are required to report back to their states after every session of congress is completed.
Reserved by the senate is the responsibility and power to declare war and maintain a national defense, dispatch the necessary aid in relief of a natural disaster, establish the necessary taxation, maintain peace and order, allow states and regions into the union, print money, create treaties, and remain responsive to the individuals they represent.
The senate is also required to make or revise the national budget quarterly.
The senate must adjourn 12 times a year, dates to be determined by need and congress.
Law making limited to 12 times a year, in other words, a limit of 12 laws per year are allowed to be created. If the limit is exceeded, a previously established law must be dropped.
In order for a law to be passed, constituency must present an issue to their senator and there must be one-hundred percent agreement and one-hundred percent inclusion of any and all the ideas presented by congress in some way.
Article III: Executive Office
Section 1:
A single president will represent the United States. This representative will serve as the head diplomat to foreign nations and serve as the figurehead of the union.
Section 2:
The requirements for the stated executive office is to be a natural born citizen that is well traveled throughout the world and familiar with alternative cultures. He or she is voted for by the people and will remain in office for a six-year term. He or she must be over 40 years old.
The executive office gets paid a six-year salary based on the average income of the senators a part of the senate. The funds for his or her salary are derived from national taxes.
Section 3:
The executives duties are primarily to be an example of the nation, be the primary diplomat, oversee congressional meetings and call them when they are needed or when he is contacted by any senate member to do so, report to the nation based on the state of things, and serve as an active member in congress, grant and retrieve citizenship, and serve as the assistant commander and chief to the head of the department of the defense. It is also the executive’s job to make sure the budget is enforced and to establish a plan for education that is then sent down to the states and enforced.
Article IV: Judicial Establishment
Section 1:
The national justice system will be based on seven chief justices over the age of 35 with 35 years of citizenship.
Section 2:
These justices, like congressional leaders, will have no guarantees and no limits to their terms of service in the public office.
The nation will be divided into 7 judicial districts based on population and the people within each district appoint, and demote, their chief justice when needed.
Justices receive a salary from the district they represent.
Section 3:
The primary function of the judicial establishment of the union is to hold congress and the executive office accountable for their actions. They remain involved immediately in the law making process. They are required to sit-in in all-congressional sessions and reserve the right to veto and cancel laws based on constitutionality so that the liberties and the rights of the citizens are not infringed upon.
When the president is not present the justices preside over the congress, restricted by their duties.
They are not to be involved in law making; they simply serve as judges of the law to make sure they do not infringe upon the citizens.
The power to resolve national and state issues concerning the law is held by the judicial branch
Article V: State’s Rights
Section 1:
Individual states have the right to maintain a republican form of government that establishes laws protecting the well being of citizens within the states. They also carry the right to succeed, enforce laws, establish justice, and be protected by the national government.
Even though they carry the right to maintain their individual governments, the national government is the supreme power of the land.
State conventions are held to promote the election of another representative and demote the use of the current representatives for each state.
Section 2:
States have the right to establish their own justice systems, however national government and the chief justice of their region sets the precedent and requirements for speedy and fair justice.
Section 3:
The economies are based on individual production of products and the necessary taxations that do not burden the public excessively.
Article VI: Citizenship
Section 1:
Citizens are entitled to equal opportunity, free speech, peaceful petition and assembly, press, speedy trial by jury, religion, and privacy.
Citizenship requires voting rights and the right to bear arms in aiding self-preservation. Everything else is a privilege and attainable.
The national language is established as English.
Citizens cannot be jailed without the court knowing why, unless the citizens are avoiding the law.
Section 2:
Immigration regulations include the submission of a registration from the foreign individual, five years of productive and responsible citizenship, and the acquisition of English. Following that procedure the individual can apply for citizenship, take a vow of allegiance, and receive citizenship. No fees for applying for citizenship. If an individual is found to be unproductive, irresponsible or exceeds the five-year limit of registration, the individual is deported.
Article VII: Voting
Section 1:
Legal voting age for citizens is 18 years of age.
Section 2:
Votes cast by the citizens for the senate representatives are to be collected individually by the state governments and counted based on majority.
Section 3:
Votes cast for district justices are to be collected by the individual states within each district and sent to their representatives in the senate where they will count the highest amount of votes per candidate per state and declare the winner.
Section 4:
Votes cast for the executive office are to be collected regionally and sent to the justice of the region who will establish the vote of his or her region by majority.
Section 5:
Tiebreaker situations are to be handled by the volume of states, counties, or regions that voted for each candidate. There must always be an odd number of counties within each state and states within each region.
Article VIII: Economics
Section 1:
A national bank is to be establish and overseen by the president, managed buy congress, and judged by the judicial court accordingly. The stated national bank will collect taxes and revenue from trade and product production within the union.
Section1:
Budget agenda is required to accommodate the needs of the people with military and education being the top two priorities in the budget.
Section 2:
A flat tax rate is enforced on all registered individuals in the union. The overall economy is to be based on creating more than is traded.
Section 3:
Welfare is to be privatized and reserved for the citizens of each community to establish and consolidate any welfare for the less fortunate.
Section 4:
Healthcare is privatized but rates remain constant and affordable based on minimum wage statistics.
Article IX: Unstated conflicts
Conflicts that arise and are not clarified by this document must be debated within congress and presented to the people of the judicial districts where four out of seven votes are needed to pass the resolution.
Preamble
We hold these truths to be self evident that a government’s sole purpose and responsibility is to protect the prosperity and well being of the citizens of the United States by doing whatever is necessary without encroaching on the individual liberty and privacy held by the people.
Article I: The Capital
The capital of the United States is to be established in the center most point of the nation.
Article II: Congress
Section 1:
The governing body of these states will be composed of one senate made up of four departments of equal representation from all states.
Section 2:
The senate is composed of four representatives from each state represented in the Union. These senate members must be over the age of 30 with a college education and have been citizens of the United States for 30 years.
Members of the senate receive payment from the individual states they represent. However, no governmental aid will be given to states that cannot afford their representative’s salaries. These salaries are to be paid out yearly.
There exists no term limits for individuals involved in Congress, nor is there any guarantee to an amount of time in congress. Failure to abide by the citizens requests results in all assets being frozen
The four departments of the senate will exist as the department of the defense, homeland security, domestic affairs, and foreign affairs. All four of these departments must be present in every congressional meeting. The head of the department of the defense exists as the commander and chief of the entire arsenal of the United States. These departments are separate but united in the law making process.
The rights of these departments are to be established as follows.
The department of defense handles the formation and preservation of the armed forces and the arsenal of the United States. The members of this department must have a military background.
The department of homeland security handles and establishes all necessary institutions to protect and provide the security of American citizens at home and abroad. They are responsible for working with the department of defense in successfully maintaining the countries borders through armed and cautionary means.
The department of domestic affairs is responsible to responding to the needs of the constituency.
The department of foreign affairs is responsible for creating policy in order to handle foreign relations with surrounding nations.
All departments are part of congress and the senate and no department is to have any exemptions to the law or the fundamentals of congress.
Section 3:
The four representatives for each state are to be nominated by the people of the states through state conventions. The constituency reserves the power to remove and replace government officials at any time through organized petition. There are no costly campaigns.
Representatives are required to live in their state of origin.
Section 4:
Legislative representatives are required to report back to their states after every session of congress is completed.
Reserved by the senate is the responsibility and power to declare war and maintain a national defense, dispatch the necessary aid in relief of a natural disaster, establish the necessary taxation, maintain peace and order, allow states and regions into the union, print money, create treaties, and remain responsive to the individuals they represent.
The senate is also required to make or revise the national budget quarterly.
The senate must adjourn 12 times a year, dates to be determined by need and congress.
Law making limited to 12 times a year, in other words, a limit of 12 laws per year are allowed to be created. If the limit is exceeded, a previously established law must be dropped.
In order for a law to be passed, constituency must present an issue to their senator and there must be one-hundred percent agreement and one-hundred percent inclusion of any and all the ideas presented by congress in some way.
Article III: Executive Office
Section 1:
A single president will represent the United States. This representative will serve as the head diplomat to foreign nations and serve as the figurehead of the union.
Section 2:
The requirements for the stated executive office is to be a natural born citizen that is well traveled throughout the world and familiar with alternative cultures. He or she is voted for by the people and will remain in office for a six-year term. He or she must be over 40 years old.
The executive office gets paid a six-year salary based on the average income of the senators a part of the senate. The funds for his or her salary are derived from national taxes.
Section 3:
The executives duties are primarily to be an example of the nation, be the primary diplomat, oversee congressional meetings and call them when they are needed or when he is contacted by any senate member to do so, report to the nation based on the state of things, and serve as an active member in congress, grant and retrieve citizenship, and serve as the assistant commander and chief to the head of the department of the defense. It is also the executive’s job to make sure the budget is enforced and to establish a plan for education that is then sent down to the states and enforced.
Article IV: Judicial Establishment
Section 1:
The national justice system will be based on seven chief justices over the age of 35 with 35 years of citizenship.
Section 2:
These justices, like congressional leaders, will have no guarantees and no limits to their terms of service in the public office.
The nation will be divided into 7 judicial districts based on population and the people within each district appoint, and demote, their chief justice when needed.
Justices receive a salary from the district they represent.
Section 3:
The primary function of the judicial establishment of the union is to hold congress and the executive office accountable for their actions. They remain involved immediately in the law making process. They are required to sit-in in all-congressional sessions and reserve the right to veto and cancel laws based on constitutionality so that the liberties and the rights of the citizens are not infringed upon.
When the president is not present the justices preside over the congress, restricted by their duties.
They are not to be involved in law making; they simply serve as judges of the law to make sure they do not infringe upon the citizens.
The power to resolve national and state issues concerning the law is held by the judicial branch
Article V: State’s Rights
Section 1:
Individual states have the right to maintain a republican form of government that establishes laws protecting the well being of citizens within the states. They also carry the right to succeed, enforce laws, establish justice, and be protected by the national government.
Even though they carry the right to maintain their individual governments, the national government is the supreme power of the land.
State conventions are held to promote the election of another representative and demote the use of the current representatives for each state.
Section 2:
States have the right to establish their own justice systems, however national government and the chief justice of their region sets the precedent and requirements for speedy and fair justice.
Section 3:
The economies are based on individual production of products and the necessary taxations that do not burden the public excessively.
Article VI: Citizenship
Section 1:
Citizens are entitled to equal opportunity, free speech, peaceful petition and assembly, press, speedy trial by jury, religion, and privacy.
Citizenship requires voting rights and the right to bear arms in aiding self-preservation. Everything else is a privilege and attainable.
The national language is established as English.
Citizens cannot be jailed without the court knowing why, unless the citizens are avoiding the law.
Section 2:
Immigration regulations include the submission of a registration from the foreign individual, five years of productive and responsible citizenship, and the acquisition of English. Following that procedure the individual can apply for citizenship, take a vow of allegiance, and receive citizenship. No fees for applying for citizenship. If an individual is found to be unproductive, irresponsible or exceeds the five-year limit of registration, the individual is deported.
Article VII: Voting
Section 1:
Legal voting age for citizens is 18 years of age.
Section 2:
Votes cast by the citizens for the senate representatives are to be collected individually by the state governments and counted based on majority.
Section 3:
Votes cast for district justices are to be collected by the individual states within each district and sent to their representatives in the senate where they will count the highest amount of votes per candidate per state and declare the winner.
Section 4:
Votes cast for the executive office are to be collected regionally and sent to the justice of the region who will establish the vote of his or her region by majority.
Section 5:
Tiebreaker situations are to be handled by the volume of states, counties, or regions that voted for each candidate. There must always be an odd number of counties within each state and states within each region.
Article VIII: Economics
Section 1:
A national bank is to be establish and overseen by the president, managed buy congress, and judged by the judicial court accordingly. The stated national bank will collect taxes and revenue from trade and product production within the union.
Section1:
Budget agenda is required to accommodate the needs of the people with military and education being the top two priorities in the budget.
Section 2:
A flat tax rate is enforced on all registered individuals in the union. The overall economy is to be based on creating more than is traded.
Section 3:
Welfare is to be privatized and reserved for the citizens of each community to establish and consolidate any welfare for the less fortunate.
Section 4:
Healthcare is privatized but rates remain constant and affordable based on minimum wage statistics.
Article IX: Unstated conflicts
Conflicts that arise and are not clarified by this document must be debated within congress and presented to the people of the judicial districts where four out of seven votes are needed to pass the resolution.