Happy Constitution Day, y'all! đ Connecting todayâs news with the research and opinion you need from TPPF experts.
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Extra Special Constitution Day Edition!
âA Glorious Liberty Documentâ
What to Know: Today marks the 233rd anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution. The event took place in Philadelphia in 1787. A yearly federal observance recognizes what Frederick Douglass called âa glorious liberty document.â ([link removed] )
The TPPF Take: Itâs especially important to honor the U.S. Constitution today.
âThere is no more pressing and timely issue facing the United States today than appreciating the principles behind the U.S. Constitution,â says TPPFâs Kevin Roberts. â2020 has been a year in which the U.S. Constitution and the principles which informed it have come under not implicit attack, but explicit attack. As we do at the Foundation, we decided to have an honest conversation about it.â
To watch Kevin and other TPPF experts, click here.
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Civic Literacy
What to Know: Thereâs an ongoing effort to strengthen civics education in our nationâs schools ([link removed] ) .
The TPPF Take: The Constitution is still the cornerstone of U.S. law, despite shocking levels of civic illiteracy.
âA growing number of state legislatures are taking on the civic literacy crisis,â says TPPFâs Tom Lindsay. âHere in Texas, a bill was signed by the governor that will require the embedding of 10 questions from the U.S. citizenship test into the junior year U.S. History end-of-course exam. If we are successfulâand we MUST be successfulâin restoring civics education, we may come again to understand why the Declaration and Constitution have been looked to by nations across the globe as both an inspiration and a model for their own reforms.â
For more on civic illiteracy, click here.
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Time to Open Texas
What to Know: Texas officials are changing the way they calculate and report COVID-19 dataâand the new numbers should provide more reliable guidance on reopening the stateâs businesses ([link removed] ) .
The TPPF Take: Itâs time to let Texans get back to work. The new (more accurate) numbers support this.
âPeople were already voluntarily practicing social distancing before governments made it mandatory,â says TPPFâs Vance Ginn. âBut the mandated lockdowns meant that many businesses had to close. Only about half of the more than 21 million Americans who lost their job through April have been rehired. We canât repeat this mistake.
For more on fear and COVID-19, click here.
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