
S1 E3 Toward an American Revolution with Jerry Fresia
11/14/21 • 78 min
Welcome to the Peaceful Political Revolution in America Podcast
If Bernie's regular castigation of the elites felt justified to you, you'll find this episode especially interesting. Today, I'm going to be talking about the people who gave us our constitution, the Framers. Who were they? What were their intentions? What kind of political system did they create? Does it explain the vast influence of the elites in our society today?
In his book, The Hidden History of American Oligarchy, Thom Hartmann writes, "If you were looking for a date when the American Oligarchy started, it would be January 30, 1976.
But our guest Jerry Fresia will explain to you why that's not quite true. It actually started on September 17, 1787. It was an overcast day in Philidelphia, the cool temperatures heralding the arrival of autumn as the Framers concluded their deliberations over the new Constitution.
Jerry Fresia's rather astounding book, Toward an American Revolution, could be titled the people's history of the U.S. Constitution. It is filled with stunning details about the Framers. Most of those facts have been buried away or happily forgotten by the American public. To our detriment, Americans have never fully come to terms with our Framers. In many ways, we have replaced their legacy with a more convenient fiction. Who were the people who created our constitution and gave birth to the world's greatest superpower?
There's a lot to unpack when it comes to the people who wrote our constitution, so let’s get started with an intense discussion about the untold history of the Framer's Constitution. Jerry Fresia is a political scientist and renowned artist. He received a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He has taught at numerous US colleges and universities. He left academia in 1989 and settled in San Francisco to pursue a career in painting. He has written extensively on both art and the political-economy of the United States. He currently lives in Bellagio Italy where he is best known for his remarkable Plein Air paintings of Lake Como.
https://www.amazon.com/Toward-American-Revolution-Constitution-Illusions/dp/0896082970
Welcome to the Peaceful Political Revolution in America Podcast
If Bernie's regular castigation of the elites felt justified to you, you'll find this episode especially interesting. Today, I'm going to be talking about the people who gave us our constitution, the Framers. Who were they? What were their intentions? What kind of political system did they create? Does it explain the vast influence of the elites in our society today?
In his book, The Hidden History of American Oligarchy, Thom Hartmann writes, "If you were looking for a date when the American Oligarchy started, it would be January 30, 1976.
But our guest Jerry Fresia will explain to you why that's not quite true. It actually started on September 17, 1787. It was an overcast day in Philidelphia, the cool temperatures heralding the arrival of autumn as the Framers concluded their deliberations over the new Constitution.
Jerry Fresia's rather astounding book, Toward an American Revolution, could be titled the people's history of the U.S. Constitution. It is filled with stunning details about the Framers. Most of those facts have been buried away or happily forgotten by the American public. To our detriment, Americans have never fully come to terms with our Framers. In many ways, we have replaced their legacy with a more convenient fiction. Who were the people who created our constitution and gave birth to the world's greatest superpower?
There's a lot to unpack when it comes to the people who wrote our constitution, so let’s get started with an intense discussion about the untold history of the Framer's Constitution. Jerry Fresia is a political scientist and renowned artist. He received a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He has taught at numerous US colleges and universities. He left academia in 1989 and settled in San Francisco to pursue a career in painting. He has written extensively on both art and the political-economy of the United States. He currently lives in Bellagio Italy where he is best known for his remarkable Plein Air paintings of Lake Como.
https://www.amazon.com/Toward-American-Revolution-Constitution-Illusions/dp/0896082970
Previous Episode

S1 E2 Thomas Paine and the Promise of America with Harvey J Kaye
Thanks to Bernie Sanders, "political revolution" has become part of today's vernacular. It's been used widely to describe the need for change on the system level and on the policy level. It's a powerful slogan and a very loaded term. Revolutions tend to be messy. Glorious one day, bloody the next. Political revolutions often end with someone's head on a pike or a neck under a guillotine.
Fortunately, that was not the case in 1787. Although our War of Independence in 1776 was a bloody battle, it was fought for more than just our independence. It was also a battle over a political idea. The idea that Americans would establish their own form of government was at the heart of the American experiment in democracy, and that idea became the first peaceful political revolution in the world in 1787. That idea came from Thomas Paine and it was the deeper and more powerful cause behind our independence. Sure, despots and kings would no longer rule over the people, but in addition, Americans would govern themselves, peacefully, by creating their own constitutions of government. This was the essence of the promise of America.
For the first time in history, the people would create their constitutions of government. It was a huge deal. The right to govern ourselves was what made America so admired around the world. That right is the fundamental cornerstone of our form of government and it is enshrined in all our founding documents. And although the constitution was written in secret, approved by the consent of a slim majority of delegates, and declared the law of the land in 1788, it remains the one we still use today. We have inherited this political system from our forefathers. It's not really our constitution anymore. None of us have had anything to do with it.
I want to continue the Peaceful Political Revolution in America podcast with a deeper dive into the importance of Thomas Pain because his ideas, more than any other American, shaped the destiny of the United States.
Peaceful Political Revolution is our American birthright, yet few Americans understand that or could tell you why. There are reasons why the story of Thomas Paine has been hidden from view. If we want to understand why his message was covered up and almost forgotten, we need to take a deeper dive into the life and times of Thomas Paine, and the events that followed his death in 1809. For that, I've reached out to Professor Harvey J Kaye, author of Thomas Paine and the Promise of America
Harvey J Kaye is Professor Emeritus of Democracy & Justice Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and an award-winning author and editor of 18 books on history and politics - his most recent titles are Take Hold of Our History: Make America Radical Again and FDR on Democracy. (But we are here to discuss his lifelong hero THOMAS PAINE - on whom he has written Thomas Paine and the Promise of America AND a young adult biography Thomas Paine: Firebrand of Revolution. )
He is an expert on Paine, and he wants you to be one too :)
Next Episode

S1 E4 Patterns of Democracy with Arend Lijphart
Welcome back to the Peaceful Political Revolution in America Podcast
I thought I'd jump ahead a little and discuss some of the basic changes we could make to our constitution which would actually make it a more democratic system of government. In this episode, I have the genuine pleasure to interview one of the leading experts on democratic forms of government. His seminal book, Patterns of Democracy is probably the best analysis in comparative democracies available today. We all need to know why.
Arend Lijphart's research focuses on comparative politics, elections and voting systems, institutions, and ethnicity and politics. His work has had a profound impact on the study of democracy and he is widely considered the leading authority on consociationalism. He is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, including Democracy in Plural Societies: A Comparative Exploration (1977), Democracies: Patterns of Majoritarian and Consensus Government in Twenty-One Countries (1984), Power-Sharing in South Africa (1985), Electoral Laws and Their Political Consequences (1986), Parliamentary versus Presidential Government (1992), Electoral Systems and Party Systems: A Study of Twenty-Seven Democracies (1994), and Patterns of Democracy: Government Forms and Performance in Thirty-Six Countries (1999; 2nd ed., 2012). Lijphart has received numerous awards throughout his prestigious career in recognition of his groundbreaking research, including the Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science, Aaron
Wildavsky Book Award, and honorary doctorates by the University of Leiden, Queen's University Belfast, and the University of Ghent. He was elected to serve as president of the American Political Science Association in 1995 and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the British Academy, and the Netherlands Academy of Sciences. Most recently, in 2010, he received the Constantine Panunzio Distinguished Emeritus Award in recognition of his unique and extensive contributions to the University of California, the discipline, and the world. He is also an acquaintance and I am especially happy to be having our first official Zoom meeting since we began exchanging emails almost 3 years ago. Welcome, Arend to the Peaceful Political Revolution in America Podcast. It's so wonderful to have you here.
Top Fixes to Our Constitution, in order of discussion:
Change Presidential System for Parliamentary System
Proportional Representation or Mixed Member Proportional Elections
Gerrymandering
Statehood for D.C. and Puerto Rico
Mandatory Voting
Abolish the Electoral College
Uniform National Voting Standards
Expand the Court to 17 Justices, Term Limits
Abolish Primaries
Fewer Elections
Term limits for Judges
Abolish the Senate
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