Post #68213
March 20, 2016, 05:50:39 PM
As I've said before, I went through a step by step process with creating the Amendment. First I asked what style of legislature was wanted, then I wrote it out article by article, asking for input along the way. When it was finished, it was taken up by the Underhusen, which went through much the same process twice-over and made their own edits to it as a result. This whole thing probably took the better part of two months and was probably the most open process we've had since the original Constitutional Convention. There was no lack of opportunity for people to voice issues, for sure.
As far as I can tell, the opposition is composed of three groups:
1) People opposed to any open assembly that had vocalized their feelings the entire time
2) People that participated in the Convention but fell quiet
3) People that never made their feelings known and came out of the woodwork during ratification
It's the third group that I'm most concerned about, because how do you get people on board for any major change if a significant portion of people aren't paying attention until the last minute? And that's what I think it came to...people that didn't pay attention to either the Convention or the Storting while they were debating this Amendment, and only became aware of it at ratification or from conversations stemming from the ratification vote. Considering the long, open process this took, I think it's a huge failure of the democratic portion of our government.
I'm worried that we're repeating it now in your topic and in others that have resulted from this issue. It seems to me that other than Hannah and Chanku (and including others that aren't participating because they oppose any open assembly), most of the people participating in these topics are the same people that supported the Amendment as it was. I honestly can't help but wonder if an amended Amendment would meet the same fate.