The U.S. Constitution
Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

U.S. Worldwide Caution: What It Means
You can tell a government message has landed when it stops sounding like policy and starts sounding like a group text: keep your passport close, avoid crowds, have a plan . On Oct. 19, 2023 , the U.S. State Department issued a rare Worldwide Caution (a global security alert) urging Americans...
Read more →
The Tate Brothers Arrested in Miami: The 38 New UK Charges, Extradition, and the Barron Trump Side Story
The Andrew and Tristan Tate story keeps resurfacing for a reason that is bigger than personalities and hotter than politics: it is a live demonstration of how modern justice systems interact across borders. This week, the brothers were taken into custody in Miami by the U.S. Marshals Service after...
Read more →
What Does “Nuke the Filibuster” Mean?
When a candidate says they want to “nuke the filibuster,” they are not talking about a constitutional amendment. They are talking about changing a Senate rule that currently lets a minority of senators block many bills unless the majority can reach a higher vote threshold to end debate. That...
Read more →
Can a State Defy the Supreme Court?
Every few years, an old American argument returns with a new headline: What if a state just refuses to go along with the Supreme Court? In recent weeks, that question flared up again after reports that a Hawaii state judge, speaking publicly, suggested the state should “defy” the Court. It is a...
Read more →
Wildberries Warehouse Hit in Elektrostal
In a war that has trained the world to watch maps of front lines, a warehouse fire in a Moscow suburb should not feel like a headline with strategic gravity. And yet that is exactly what made the Elektrostal strike go viral. The target was not a barracks or an airfield. It was a logistics hub tied...
Read more →
Why the Third Circuit Could Strike Down New Jersey’s AR-15 Ban
You can feel the modern Second Amendment debate in the vocabulary alone. One side says “assault weapon.” The other says “common semiautomatic rifle.” New Jersey’s restrictions on AR-15 style rifles and so-called large-capacity magazines have long depended on the first phrase. The...
Read more →
The 25th Amendment Explained: How Presidential Disability and Removal Work
The phrase “invoke the 25th” has become modern political shorthand for a very old anxiety: what happens if the President cannot do the job, and nobody can agree on it? That question flares up whenever a major public figure claims a President is cognitively unfit, medically impaired, or simply...
Read more →
Election Integrity, Voter Rolls, and Federal Power
When a high-profile political figure says new election-security intelligence has been declassified and released, the argument that follows is usually louder than the documents themselves. But the constitutional question underneath all the noise is actually straightforward. Who has the power to...
Read more →
Congressional Term Limits and the Constitution
Every time Congress has a very public reminder that its members are human and aging, the same question returns with fresh urgency: why can the people not just impose congressional term limits and be done with it? It feels like it should be easy. The House is elected every two years. The Senate...
Read more →
Trump Airport Backlash: Dulles Proposal and United
You can almost hear the modern American argument in the boarding announcement: now arriving at Washington Dulles . Then comes the online add-on that some viral posts and memes have pushed: also known as Trump International Airport . The backlash is not really about baggage claim or runway delays....
Read more →
Why “Friendly Reminder” Is Trending: The Tim Walz Pardon Controversy Explained
There are days when the internet hands us a word that sounds harmless and turns out to be a weapon. Today’s example is “Friendly” and, more specifically, the meme-format phrase “Friendly reminder.” The term is trending because high-engagement political accounts are using that faux-polite...
Read more →
Roger Waters on Tucker Carlson: The Hotel-Ban Claim and the ‘Absolute Devil’ Backlash
Roger Waters has always understood something most public figures try to avoid: controversy is not a side effect of politics, it is the fuel. But his July 17, 2026 appearance on Tucker Carlson’s show detonated for a different reason. It did not produce one viral moment. It produced two competing...
Read more →
Olive Garden’s Pasta Pass ID Meme, Explained
Olive Garden is trending for a reason that has nothing to do with a menu change, a corporate scandal, or a sudden national shortage of breadsticks. It is trending because politics on the internet has discovered one of its favorite devices: the everyday analogy. This time, the prop is the chain’s...
Read more →
When Police Take Your Guns Without a Hearing
When people hear the phrase “red flag” , they often picture a court order. A judge, evidence, a hearing, and a clear set of rules. But in a recent Long Island case, a family says something far less formal happened: police effectively disarmed two licensed gun owners based on a mental health...
Read more →
Abolish the Senate, Replace Capitalism: What Happens to Checks and Balances?
Every few years, American politics rediscovers an old temptation: if the system is frustrating, simplify it. Make it more direct. More majoritarian. More immediate. A recent video clip making the rounds online captures that impulse in its most blunt form. In it, Ashik Siddique, identified as a...
Read more →
Florida’s Campus Speech Fight Heads Toward En Banc
When a state tells a university professor, “You may discuss this idea, but only if you do it neutrally and without endorsement” , what exactly is being regulated: curriculum, or conscience? That is the knot now tightening in Pernell v. Fla. Bd. of Governors of State Univ. , a Florida case that...
Read more →
Can a Lawmaker’s Spouse Win a $2 Billion Courthouse Contract?
When a news story suggests that a major public construction contract could benefit the spouse of an elected official, the public question is immediate and reasonable: is that even allowed ? To be concrete, that question has circulated in Massachusetts in connection with U.S. Representative Ayanna...
Read more →
Birthright Citizenship and the 14th Amendment
Birthright citizenship is one of those American ideas that feels so basic we can forget it is also deeply technical. If you are born here, you are a citizen. In practice, that is how most people understand it. Except the 14th Amendment does not actually say “born here, therefore citizen” with...
Read more →
Protecting the Supreme Court Without Politicizing It
There is a certain civic magic in the idea that a Supreme Court justice can do the job, go home, and simply be a citizen again. Not a celebrity. Not a campaign surrogate. Not a target. Just a public servant who writes opinions that bind the nation. That picture is increasingly outdated. When...
Read more →
ABT Stock After Q2 2024: The Real Reason Abbott Rallied
Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT) did something that reliably lights up search engines: it reported an earnings quarter that was not dramatic on the surface, then gave the market a reason to breathe anyway. Q2 2024 results landed largely in line with Wall Street’s expectations. That is the part...
Read more →