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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

When Police Take Your Guns Without a Hearing

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...

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Abolish the Senate, Replace Capitalism: What Happens to Checks and Balances?

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...

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Florida’s Campus Speech Fight Heads Toward En Banc

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...

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Why Gainbridge Fieldhouse Is Trending in Indianapolis

Why Gainbridge Fieldhouse Is Trending in Indianapolis

When a building starts trending, it usually means the internet is asking a practical question, not a philosophical one. Where is it? What’s happening there? How do I get in? Where do I park? What time do doors open? And which entrance matches my ticket? That is the story behind periodic spikes in...

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Oracle’s 52-Week Low and the AI Buildout Backlash

Oracle’s 52-Week Low and the AI Buildout Backlash

In a recent drawdown, Oracle’s stock slipped to a fresh 52-week low. The move looked, at first glance, like the usual market morality play. A red number appears, and the crowd assumes something snapped overnight. But the more revealing story is slower. Oracle was being repriced not because the...

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Can a Lawmaker’s Spouse Win a $2 Billion Courthouse Contract?

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...

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Birthright Citizenship and the 14th Amendment

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...

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Protecting the Supreme Court Without Politicizing It

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...

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ABT Stock After Q2 2024: The Real Reason Abbott Rallied

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...

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Why Jake Johnson Is Suddenly Everywhere

Why Jake Johnson Is Suddenly Everywhere

Jake Johnson is trending for a reason that feels almost quaint: a lot of people realized they have been watching him for years, and they finally wanted the name to match the face. This is not a scandal cycle or a breaking-news spiral. It is a recognition reset: highly recognizable, low tabloid...

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Why Marco Rubio Is Trending: The “Far-Left Political Terrorism” Summit

Why Marco Rubio Is Trending: The “Far-Left Political Terrorism” Summit

Marco Rubio is trending because he became the public face of a live diplomatic event with a built-in search hook: a U.S.-convened global summit held July 16, 2026 at the State Department focused on what State Department materials and Rubio’s public remarks described as “far-left political...

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Why “Ind vs Eng” Is Trending in the US

Why “Ind vs Eng” Is Trending in the US

“Ind vs Eng” looks like a simple sports shorthand. In practice, it is a match-day query. When it climbs on Google Trends in the United States , it usually means a lot of fans are trying to verify, in real time, what is happening in India vs England and how to follow it: start time in their...

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Can a President Fire a U.S. Attorney? What the Seattle Removal Shows

Can a President Fire a U.S. Attorney? What the Seattle Removal Shows

The headline out of Seattle feels like a civics exam written by a prankster: a U.S. attorney , Roger Rogoff, was sworn in by federal judges and then reportedly removed within the hour after an announcement by Todd Blanche. People searching today are not really asking about one officeholder. They...

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Why Dick Durbin Is Trending

Why Dick Durbin Is Trending

Dick Durbin is usually not the headline. He is the institutional voice in the room, the senator who asks the follow-up when the cameras are drifting away. So when his name trends, it is usually because he has become a hinge between two things Americans care about but rarely connect: how Congress...

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Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh: The Viral US Search Spike, Explained

Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh: The Viral US Search Spike, Explained

When a cricket match trends in the United States, it usually looks like a mystery for about five minutes. Why would Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh spike on Google in a country where most sports bars cannot tell a T20 from a Tuesday? USConstitution.net does not usually do sports. But the Constitution is a...

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Prince Harry’s Nightmare Week, Charles Reunion, and the “Full-Time Dad” Fight

Prince Harry’s Nightmare Week, Charles Reunion, and the “Full-Time Dad” Fight

Prince Harry is trending because the internet is not reacting to one headline. It is reacting to a stack of them that, together, revive a long-running question of the post-Megxit era: what is Harry’s relationship to the monarchy now , and what does he want his life to mean outside it?...

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Can ICE Use Traffic Stops?

Can ICE Use Traffic Stops?

When a political figure calls the traffic stop one of ICE’s “most important” tools, it turns a practical tactic into a constitutional question. Can ICE use traffic stops? Sometimes, yes. But in the United States, a “stop” is not a casual conversation. It is a Fourth Amendment seizure ,...

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Can a Special Counsel Collect Lawmakers’ Texts?

Can a Special Counsel Collect Lawmakers’ Texts?

News stories about a special counsel “scooping up” text messages involving dozens of members of Congress land with a particular kind of constitutional charge. Not because texts are inherently sacred, but because of who is collecting them and whose communications are being collected. When the...

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The Vanishing Jury Trial

The Vanishing Jury Trial

The Sixth Amendment promises what sounds like a civic birthright: the accused can demand a “speedy and public trial” before an “impartial jury.” Article III backs it up. The Declaration of Independence even lists the loss of jury trials as a hallmark of tyranny. So here is the question I...

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Can the President Rewrite a Grant?

Can the President Rewrite a Grant?

Federal money always comes with a catch. The question is: who gets to write the catch? On Thursday, a federal judge in California drew a bright line between what Congress funds and what a President can demand in exchange for releasing those funds. U.S. District Judge William Orrick issued a...

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