America did not invent constitutional government in 1787.
The first constitutions written in the New World were extensions of royal charters granted to the thirteen Crown colonies. They already defined authority, limited power, structured offices, and bound governors to law. What Americans ratified in 1788 was not a novel form of government, but the transfer of sovereignty from Crown to People within an already-existing constitutional tradition.
Mistaking that transfer for invention proved fatal.
By believing the Constitution was something we created, Americans came to believe it was something we could manage—reinterpret, expand, suspend, or correct when inconvenient. Fidelity gave way to ingenuity. Obedience gave way to interpretation. Responsibility gave way to power.
The world accepted the myth. And America paid the price.
After nearly 250 years, the United States has been incorporated into existence but has never matured. It behaves like a corporation that confuses innovation with legitimacy and adaptability with wisdom. Constitutional violations are excused as policy disagreements. Oaths are treated as ceremonial. The Constitution survives not because it is obeyed, but because it is rhetorically admired.
A constitution that is understood as an invention can be improved.
A constitution that is understood as an inheritance must be honored.
America chose the first. History is now demanding the second.
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