Proposed Amendments
Twelve structural reforms across three categories. Each one fixes a flaw in how the system operates. Together they provide oversight in government limiting the abuse of power under of a Bill of Structural Integrity. The only ones that will be complaining are the ones abusing it.
These are not the only amendments the United States needs. But none of the others will matter if the structure stays broken. Laws get rewritten. Executive orders expire. Court rulings get reversed.
To understand just how outdated the U.S. Constitution is, compare it to the rest of the world. Out of 224 constitutions analyzed through the Constitute Project, most countries already protect things the U.S. still argues about. Here, those same issues get turned into political fights that keep people divided and politicians in control and benefiting from it. The topics below aren't what the amendments on this site address. They show what should be fixed no matter what side you are on. But first we have to cure the disease instead of masking the symptoms.
Free & Fair Elections
These four amendments are interdependent. Amendment No. 1 establishes the independent body that enforces the other three. The current Federal Election Commission was built by the two parties to avoid oversight, not provide it.
Rule of Law
These four amendments are also interdependent. Amendment No. 5 establishes a Constitutional Court and restructures the judiciary foundation that Amendments 6, 7, and 8 build on.
Checks & Balances
These four are independent, but not four separate problems. They fix what happens when a country lacks oversight and rules on enforcement.
No. 10