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  • - [Kim] Hi, this is Kim from Khan Academy

  • and today I'm learning more about Article VI

  • of the U.S. Constitution.

  • Article VI is as we'll soon see

  • kind of a constitutional grab bag.

  • It covers debts, religious tests for office

  • and it establishes the Constitution

  • as the supreme Law of the Land.

  • To learn more about what binds these diverse ideas together,

  • I sought out the help of two experts.

  • Kermit Roosevelt is a Professor of Law

  • specializing in constitutional law and conflict of laws

  • at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

  • And Michael Ramsey is Professor of Law

  • and Director of International and Comparative Law programs

  • at the University of San Diego's School of Law.

  • So let's start out talking

  • about the debts portion of Article VI.

  • Professor Roosevelt, why were the framers

  • so interested in debt?

  • What was the historical context that led them

  • to explicitly address debt in Article IV?

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] Well, debt is important generally

  • because nations often need to borrow money.

  • And specifically with the Constitution

  • and the Articles of Confederation, the U.S. government

  • had been borrowing money to pay for the Revolutionary War.

  • So there was a question we're moving

  • from a sort of loose confederation,

  • almost like a treaty between nations,

  • under the Articles of Confederation,

  • to a single unitary country

  • with a stronger national government under the Constitution.

  • And there's a question, is it still the same country?

  • Will the new United States pay the debt?

  • So the old United States.

  • - [Professor Ramsey] Now, there's a general principle

  • of international law that a successor government

  • undertakes the obligations of the predecessor.

  • So you wouldn't necessarily think this would be a problem

  • but I think they were particularly concerned

  • because the idea of a republic was a somewhat new,

  • and at least in the 18th century a somewhat unusual one.

  • And the change of a republican government

  • might cause some worries in Europe

  • where this money was owed.

  • So I think they just wanted to reassure all of the creditors

  • that even if they were changing their method of government,

  • that that wasn't going to effect any of the debts.

  • - [Kim] What might have happened had they decided

  • not to pay those debts?

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] If they had decided

  • not to pay the debts, then other countries

  • would probably have been much less willing

  • to lend money to the new United States.

  • Because they might have thought,

  • well you know another change in government could occur.

  • - [Professor Ramsey] There was substantial question

  • throughout the world whether the United States

  • would be able to survive in the face of all the challenges

  • that they had after gaining their independence.

  • So in order to make it seem that the United States

  • was a country that could be trusted,

  • a country that could be expected to stick around

  • and not collapse in the chaos or revert to colonial status,

  • one of the most important things for them

  • was to show that the debts would be honored.

  • Because a failure to honor debts

  • would suggest that the country did not in fact

  • have true sovereignty and was not prepared to be an actor

  • on the international stage that could be trusted.

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] Another interesting thing

  • to contrast this to is the treatment of debts

  • after the Civil War.

  • Where of course the United States, the federal government,

  • paid its own debts but there's a provision

  • in the 14th amendment explicitly repudiating

  • the Confederate debt.

  • So if you loaned money to the Confederate States of America,

  • you're never getting that back.

  • Because we didn't treat that as a valid government

  • that would be continued going forward.

  • - [Professor Ramsey] Another thing that it illustrates

  • is that the Constitution in some respects

  • was a visionary document that was concerned

  • with the long term future of the United States

  • but in other respects, it responded to very immediate,

  • practical problems that the framers faced in their day.

  • They were thinking about not just the future

  • of the country for the ages, they were thinking about that

  • but they weren't thinking just about that.

  • They were also thinking about reassuring France

  • with respect to the debts that existed right at that moment.

  • - [Kim] So there's a lot going on in Article VI

  • and specifically it talks about the Constitution

  • as the supreme Law of the Land.

  • So what's important about that statement?

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] What's important about that

  • is that it means the Constitution is our highest law.

  • It prevails over any other kind of law in a conflict.

  • So one thing that that means

  • is the Constitution is supreme over state law.

  • And then the Constitution actually goes on

  • to talk about that a little bit more.

  • But it also means the Constitution is supreme

  • over federal law.

  • So everyone is bound by the Constitution.

  • The states can't go against it, congress can't go past it,

  • the president can't violate constitutional restrictions.

  • The Constitution is really the last word.

  • It's the pinnacle or the keystone

  • of the arch of American democracy.

  • - [Professor Ramsey] And that's why we can say

  • that things are unconstitutional,

  • that laws are unconstitutional and therefore invalid.

  • And most importantly, it's why the Supreme Court can say

  • that laws are unconstitutional and invalid.

  • It creates a superior law that limits the laws

  • that can be passed by the other parts of the government.

  • It creates a hierarchy of laws and in doing so,

  • it assures that we have a single set of rules

  • that applies to all the states and to the federal government

  • and it can't be changed except by an amendment.

  • Which is relatively difficult to do.

  • There's a procedure in the Constitution

  • for how you can amend the Constitution

  • but until amending, the Constitution as written

  • is our superior law.

  • And that was different from the way that the framers,

  • the rules the framers were used to under the English system,

  • where they didn't have a written Constitution.

  • They had an unwritten Constitution but that Constitution

  • was subject to change by Parliament.

  • - [Kim] So has this supremacy

  • of the Constitution been tested over time?

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] There haven't been a lot

  • of claims that the Constitution is not supreme.

  • So generally speaking, everyone gives

  • at least lip service to this idea.

  • What's been tested is more the question

  • of who gets to decide what the Constitution means

  • and when something conflicts with it.

  • So if you want the Constitution

  • and federal law to be supreme,

  • probably you would want to have someone

  • in the federal government deciding

  • when there's a conflict say with state law.

  • And the forms that resistance has taken over the years

  • are more states saying

  • not you know we can go against the Constitution,

  • we're above the Constitution,

  • but states saying we don't think what we're doing

  • violates the Constitution.

  • Right, and you the Supreme Court, you think it does

  • but you're wrong.

  • - [Professor Ramsey] In the 19th century,

  • just before the Civil War,

  • the Supreme Court decided in the Dread Scott case

  • that African Americans could not be citizens

  • to the United States even if they were freed slaves.

  • And President Lincoln believed that that was wrong.

  • He said that there was nothing in the Constitution

  • that denied the ability of them to be citizens.

  • And he said that the Supreme Court

  • had misinterpreted the Constitution

  • and he would not accept the Supreme Court's ruling

  • in that regard.

  • Later, in the 20th century, the Supreme Court held

  • that the Constitution barred segregation

  • particularly in schools

  • in the Brown versus Board of Education case.

  • But many southern governors and other institutions

  • throughout the south thought

  • that the Supreme Court had gotten that one wrong.

  • And they refused to abide by what the Supreme Court had said

  • the Constitution means.

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] What they said was not

  • the Constitution doesn't bind us

  • but we know what the Constitution means

  • better than you Supreme Court, you're wrong,

  • you're making this up, it's political, it's not judging.

  • - [Kim] Another thing that Article VI talks about

  • is religious tests.

  • Why were the framers so interested

  • in preventing religious tests in government?

  • What sort of historical evils were they trying to prevent?

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] So this is connected

  • to the basic idea of the separation of church and state.

  • And you separate church and state

  • really to protect both of those things.

  • So you want to protect religion from being corrupted

  • by political considerations

  • but you also want to protect your political system

  • from being a battle ground between rivaled religions.

  • - [Professor Ramsey] So where this comes from is

  • that in England, they had had a series

  • of what they called Test Acts.

  • And what the Test Acts did was it required

  • that for people to be eligible for government offices

  • that the people had to be members of the Church of England.

  • And that other religious groups,

  • they were barred by the Test Acts

  • from holding government office.

  • So actually, many of those minority religions,

  • many adherence of those ended up coming

  • to the American Colonies to gain some measure

  • of religious freedom.

  • The pilgrims were an example of that.

  • There was a Catholic colony in Maryland.

  • And just generally speaking, many of the people,

  • many of the colonists who came over

  • were people who were not part

  • of the main established church in England.

  • And so you can see why they would not want to have

  • something like the Test Acts.

  • And they wanted to make clear

  • that in the new national government

  • that any religion, or no religion

  • would be allowed for government office holders.

  • - [Kim] Do you think it's true

  • that we don't have religious tests or oaths

  • in the United States?

  • How about the practice of swearing on a Bible

  • during the presidential inauguration?

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] Well the practice of swearing

  • on a Bible is very interesting as is the fact

  • that when the president recites the oath of office,

  • every president going back to George Washington

  • has added on to the end of it, so help me God.

  • There's actually an oath in the Constitution

  • the president has to swear to preserve,

  • protect and defend the Constitution

  • but the Constitution doesn't say so help me God.

  • The presidents just add that on on their own.

  • And actually that sort of illustrates the way

  • in which the Constitution treats religion.

  • Which is it can't be part of government

  • in an official sense.

  • But we know that members of government are also people

  • and they have religious beliefs that are important to them

  • and we don't demand that they exclude religion

  • from their lives, we just demand

  • that it be separated from government authority.

  • So you can swear on a Bible if you want to,

  • you don't have to.

  • You can swear on some other religious book.

  • We had a member of congress

  • take an oath of office on a Quran.

  • So individual government officials are allowed to

  • include religion in so far as it's about them personally.

  • You know, what you think is appropriate

  • to mark this occasion.

  • What solemnifies this oath for you.

  • You can do that.

  • But we can't require it and they can't make

  • the exercise of their power religious in nature.

  • So you can't, you know as a government official,

  • exercise your power on religious grounds.

  • - [Kim] Something that strikes me about Article VI

  • is that is addresses so many different things.

  • Do you have a sense of why

  • debts and constitutional supremacy and religious tests

  • are all in one article?

  • - [Professor Ramsey] The Article VI, as you said,

  • is a little bit of a grab bag.

  • It's not entirely clear how these different pieces

  • of Article VI relate to each other.

  • And I think they were just things that the framers

  • wanted in the Constitution and didn't know for sure

  • where else to put them.

  • - [Professor Roosevelt] I'm not exactly sure

  • why the debts are there.

  • If I had to say something about Article VI

  • it would be it's sort of the glue

  • that holds the constitutional architecture together.

  • So maybe the debts are in there to explain the continuity

  • between the U.S. government

  • under the Articles of Confederation

  • and U.S. government under the Constitution.

  • Then the supremacy clause explains

  • how all of the different parts

  • of the federal system are supposed to fit together.

  • And what the supremacy clause is saying

  • is the Constitution is above all of them.

  • The Constitution connects them all.

  • Everyone has to abide by the Constitution.

  • And it tells you, you know the Constitution

  • is the highest law, then you've got federal law

  • and then below that is state law

  • so that if there's a conflict

  • between federal law and state law,

  • the federal law is gonna win.

  • And then the last part of Article VI

  • is sort of doing the same thing.

  • Because what holds a country together?

  • What binds people into a single people?

  • In a lot of countries at the time of the founding,

  • it was religion.

  • Right, religion was the glue

  • that held the society together

  • and if you weren't a member of that religion,

  • you were an outsider, you were a second class citizen,

  • you would be shunned

  • and not given equal rights in some ways.

  • The last clause of Article VI says something sort of similar

  • about America except it explicitly says

  • it's not religion that binds us together.

  • Right, no religious tests can be required

  • but you do have to take an oath.

  • What do you have to pledge to support?

  • You have to pledge to support the Constitution.

  • So there again is telling you the Constitution

  • is what we all have in common.

  • That's what makes us Americans.

  • That really is the glue that binds our society together.

  • - [Kim] So we've learned that Article VI is,

  • as Professor Roosevelt put it,

  • the glue that binds the country together.

  • In assuming the debts

  • from the era of the Articles of Confederation,

  • Article VI established the continuity of U.S. government.

  • It also placed the Constitution, not religion,

  • as the supreme law of the United States.

  • To learn more about Article VI,

  • visit the National Constitution Center's

  • Interactive Constitution

  • and Khan Academy's resources

  • on U.S. government and politics.

- [Kim] Hi, this is Kim from Khan Academy

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憲法第六条|国立憲法センター|カーンアカデミー (Article VI of the Constitution | National Constitution Center | Khan Academy)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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