-Caveat Lector-

http://onion.com/onion3847/bill_of_rights.html

WASHINGTON, DC�Flanked by key members of Congress and his administration, President
Bush approved Monday a streamlined version of the Bill of Rights that pares its 10 
original
amendments down to a "tight, no-nonsense" six.


http://graphics.theonion.com/pics_3847/bill_of_rights.jpg

Above: As supporters look on, Bush signs the Bill Of Rights Reduction And 
Consolidation Act.
A Republican initiative that went unopposed by congressional Democrats, the revised 
Bill of
Rights provides citizens with a "more manageable" set of privacy and due- process 
rights by
eliminating four amendments and condensing and/or restructuring five others. The Second
Amendment, which protects the right to keep and bear arms, was the only article left
unchanged. Calling the historic reduction "a victory for America," Bush promised that 
the
new document would do away with "bureaucratic impediments to the flourishing of
democracy at home and abroad." "It is high time we reaffirmed our commitment to this
enduring symbol of American ideals," Bush said. "By making the Bill of Rights a tool 
for
progress instead of a hindrance to freedom, we honor the true spirit of our nation's
forefathers." The Fourth Amendment, which long protected citizens' homes against
unreasonable search and seizure, was among the eliminated amendments. Also stricken
was the Ninth Amendment, which stated that the enumeration of certain Constitutional
rights does not result in the abrogation of rights not mentioned. "Quite honestly, I 
could
never get my head around what the Ninth Amendment meant anyway," said outgoing House
Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX), one of the leading advocates of the revised Bill of
Rights. "So goodbye to that one." Amendments V through VII, which guaranteed the right 
to
legal counsel in criminal cases, and guarded against double jeopardy, testifying 
against
oneself, biased juries, and drawn-out trials, have been condensed into Super-Amendment
V: The One About Trials. Attorney General John Ashcroft hailed the slimmed-down Bill of
Rights as "a positive step." "Go up to the average citizen and ask them what's in the 
Bill of
Rights," Ashcroft said. "Chances are, they'll have only a vague notion. They just know 
it's a
set of rules put in place to protect their individual freedoms from government 
intrusion, and
they assume that's a good thing."


http://graphics.theonion.com/pics_3847/bill_of_rights_jump.jpg

Above: Bush works on revisions to the Bill of Rights. Ashcroft responded sharply to 
critics
who charge that the Bill of Rights no longer safeguards certain basic, inalienable 
rights.
"We're not taking away personal rights; we're increasing personal security," Ashcroft 
said.
"By allowing for greater government control over the particulars of individual 
liberties, the
Bill of Rights will now offer expanded personal freedoms whenever they are deemed
appropriate and unobtrusive to the activities necessary to effective operation of the 
federal
government." Ashcroft added that, thanks to several key additions, the Bill of Rights 
now
offers protections that were previously lacking, including the right to be protected by
soldiers quartered in one's home (Amendment III), the guarantee that activities not
specifically delegated to the states and people will be carried out by the federal 
government
(Amendment VI), and freedom of Judeo-Christianity and non-combative speech
(Amendment I). According to U.S. Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID), the original Bill of Rights, 
though
well-intentioned, was "seriously outdated." "The United States is a different place 
than it
was back in 1791," Craig said. "As visionary as they were, the framers of the 
Constitution
never could have foreseen, for example, that our government would one day need to jail
someone indefinitely without judicial review. There was no such thing as suspicious 
Middle
Eastern immigrants back then." Ashcroft noted that recent FBI efforts to conduct
investigations into "unusual activities" were severely hampered by the old Fourth
Amendment. "The Bill of Rights was written more than 200 years ago, long before anyone
could even fathom the existence of wiretapping technology or surveillance cameras,"
Ashcroft said. "Yet through a bizarre fluke, it was still somehow worded in such a way 
as to
restrict use of these devices. Clearly, it had to go before it could do more serious 
damage
in the future." The president agreed. "Any machine, no matter how well-built, 
periodically
needs a tune-up to keep it in good working order," Bush said. "Now that we have the 
bugs
worked out of the ol' Constitution, she'll be purring like a kitten when Congress 
reconvenes
in January�just in time to work on a new round of counterterrorism legislation." "Ten 
was
just too much of a handful," Bush added. "Six civil liberties are more than enough."








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