https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...nwA?li=BBnb7Kz
                                     
The Founders of the United States Constitution are often on the  defensive these days among democratic socialists and liberals like Sen.  Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). But that hasn't deterred Warren from  appealing to the Founders in her campaign to end the Senate filibuster.  Those who drafted and ratified the Constitution, Sen. Warren 
told  Axios, favored simple majority rule in both the House and Senate. The  filibuster is thus a corruption of the Founders' commitment to majority  rule.
     

    © Greg Nash  Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)   In fact, most of the men who participated in the drafting of the  Constitution had reservations about majority rule. Nowhere in the  original Constitution is majority rule mentioned, let alone recommended  as an attribute of popular governance. Under the Constitution the  majority rules by implication and out of pragmatic necessity. Majority  rule is implied by express provision for super majorities for conviction  in the case of impeachment, expulsion of members, overriding of  presidential vetoes and amendment of the Constitution - as well as by  provision for a vice presidential vote in the event of an even split in  the Senate.
   
 As a practical matter, majority rule is the only way for popular  government to function effectively, but to avoid the tyranny of the  majority, the Founders instituted various constraints on simple majority  rule.
Ratification of the Constitution required the agreement of  at least nine of the 13 states, thus allowing states containing as  little as 13 percent of the national population to nix the project.  After ratification, states with only seven percent of the national  population could defeat amendment. In the first Congress, senators  representing as little as one-third of the national population could  defeat legislation passed by the House. Presidential vetoes of  Congressional enactments could be sustained by senators representing as  little as 12 percent of the national population. These were not  provisions instituted by enthusiastic advocates of majority rule.
Federalism  and the enumeration of national powers, separation of powers with  judicial review of legislative and executive actions, a bicameral  legislature and explicit guarantees of individual liberty followed by  the Bill of Rights all served to limit majority rule. Had they thought  of it, the Founders might well have included something resembling the  filibuster in Article I. They did authorize each house to "determine the  Rules of its Proceedings" and one such rule that has served the  Founders' purposes is the filibuster.
On other issues Sen. Warren  might argue that we cannot be beholden to rules and practices enacted  for a different time just because the Founders thought them wise. To be  sure, we must adapt our institutions to circumstances the Founders could  not have imagined - But the circumstances we face today are exactly  those feared by the founding generation. Both parties have embraced a  winner-takes-all, we won you lost, understanding of democracy. When  Republicans controlled the Senate during the Obama administration, they  stymied every Democratic initiative because they had the votes. Today,  with the narrowest margin possible in a divided Senate, Democrats seek  to impose their agenda on a similarly divided nation. The filibuster is  the only thing that stands in their way.
In 
Federalist 10,  James Madison warned of factions "united and actuated by some common  impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other  citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community."
"If  a faction consists of less than a majority," wrote Madison, "relief is  supplied by the republican principle, which enables the majority to  defeat its sinister views by regular vote." But "when a majority is  included in a faction, the form of popular government . . . enables it  to sacrifice to its ruling passion or interest both the public good and  the rights of other citizens."
A Senate equally divided between  Republicans and Democrats should instill humility in both parties. But  as the Founders understood, passion and interest have the opposite  effect.
In the name of democracy, Democrats seek to impose their  will with only the slim margin of the vice president's tie-breaking vote  - not what the Founders envisioned.
"To secure the public good  and private rights against the danger of . . . [majority] faction, and  at the same time to preserve the spirit and the form of popular  government" wrote Madison, "is then the great object to which our  inquiries are directed."
Contrary to Sen. Warren's suggestion that  the filibuster counters the Founders' belief in majority rule, Madison  would likely think it a brilliant innovation for preventing majority  tyranny and preserving the spirit and form of popular government.
James  L. Huffman is a professor of law and the former dean of Lewis &  Clark Law School in Portland, Ore. He was the Republican nominee in the  2010 U.S. Senate election in Oregon. Follow him on Twitter @JamesHu41086899.
Typical lies and Hypocrisy of lizzie and her DPST criminal cabal 
revising history in her own marxist light is typical - and the usual lies of Lizzie and her  marxist cabal. 
DPST's have no shame in their Lies and propaganda - they learned their techniques from Goebbels - and very well. 
They are planning to extinguish representative democracy in favor of marxist  totalitarianism of teh woke radical communists. 
Be afraid - Be very afraid what they plan to do to American citizens!