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302 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 7, 2024
No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.Jacobs wanted to give his permission knowing that if the soldier misbehaves he has the right to kick him out. The first people in uniform that he approached declined—they probably thought he was a dangerous pervert. It was at this point that I was convinced he was pulling the reader’s leg (i.e. not being serious). But then he managed to get a soldier to stay in his apartment for three nights. Jacobs describes conversations with this soldier in such detail that I’m convinced that he’s reporting the truth.
Book Rating: 4.0 stars
I thoroughly enjoyed this look at the Constitution of the United States. I wish there'd been more perspectives from people of color and women.
I liked that the author talked about how the document was mostly meant to be treated and interpreted, as opposed to how it is treated and interpreted, which is vastly different. As well as how racist and sexist the founders, original document, and some amendments are.
The author also talked about how the balance of power has shifted over the years, how it's almost impossible to pass an amendment now, and how that's not how it's supposed to be. As well as how the government wasn't meant to be the two-party system it has become.