Damus
Schmittbox · 146w
No. United States. Nothing. One of the most perfect documents ever written. Timeless. It needs to be READ and UNDERSTOOD By all Citizens and ESPECIALLY Elected Officials.
NEW1 · 146w
I would always change the constitution to fit the modern times in any country. It would be for the benefit of the many not the few. The only constant is change.
ThatSysOp · 146w
German here: While i am overall relatively happy with our "Grundgesetz" i would like more direct democracy like in switzerland
sms · 146w
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhSqzANQvbk
sirfabel · 146w
France: be able to fire a president
Zach · 146w
Nope. Having a document as a backbone is an important element of stability. Lately I see the same in BTC arguments about block size or high fees. That not changing the protocol on a whim is a strength. For a government’s constitution it’s the same.
HolySats · 146w
Great question! I would add a constitutional right to pay in physical cash and Bitcoin to oppose the #CBDCs. I would then proceed to rewrite the article about censorship. We, the Czechs have enough experiences with state controlled censors - we were a communist ruled country. Our modern constit...