I thought at first you were saying the the country's principles are in the constitution. But I guess you're saying that the principles are elsewhere--and only some of those principles made it into the nation's founding documents. That makes sense, but then it becomes a matter of cherry-picking--which Founders, which of their documents (letters, writings, speeches)--are emblematic of "the principles".
For example, do we take as principal the part of Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia where he condemns slavery or the part where he advocates apartheid? Or the part where he says that black people are inferior to whites?
Where are these principals that aren't in the Constitution or the D of I, but should still guide us? As seems obvious in the larger political sphere--especially in the debates about the place of Christianity--people will pick documents that suit their views.
Anyway, it seems like a problematic position to hold.






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wacco's! "Logic" and "facts": 

...S2T; I think maybe you are becoming (or at least one of) the wacco resident 



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