Monday, November 24, 2025

Why Some Americans Still Don’t Understand How Government Works

And Why That’s Becoming a National Problem

I’ve had arguments with my conservative brother for decades — long before he slipped into the MaGA orbit. What stands out now is how much he sounds like the people in the new movie Sovereign: convinced the government is illegitimate, certain he’s discovered “hidden” truths, and armed with court cases he pulled from somewhere online.

The pattern is the same across the country. Millions of Americans have embraced a worldview where the Constitution is fixed in 1789, the federal government is illegitimate whenever it displeases them, and any law they don’t like is automatically “unconstitutional.”

It’s not just wrong — it’s dangerous. Sure, I agree with some of their complaints. Some they are right on, not as many as they wish to believe, some they think they are right on and it sounds and feels good, but there are good reasons or bad, it's not how it is in reality. Some of their issues are in concept good, but in reality, either make no sense, or aren't possible due to how America has evolved. 

More importantly, it reveals something deeper: they fundamentally misunderstand how the American system actually works.

Here’s why this belief system is so persistent, and why people get the Constitution, the law, and the government wrong in the same ways.

It's like the unconstitutional and illegal militia issue and the 2nd Amendment nonsense. But I digress and have discussed ad nauseum


1. They Don’t Know That Law Evolves — Constantly

A surprising number of people think the Constitution is a list of unchanging rules written in stone. They believe:

  • if a law isn’t in the original text, it’s invalid

  • if a court case says something they like, it’s “forever true”

  • if a regulation exists, it’s “tyranny”

But the truth is simple:

American law only works through evolution.

Every generation has added the interpretations, refinements, and court decisions that make it usable. Without 200+ years of case law, the Constitution is too vague to govern a modern nation.

Most of the cases these folks cite have been overturned or limited long ago. They just… don’t know it.


2. They Believe in a Mythic America That Never Existed

For many people on the extreme right, their version of America isn’t historical — it’s emotional. It’s a story about rugged individualism, small government, pure liberty, and the founders as flawless prophets.

The problem?
The actual founders:

  • disagreed with each other constantly

  • changed their minds

  • compromised

  • regretted things they’d written

  • expected the country to evolve

  • designed a system that must grow to survive

Jefferson himself later contradicted things MAGA loves to quote. But myth is more comfortable than reality.


3. Sovereign-Citizen Thinking Has Merged With MAGA

The “you can’t tax me,” “the government is illegitimate,” “states are sovereign,” “federal law is optional” attitude didn’t start with MAGA — it’s straight out of the sovereign-citizen movement.

The two ideologies have fused.

They follow the same script:

  • I only accept laws I like.

  • I only accept election results I agree with.

  • I only accept government authority when it benefits me.

It’s constitutional cosplay — not constitutional literacy.


4. It’s About Identity, Not Information

This part matters:

Most people who say “I’ve read the Constitution” haven’t.
What they’ve read is a Facebook-tier translation of what they want the Constitution to say.

Correcting them doesn’t work because the belief isn’t rooted in evidence — it’s rooted in identity.

Rejecting government becomes a way of saying:

  • I’m in control.

  • I’m smarter than the experts.

  • I refuse to feel powerless.

It’s emotional self-protection wearing the mask of political philosophy.


5. America Has Evolved for 200+ Years — And That’s the Point

When someone says, “That’s not how the Constitution was originally written,” they’re accidentally making the opposite argument:

Yes — it isn’t.
Because we updated it.
Because we amended it.
Because we corrected mistakes.
Because society changed and the law changed with it.

If we froze America in 1789, then:

  • slavery is legal

  • women can’t vote

  • states can ban any religion

  • corporations don’t exist

  • no national currency

  • no federal protections

  • no civil rights

  • no modern economy

Nobody actually wants that country — but many want the fantasy of it.


6. The Founders Knew This Day Would Come

Jefferson didn’t want his early 30s phase worshipped as sacred doctrine.
Madison warned that tyranny could rise from inside the American system.
Washington warned that factionalism could destroy democracy.
Hamilton warned about charismatic demagogues.
Franklin warned about citizens becoming complacent and uninformed.

They didn’t expect Americans to freeze the country in amber.
They expected future generations to be adults, adapt, and face reality.


So What Are People Getting Wrong?

Everything in this worldview boils down to one central misunderstanding:

They think government exists to validate their preferences.
When it doesn’t, they declare it illegitimate.

They mistake discomfort for tyranny.
They mistake disagreement for oppression.
They mistake democracy for persecution.
And they mistake mythology for history.


Why This Matters

We now face a movement that believes:

  • the law only applies when it benefits them

  • the Constitution means whatever they want it to mean

  • modern government is “illegitimate”

  • elections are valid only when they win

That’s not conservatism.
It’s not even politics.

It’s a step toward something the founders feared more than anything:
rule by grievance, not rule by law.


Final Thoughts

America survived 200 years because we accepted — even embraced — the evolution of law, society, and government. The danger today isn’t disagreement over policy. It’s the rise of a whole subculture living in a fantasy Constitution that never actually existed.

Understanding that is the first step in pushing back against it — not to change their minds, but to prevent their mythology from rewriting our reality.

In the end, if you are wrong about these beliefs, the cost is not theoretical, it is human. I understand that many people truly believe they are right, but belief alone does not make a worldview accurate or sustainable. 

So the real question becomes: what are you actually fighting for, and is it worth the damage it can cause? 

All the arguments, the fractured relationships, the tension in your home or community, these add up and affect everyone around you. This mindset also tends to attract people who are naturally obstinate or contrary, people who feel empowered by resisting anything placed in front of them. 

At what point does that shift from a personality trait into a sign that something deeper is going on, something that brushes up against issues of mental health? At some point this stops being about debate and becomes about quality of life, yours, your family's, your neighbors', and the strangers whose lives intersect with yours. 

And if these convictions ever escalate into real-world confrontation or life-threatening situations, what value remains in a belief system that requires harm, or demands that you risk your own life or the lives of those you love? 

And what of the people you do not know, the ones with families who will grieve them? 

That is the true weight of being wrong about something this big.

And if, or where you ARE correct? Fight your fights sensibly, but fight as I do so many other things, especially dangerous things, to live to fight another day. I've done many dangerous things in my life, in such a way as to be able to do them again, another time. I partied hard at times in life, but in a healthy way. I had friends who did not give any care to themselves toward sustainably seeking their preferred activities. I'm still here. They are not. 

So fight to win. But also fight your fight to fight another day.

Otherwise, your fight, is over. And it's all...just moot.

Cheers! Sláinte! Na zdravie!

Compiled with aid of ChatGPT


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