do you agree that our constitution will be changed or amendments thereof will be executed?
Answers
Answer:
No
I do not agree with this.
Answer: mark brainlist
Explanation:LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Describe how the Constitution may be formally amended/changed.
Explain the contents and significance of the Bill of Rights.
Discuss the importance of amendments.
A major problem with the Articles of Confederation was the inability to adapt and change without unanimous consent. The framers learned this lesson well. One of the strengths they built into the Constitution was the ability to amend it to meet the nation’s needs and address concerns or structural elements they had not anticipated.
Since ratification in 1789, the Constitution has changed only 27 times. The first 10 amendments were added in 1791. Responding to charges by anti-federalists that the Constitution made the national government too powerful and provided no protections for the rights of individuals, the newly elected federal government tackled the issue of guaranteeing liberties for American citizens. James Madison, a member of Congress from Virginia, took the lead in drafting nineteen potential changes to the Constitution.
Madison followed the procedure outlined in Article V that says amendments can originate from one of two sources. First, they can be proposed by Congress and approved by a two-thirds majority in both the House and the Senate before being sent to the legislatures in all the states. If three-quarters of state legislatures vote to approve an amendment, it becomes part of the Constitution. A second method allows for the petitioning of Congress by the states: Upon receiving such petitions from two-thirds of the states, Congress must call a convention for the purpose of proposing amendments, which would then be forwarded to the states for ratification by the required three-quarters. All the current constitutional amendments were created using the first method.