『THE MISSING AMENDMENT』のカバーアート

THE MISSING AMENDMENT

THE MISSING AMENDMENT

著者: FRANKIE
無料で聴く

The Missing Amendment is a 10‑minute journey into the constitutional story America never finished. Each episode uncovers the women who shaped our laws, the rights the Constitution overlooked, and the battles still unfolding today. From the Founding Era to the Equal Rights Amendment to modern Supreme Court cases, this podcast brings clarity, history, and humanity to the fight for equality. If you’ve ever wondered why women’s rights remain contested — and who has pushed the Constitution forward — this is your guide.

世界 政治・政府 政治学
エピソード
  • Who Counts as a Person? The illusion of the 14th Amendment
    2026/07/13

    Who counts as a person? This is not, in my opinion, as complicated a question as members of SCOTUS might have us believe. In this episode, I briefly discuss the absurdity of Citizens United, then walk back to the late 19th Century and Myra Bradwell, the woman who pushed for her autonomy in law and practice. (This podcast is my interpretation of the case, the history, and the 14th Amendment

    Reference: Citizen's United v Federal Election Commission, 2010

    Reference: Bradley v Illlinois, 1873

    Reference: https://constitutioncenter.org/the-constitution/amendments/amendment-xiv

    Reference: https://www.casebriefs.com/blog/law/family-law/family-law-keyed-to-weisberg/being-married-regulation-of-the-intact-members/bradwell-v-illinois/

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    11 分
  • Abigail Adams and "Remember the Ladies"
    2026/07/06

    In 1776, as the men of the Continental Congress debated independence and imagined a new nation, Abigail Adams wrote to her husband, John Adams, and asked him to do something radical:“remember the ladies.” In that same letter, she warned against giving husbands “such unlimited power” and wrote, “all men would be tyrants if they could.”

    Abigail Adams did not have a podium. She had a voice.

    She was not signing a founding document. She was writing from home, from the margins of official power — and yet she saw with startling clarity what the architects of the nation were building, and who they were leaving out. She understood that if a country was going to be born in the language of liberty while ignoring women, that contradiction would not disappear. It would harden into law, custom, marriage, property, politics, and everyday life. Her warning came at the beginning. The consequences are still with us.

    www.masshis.org

    Library of Congress: https://www.loc.gov

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    11 分
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