Abstract

Government after War - Signs of the Present Time

Dewey, Stoddard | December 7, 1916 issue

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One surprise of this war for the average American is the continued cropping up of the question whether government shall be constitutional. He knows that the Supreme Court's business is to judge it a law of Congress or act of Government be unconstitutional, but it never occurs to him in everyday experience that national government itself may be something else than constitutional. Perhaps the essential condition of free government may yet be found in something which was an object of the U.S. President's foresight at the very beginning of this war-federal government.

See Also:

PRESIDENTS -- United States; FEDERAL government; WAR; COURTS -- United States; CONSTITUTIONS; UNITED States
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