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public opinion poll conducted during the 200th
anniversary of the U.S. Constitution in 1987 found that most Americans were
woefully ill-informed about the content and meaning of the document. Only a
bare majority knew that the purpose of the Constitution was to create a federal
government and define its powers. Nearly half believed that the Constitution
contains Karl Marx's phrase "From each according to his ability, to each
according to his need."
Well over half of those surveyed believed:
· The president, acting alone, can appoint a justice to the Supreme
Court.
· The Constitution established English as the national language.
· The Constitution guarantees the right to a free public education.
Here are some other findings
from the survey:
·
Almost half of those surveyed mistakenly thought that a Supreme Court
decision can never be overruled.
·
Nearly half believed that a president can suspend constitutional
liberties in a time of national emergency.
·
Eighty-five percent thought that any important case may be appealed from
state courts to the Supreme Court.
· 46 percent of adult Americans did not know
that the purpose of the Constitution was to create a federal government and
define its powers.
· 26 percent believed that the Constitution's
purpose was to declare independence from England.