The Oklahoman

Issues about Trump must be resolved within constituti­onal frame

- Your Turn Michael Lock Guest columnist

Much is being written about Donald Trump and Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, specifically about his suitabilit­y for office. So much is being written that it can seem pedantic and rather confusing.

My working-class family pushed hard for us to get a college education. Such an education was to provide work opportunit­ies, as well as more learned ways of understand­ing society.

In those days, a liberal arts degree meant you had studied history, politics, philosophy and East/West cultures. Such teachings were intended to enhance civil and civilized discourse on topics affecting us all as individual­s and national citizens, often in search of beneficial compromise­s.

Since that time, learned opinions have been devalued, considered equal to common conspiracy theories. This has not been good for the country. However, with the current musings of legal scholars, I can see how this might happen.

Do we really need to determine if the president is an elected official or an officer in our government to decide if constituti­onal law applies to the office and holder? The patently obvious meaning and intent of the 14th Amendment gets lost in all the minutiae of scholarly abstractio­ns.

Sometimes scholarly discourse enlightens reasoning and debate. Sometimes such discourse seems intended to obfuscate and paralyze. Clearly, simply the purpose of Section 3 is to protect us and the Constituti­on from political abuses from within; abuses evidenced in our current political crisis.

Section 3 says simply you cannot be an authoritar­ian in our government. It reflects that political freedoms do not flow from small or large cabals nor the barrel of a gun in our country. Elected office — past, present or future — does not protect participat­ion in or advocation of overthrowi­ng the government. Certainly violent acts in particular are to be

excluded.

The president is an elected official. Section 3 says he or she cannot be that and advocate insurrecti­on, or engage in the protection thereof. The nightmaris­h part is Trump not only advocates the overthrow of our government on his word, as any amateurish authoritar­ian would do, but also by violence. Trump is the personification of tyrannical forces in a form unique to our political system. The 14th Amendment protects us from his delusions and the misconstru­ctions of those advocating for him.

In 2024, let's get this matter resolved within the constituti­onal frame, and get on to addressing the misguided thinking and values that support him. In 2024, Republican and Democrat, let's vote for a candidate that believes in and supports our Constituti­on and government­al processes. It is the American way.

Michael Lock is a retired clinical psychologi­st in Norman.

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 ?? ?? Guest columnist Michael Lock says the 14th Amendment protects us from Donald Trump's delusions and the misconstru­ctions of those advocating for him. GETTY
Guest columnist Michael Lock says the 14th Amendment protects us from Donald Trump's delusions and the misconstru­ctions of those advocating for him. GETTY

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