Obviously you disagree with it, but it is not meaningless psycho-babble. It's called rhetoric, and it's an interpretation of the situation we are in. Although one cannot foresee the future, I would bet a gold coin that we will never experience an Executive administration in our lifetime that relinquishes any real power, and likewise for the Legislature the vast majority of the time. Nor do I think that the intentions or the words of the founders or the Constitution will have much to do with our future. We are "past that" and are living in a modern time under different rules, yet those rules are hardly concrete. Hence the rule of man being different from the rule of law.
Furthermore, I did not say Amendments were easy; just that they are not as difficult as you suggest. There is a fairly clear framework to work with, and working around it is not the best solution, in my view. On average, we've had one at a rate of about every four years. If you count the Bill of Rights as one, then we've had one about every 12 years. We've had at least one in our lifetimes.
Additionally, I think you are wrong about there not being a difference between a formal DoW and Congressional support for military action. A formal DoW or a formal equivalent (UNSC "DoW") functionally promotes an eventual end state; a state in which one nation capitulates or both agree to terms. Now, four years longer than our involvement in WW2, and about seven years longer than Desert Storm, we don't seem surprised about our long wars in this fast-paced age. "The nature of the enemy necessitates our strategy." Right...
It's a curious, and dubious, situation.
Furthermore, I did not say Amendments were easy; just that they are not as difficult as you suggest. There is a fairly clear framework to work with, and working around it is not the best solution, in my view. On average, we've had one at a rate of about every four years. If you count the Bill of Rights as one, then we've had one about every 12 years. We've had at least one in our lifetimes.
Additionally, I think you are wrong about there not being a difference between a formal DoW and Congressional support for military action. A formal DoW or a formal equivalent (UNSC "DoW") functionally promotes an eventual end state; a state in which one nation capitulates or both agree to terms. Now, four years longer than our involvement in WW2, and about seven years longer than Desert Storm, we don't seem surprised about our long wars in this fast-paced age. "The nature of the enemy necessitates our strategy." Right...
It's a curious, and dubious, situation.