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When Daniel J. Tekunoff first discovered the defect in Article V of the US Constitution, he didn't know if there would ever be a feasible solution. It would take him five years to craft the best way to fix the serious issues the article raises.
Article V has one major problem: it does not provide a method for electing delegates to a future Article V convention.
Tekunoff proposes a simple solution. He wants to create a new amendment called the Tricameralism Amendment. In his new guide, Tekunoff takes you step by step through the legal and constitutional history that makes such an amendment not only possible but necessary.
Tekunoff covers
- the structural defects of the Constitution,
- the history of the Bill of Rights and Congress's failure to complete it,
- the importance of organizing a new constitutional convention,
- the benefits and intricacies of the Tricameralism Amendment,
- the concept of American exceptionalism, and
- the resources you need to fully understand the facts and petition your own representatives for a new convention.
Tekunoff's work gives you new insight not only into Article V but also into the Constitution as the foundation for American politics.
Daniel J. Tekunoff first discovered the defect in Article V of the US Constitution fifteen years into his legal career. Five years later, Tekunoff discovered a potential solution in The Federalist Papers, specifically "Federalist No. 51." He then set to doing the research to back up the proposed solution.
Tekunoff has been certified as a minimum continuing legal education provider by the State Bar of California and created a two-hour seminar for lawyers, "The Article V Defect and the Original Representation Error: History, Analysis, and Proposed Solution." He now lectures on Article V and its issues.
Tekunoff was born and raised in Fresno, California. He received his bachelor's degree in anthropology from the University of California, Los Angeles, and his law degree from the Loyola Law School, Los Angeles. He also studied international and comparative law for Russia and Poland through the University of San Diego School of Law.
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