Constitution 2050

In these five stories, Raymund Eich posits new amendments to the United States Constitution.


Amendments written to better bestow the blessings of liberty on the American people and their posterity.


Amendments that those same American people, ranging from common men and women to Presidents, try to evade for personal gain.


The Twenty-Eighth Amendment


President Archer faced a Middle East crisis. The audio-visual recording crew following his every public move limited how he could resolve the crisis. Or did they?


The Twenty-Ninth Amendment


It didn't matter if Gretchen Archer knew what her father had done. It mattered if she should have known.


The Thirtieth Amendment


Born to an illegal immigrant, Gonzalo had a chance to live and work in the United States. If he demonstrated fluency in the English language. Others had the same chance... and would pass the test by hook or by crook.


The Thirty-First Amendment


Empowered to pass a law restricting the practice of any religion other than Christianity or Judaism, Congress passed the 9/11 Memorial Act forbidding the practice of Islam. But if devout Muslims may eat Jewish food, what's a kosher butcher to do?


The Thirty-Second Amendment


By chance, President Edward Slovachek could appoint three Supreme Court justices. Enough to tilt the Court to uphold a controversial law he supported. In the halls of the Senate, he could force through his appointments—but at what price?

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Constitution 2050

In these five stories, Raymund Eich posits new amendments to the United States Constitution.


Amendments written to better bestow the blessings of liberty on the American people and their posterity.


Amendments that those same American people, ranging from common men and women to Presidents, try to evade for personal gain.


The Twenty-Eighth Amendment


President Archer faced a Middle East crisis. The audio-visual recording crew following his every public move limited how he could resolve the crisis. Or did they?


The Twenty-Ninth Amendment


It didn't matter if Gretchen Archer knew what her father had done. It mattered if she should have known.


The Thirtieth Amendment


Born to an illegal immigrant, Gonzalo had a chance to live and work in the United States. If he demonstrated fluency in the English language. Others had the same chance... and would pass the test by hook or by crook.


The Thirty-First Amendment


Empowered to pass a law restricting the practice of any religion other than Christianity or Judaism, Congress passed the 9/11 Memorial Act forbidding the practice of Islam. But if devout Muslims may eat Jewish food, what's a kosher butcher to do?


The Thirty-Second Amendment


By chance, President Edward Slovachek could appoint three Supreme Court justices. Enough to tilt the Court to uphold a controversial law he supported. In the halls of the Senate, he could force through his appointments—but at what price?

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Constitution 2050

Constitution 2050

by Raymund Eich
Constitution 2050

Constitution 2050

by Raymund Eich

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Overview

In these five stories, Raymund Eich posits new amendments to the United States Constitution.


Amendments written to better bestow the blessings of liberty on the American people and their posterity.


Amendments that those same American people, ranging from common men and women to Presidents, try to evade for personal gain.


The Twenty-Eighth Amendment


President Archer faced a Middle East crisis. The audio-visual recording crew following his every public move limited how he could resolve the crisis. Or did they?


The Twenty-Ninth Amendment


It didn't matter if Gretchen Archer knew what her father had done. It mattered if she should have known.


The Thirtieth Amendment


Born to an illegal immigrant, Gonzalo had a chance to live and work in the United States. If he demonstrated fluency in the English language. Others had the same chance... and would pass the test by hook or by crook.


The Thirty-First Amendment


Empowered to pass a law restricting the practice of any religion other than Christianity or Judaism, Congress passed the 9/11 Memorial Act forbidding the practice of Islam. But if devout Muslims may eat Jewish food, what's a kosher butcher to do?


The Thirty-Second Amendment


By chance, President Edward Slovachek could appoint three Supreme Court justices. Enough to tilt the Court to uphold a controversial law he supported. In the halls of the Senate, he could force through his appointments—but at what price?


Product Details

BN ID: 2940163031603
Publisher: CV-2 Books
Publication date: 02/25/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 978 KB

About the Author

Raymund Eich files patent applications, earned a Ph.D., won a national quiz bowl championship, writes science fiction, and affirms Robert Heinlein’s dictum that specialization is for insects.


In a typical day, he may talk with biochemists, electrical engineers, patent attorneys, and rocket scientists. Hundreds of papers cite his graduate research on the reactions of nitric oxide with heme proteins.


His novels include the Stone Chalmers series of wormhole espionage adventures—THE PROGRESS OF MANKIND, THE GREATER GLORY OF GOD, TO ALL HIGH EMPRISE CONSECRATED, and IN PUBLIC CONVOCATION ASSEMBLED—the Confederated Worlds military science fiction series—TAKE THE SHILLING, OPERATION IAGO, and A BODYGUARD OF LIES—and evolutionary psychology hard science fiction novel NEW CALIFORNIA.


He lives in Houston with his wife, son, and daughter.


Learn more at www.raymundeich.com.

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