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Reconstruction, Industrialization, and the Rise of the New Constitution: A Second Founding
See how the Civil War and Reconstruction shattered the original constitutional order. In this episode, we’ll explore the Fourteenth Amendment—how it transformed the Constitution from a pact among states into a charter of individual rights enforceable by the federal government. We’ll examine how industrialization and national markets created pressures that dual federalism couldn’t contain. And we’ll meet the Lochner Court—the judges who tried to protect economic liberty while
Oct 25, 20251 min read


Reconstruction, Industrialization, and the Rise of the New Constitution
When the Civil War ended, the United States was not the same nation that had gone to war four years earlier. The bloodletting had settled the question of state sovereignty by force, but the peace that followed redefined individual sovereignty by law.
The Reconstruction Amendments—the 13th, 14th, and 15th—marked a second founding. They transformed the Constitution from a pact among states into a national charter of rights that bound the states themselves.
Oct 6, 20257 min read
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