In three quarters of the resolution adopted by the Senate, Congress proposed 33 amendments, four of which were officially awaiting the decision of state politicians. Beginning with the 18th revision, except for the 19th amendment and the child labor amendment that were unresolved in 1924, each proposed amendment has a definite deadline for approval. In the first 13th revision, which was the title of the nobility amendment proposed in 1810, any American citizenship is revoked from any foreign power, or from other aspects of aristocratic or honorary titles became. what?
The two previous amendments proposed by Congress will be the thirteenth fix, but not yet approved. The title of aristocratic revision was submitted to the state in 1810 and approved by 12 states; it will withdraw US citizenship of anyone who accepts the foreign nobleman or foreign payment title without Congressional approval . In December 1860, when Abraham Lincoln won the presidential election and the South was threatened to leave the league, another attempt to write the thirteenth revision bill began. The so-called Corwin fix - named after Ohio Republican Thomas Corwin. He served as the chairman to propose the amendment of the parliament who served as chairman of the 33rd committee. . At the request of President James Buchanan, 33 committees were set up to discuss amendments to deal with the split crisis, and the committee included representatives from each state.
In May 1810, Congress approved the amendment of the US Constitution to deprive all citizens from the foreign aristocratic title of US citizenship and to submit it to the Legislature for approval. However, proposed amendments, often referred to as "title of nobility amendment", are not approved by the required number of states and are not technically proposed in the state. In 1812, the core group of the Democratic Republican Parliament participated in a few people, and in May 1812 Madison was again nominated without objection. A rebellious group of New York democratic republics nominated a nephew of Vice President George Clinton who recently died in the 1812 election against New York Vice President DeWitt Clinton and Madison
If approved, the revision of the noble Protocol (proposed in 1810) will rob all citizens from the title of a foreign nobleman of US citizenship. When submitted to the state, it requires approval of 13 countries to become part of the Constitution; from the 11th century to the beginning of 1812 they have already done so. However, as Louisiana joined the league the same year (April 30, 1812), the approval standards rose to 14. Therefore, when the State of New Hampshire approved the amendment in December 1812, amendments were made again in the two approved states. Since then, other states have not approved this amendment. To become a part of the "Constitution" today, we need an additional 26 copies.