The 18th was classic progressive? What kind of drugs are you on? Prohibition was the work of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, hardly a progressive bunch. It was an attempt by right wing Christians to jam their ideology down everybody else's throats, and its unintended consequence was the creation of organized crime, just as the current prohibition (aka"the war on drugs") has created the murderous drug cartels, and has turned major portions of Afghanistan and Central and South America into narco-states. Prohibition of things identified as social evils, like abortion, alcohol, pot, dancing, interracial dating, homosexuality, hell even heterosexuality if it occurs outside the confines of marriage, and oral or anal sex regardless of sexual identity, and sex education, and birth control (LET'S JUST CALL IT WHAT IT IS: THE ANTI-RECREATIONAL SEX AGENDA) is not even remotely progressive. Progressives don't give a shit about prohibiting any of that, and you clearly don't know shit about progressives. Banning "social evils" is the bailiwick largely of the so-called "social conservatives," also known in the media as "low-information voters," and known to those of us with functioning brains as "IGNORANUSES" (yes, that's spelled correctly).
The 17th corrected one of the founders' few errors, the feeling that there needed to be an upper house appointed by state legislatures to balance out the peoples house, antidemocratic in theory, and in practice so much worse. The unintended consequence of the original provision was a senate full of party hacks and those with enough wealth to buy a few state politicians to grease the skids of appointment. The 17th, far from being a progressive ideological amendment, was meant to curtail ongoing problems with the appointment process, including successive legislatures sending different Senators each year, and the obvious problems of bribery and corruption. BTW, are you really saying that only progressives are anti-corruption; that being against corruption in government is an ideological position? So conservatives are pro-corruption? Why doesn't that surprise me? In point of historical fact, in several states the People were already directly electing their senators via referendum on voting day, and the governor would appoint the winner to the Senate. The 17th was meant not only to bring the government closer to the People, but to standardize the process of what is after all, a national office. BTW#2: are you saying that bringing the government closer to the voters is progressive ideology? So conservative ideology would be taking the government away from the voters? I'm glad to see that finally admitted, and that does dovetail nicely with the conservatives' pro-corruption stance. Are the cons also against standardizing election processes? Well, of course they are. It makes elections easier to steal when you have dozens of different processes. Standardization would close a lot of loopholes. So to sum up, conservatives are anti-democratic, anti-standardization, and pro-corruption, all of which is currently on glorious daily display in Washington, D.C.
.With regard to your nonsense regarding the 22nd amendment, you wrote, and I quote verbatim, "it could be a societal negative to have someone electable that many times." Care to explain that logical howler, bucko? If he's electable, that means the people want him to return and continue his policies. Do you have a problem with that?
Well, of course you do We've already established that you are pro-corruption, and anti-democratic. Of course you would have a problem with a hugely popular president, because like all cons, you clearly believe that the government does not exist for the benefit of the People. I suppose you would have preferred that government "of the People, by the People, and for the People" had perished from the earth in the 1860's. BTW#3, the reason Truman was exempted was to get democrats to sign on. Despite that, what you allege was a bipartisan amendment took 1,439 days to be ratified, compared to the 17th, which you claim was "very ideological", but was ratified in only 330 days.