It’s March 21st. This day in 1972, a group of 100 regular citizens are meeting to re-write Montana’s constitution. Among other provisions, the new document enshrines a “right of privacy.”
Jody, Niki, and Kellie discuss why this right worked its way into the new document — and why the constitutional convention should take place in more states more often.
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Our team: Jacob Feldman, Researcher/Producer; Brittani Brown, Producer; Khawla Nakua, Transcripts; music by Teen Daze and Blue Dot Sessions; Audrey Mardavich is our Executive Producer at Radiotopia
The First Government Shutdown Fight (1879)
The Shamrock Summit (1985)
FDR Says Bottoms Up (1933)
Kennedy's Latin American Marshall Plan (1964)
Hoover Almost Takes Over Baseball (1951)
When "Primary" Became A Verb (2004)
The Ask President Carter 1-900 Number (1977)
Hangers On Week: Al Smith and Remakes The Democratic Party
Hangers On Week: Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition
Hangers On Week: Sowing The Seeds of Trump
Hangers On Week: Why Candidates Stick Around w/ Amy Walter
Malcolm X Is Assassinated (1965)
Dick Cheney Shoots His Friend In The Face (2006)
NJ Law Calls For "Gradual Emancipation Of Slaves" (1804)
The FDR Assassination Attempt (1933)
Mandela Released From Prison (1990)
The First Execution By Gas Chamber (1924)
Lockheed Caught Bribing The Japanese Government (1976)
FDR's Court-Packing Plan Backfires (1937)
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