Article Five, clause two of the United States Constitution 
            
 states, "under the Authority of the United States, [the Constitution] 
            
 shall be the supreme law of the land."  As a result of the fact that 
            
 the current activist government is pursuing inconsistent policies, 
            
 many believe the Constitution has become irrelevant because no guiding 
            
 principles seem to exist.  Thomas Jefferson once said, "The
            
 Constitution belongs to the living and not to the dead."  Accordingly, 
            
 it is often referred to as a "living" document because of its regular 
            
 alteration and reexamination; therefore, the Constitution has not 
            
 become irrelevant in defining the goals of American government.  This 
            
 will be shown by examining how the Constitution ensures and upholds 
            
 American ideas of rights, defines governmental structures, allows for 
            
 an increase in governmental growth, and permits the Supreme Court to 
            
 shape and define public policy through Constitutional
            
         Through years of research on court cases, political scientists 
            
 are in agreement that most people favor rights in theory, but their 
            
 support diminishes when the time to put the rights into practice 
            
 arrives.  For example, a strong percentage of Americans concur with 
            
 the idea of free speech throughout the United States, but when a court 
            
 case such as Texas vs. Johnson (1989) arises, most backing shifts away 
            
 from complete freedom of speech.  In the case, a Texan named Gregory 
            
 Johnson set fire to an American flag during the 1984 Republican
            
 National Convention in Dallas in order to protest nuclear arms 
            
 buildup; the decision was awarded to Johnson in the midst of stern 
            
         Lockean philosophy concerning the natural rights of man also 
            
 serves amajor role in an American's idea of rights.  Many citizens 
            
 feels that it is the task of the state to preserve such birthrights as 
            
 life, liberty, and property.  The juristic theory of rights deals ...