IMNSHO, it started with the "undeclared war" a.k.a. "police action" in Korea. Oh, and 9/11. Look what resulted from that.<p>Wikipedia says [0]:<p>> As of September 2024, the United States Congress has formally declared war 11 times, and has not done so since 1942; 6 of these were WWII declarations. The United States did not declare war during its involvement in Vietnam, although the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution authorized the escalation and use of military force in the Vietnam War without a formal declaration of war. On at least 125 occasions a US president has employed military forces without authorization from Congress. One of the most significant of these occasions was the Korean War, where the United States led a peacekeeping United Nations force to stop North Korea's invasion against South Korea. The conflict resulted in over 142,000 American casualties (about 40,000 deaths and over 100,000 injuries).<p>And courts can be packed, at times rewriting the Constitution. It's also my opinion that congre$$ has deliberately deadlocked for decades to prevent social legislation and wealth taxes, hence the obscene distribution of wealth, using the voter frustration they created to propel/maintain their seats, since "It's always the other guy's fault" in politics. With perpetual deadlock, the executive branch fills the vacuum.<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undeclared_war" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undeclared_war</a>