
Credit: The “God Bless the USA Bible” - eychuf77
By Vincent Cordova
April 24th, 2026
A high school teacher in Oklahoma made a disturbing discovery in 2025.
Inside a “God Bless the USA Bible” - endorsed by Donald Trump and distributed to public schools - was a copy of the U.S. Constitution. But it wasn’t the real Constitution. Sixteen amendments were missing.
The 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery. The 14th, guaranteeing equal protection and birthright citizenship. The 15th, 19th, and 24th, which expanded voting rights to Black men, women, and poor people. The 22nd, limiting any president to two terms.
The publisher’s explanation was stunningly honest: they had intentionally included only the “original founding fathers’ documents.” Later amendments, they said, came after the nation’s founding.
Let that sink in. A document presented to schoolchildren as the U.S. Constitution - stripped of every change that made the country more just, more democratic, and less like a slaveholding oligarchy.
Most people saw this as a scandal about religion in schools. It is that. But it’s also something much bigger.
This is how exploitation works. And it works the same way on poor countries as it does on poor regions of the United States.
For centuries, wealthy nations - including the United States - have extracted resources from poorer countries while keeping those countries unstable and impoverished.
The methods are well documented:
The result is the same everywhere: chronic poverty, pollution, and dependent economies. The wealthy nation gets cheap resources. The poor nation gets ruined land and empty promises.
An incomplete constitution in a resource colony is not an accident. It is a tool. If a people never learn their rights, they never fight for them.
Now look at the American South.
The same pattern repeats - not at the international border, but inside the United States.
| Method | How it plays out in the South |
|---|---|
| Deceptive legal frameworks | “Right-to-work” laws sold as “worker freedom” - but actually designed to keep unions weak and wages low for corporations headquartered elsewhere. |
| Chronic underinvestment | Federal and state governments underfund Southern schools, healthcare, and infrastructure. Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana consistently rank near the bottom in education, health outcomes, and life expectancy. |
| Selective history | The “Lost Cause” myth, states’ rights propaganda, textbooks that downplay slavery and Reconstruction - and now, a Bible that omits the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. |
| Undermining political power | Voter suppression (poll taxes transformed into strict ID laws, felony disenfranchisement), gerrymandering, and federal neglect during disasters (Katrina, Jackson water crisis). |
The result? The South remains relatively poor despite generating immense wealth in timber, natural gas, coal, agriculture, and cheap labor. Profits flow to corporate headquarters in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. Pollution stays in the South. Poverty stays in the South.
Just as the Global South exports cobalt but remains poor, the U.S. South exports natural gas and auto parts while its people die of treatable diseases and lack clean water.
The Trump Bible didn’t just lose a few pages. It erased the legal spine of American freedom.
Who benefits when Oklahoma schoolchildren read a Constitution without the 14th Amendment? The same people who benefit when a Congolese miner never learns about his country’s mineral rights.
Exploitation requires ignorance. And ignorance is manufactured.
This is the loop that operates at both scales - international and domestic:
Deception (incomplete history, missing amendments) -> Ignorance of rights and past exploitation -> Acceptance of low wages, pollution, political disenfranchisement -> Poverty and weakened collective action -> More vulnerability to further deception -> (repeat)
Every missing amendment is a turn of the crank.
Some will say: “Oklahoma is not a colony. It has representation in Congress.”
But formal representation does not prevent economic extraction. The U.S. Senate overrepresents small, rural, resource-rich states - yet wealth still flows out. Representation without economic power is a cage.
Others will say: “It was just a Bible publisher’s mistake. Not a conspiracy.”
The publisher admitted it was intentional. And this pattern repeats - from Texas textbooks sanitizing slavery to Florida restricting African American studies. Coordination is not required. Ideology is enough.
And yes, some will say: “Comparing the U.S. South to the Congo is offensive hyperbole.”
No comparison is perfect. But the structural logic is identical: a peripheral region rich in resources, kept poor by design, with a fabricated history to justify it. That’s not hyperbole. That’s political economy.
So what do we do?
A Constitution missing 16 amendments is not a collectible. It is a weapon. And the wound it leaves is poverty - in the Global South, in the American South, and in every place where deception is cheaper than justice.
When teacher Aaron Baker received a “Trump Bible” in his Oklahoma classroom, the version of the U.S. Constitution inside omitted Amendments 11 through 27 entirely. That meant:
The Constitution that remained still contained the three-fifths compromise, which the 13th Amendment effectively removed after abolishing slavery. The publisher’s explanation was stark: “The decision was made to only include the original founding fathers’ documents, as Amendments 11-27 were added at later dates.” Alex Luchenitser, Associate Legal Director for Americans United for Separation of Church and State, put it plainly: “It would certainly mislead students if they are given this Bible.”
The mandate that put these Bibles in Oklahoma schools was rescinded in October 2025 by newly appointed Superintendent Lindel Fields. The Oklahoma Supreme Court later dismissed the associated lawsuit, noting the policy reversal rendered the case moot. But the damage was already done-more than 500 Bibles had already been purchased and distributed, and thousands more had been planned.
The Economic Policy Institute (EPI), a non-partisan think tank, has published a landmark series tracing the deliberate design of the Southern economy. Summary: The South does not accidentally have low wages, weak unions, and fragile public services. These features were intentionally cultivated to preserve a cheap labor pool.
“The Southern economic development model was deliberately designed [...] to extract the labor of Black and brown Southerners as cheaply as possible.”
EPI’s findings include:
The result is persistent poverty despite enormous natural wealth. One-fifth of Southern counties carry the “persistent poverty” designation, and Southerners as a whole are “less educated and less healthy than other Americans... more likely to die young.”
Editorial note: Notice the functional parallel. Just as the Global South exports cobalt but remains poor, the U.S. South exports natural gas and auto parts while its people die younger, earn less, and are systematically denied the emergency health coverage available in other wealthy nations.
A peer-reviewed 2025 study in the International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science offers a structural analysis of the Global North-Global South relationship that maps directly onto the patterns discussed above:
“Slavery, colonization, and neo-colonialism are interconnected stages within a single global capitalist system designed for perpetual extraction and value transfer.”
Contemporary mechanisms include debt imperialism, profit repatriation, and green colonialism-practices that “replicate colonial hierarchies” through extractive trade patterns and asymmetric financial governance. This system makes a stark prediction: global dependency is not an accidental holdover from the colonial era, but a fundamental feature knowingly preserved for ongoing resource extraction.
Likewise, a 2025 article in Capitalism Nature Socialism describes how “the global structure of dependency inherited from colonialism has not been substantially altered.”
Historians have long argued that the U.S. South functions as an “internal colony”-a region possessing mineral wealth, but systematically impoverished by outside capital extraction. As early as 1938, Roosevelt’s own advisors told him the South suffered from economic colonialism, used as “an extractive economy for the rest of the nation, leaving the region both impoverished and underdeveloped.”
The framework captures what other models miss:
“The value of the Internal Colonialism Model lies in its ability to bring into focus issues of decision-making and control of everyday life that tend to be ignored [...] The other models describe many of the problems and conditions that are the result of domination and exploitation, but they fail to address these things as causal factors.”
The South, it observes, produces billions in coal but absorbs great poverty in return. It houses sophisticated industrial infrastructure linked to the world’s largest corporations, yet its people remain undereducated, isolated, and physically isolated.
Editorial note: The “Trump Bible” is not a cause of this system-but it serves exactly the same function as colonial textbooks that taught subjugated peoples they were backward, or judicial writing that stripped voting rights from Black Southerners after Reconstruction. Its purpose is to erase memory. No memory, no resistance. No resistance, exploitation continues.
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