I want to avoid the sense of rotisserie government and constitutional musical chairs that pervaded earlier Republic's of Lavalon.
If I may address this statement, President McKerra, two constitutions per year was about the rate. Which was of course far too many. My new philosophy (which has been tested in a couple of micro-nations) on micro-national constitutions is to make them short and simple, but pore over every detail, think about all the possible permutations of how things (especially votes) could go haywire, and iron out those problems. Then put most of the activity into Acts. Write as little as possible, other than core ideas, into the actual Constitution, and leave the rest up to Acts.
As for this constitution, I have no opinion. I don't plan on being a citizen just yet, just a commenter.