Back to Basics
(Author Unknown)
OUR FOUNDING FATHERS gave us a Constitutional Republic.
Because of them, we were born free. Nevertheless, we could die slaves
because we have lost sight of basic truths.
1. Freedom cannot exist without morality. The phrase
immoral free men makes no more sense than dry water. Unless
we have sufficient character and moral fortitude, we will not be able to
govern ourselves.
When morality declines, the abuse of rights increases and more
government is necessary. Just as criminals need jailers and domesticated
animals need herdsmen, an immoral citizenry needs a police state. If we
ever abandon our morality and adopt instead the law of the jungle, we
will lose our freedom.
2. Ignorant and free can never be. In order to be
capable of self-government, we must not only be moral but informed. If
we are not informed, we will tend to vote for the politician who
promises the most. We will vote for more and bigger government until one
day we have total government.
An uninformed electorate, whether moral or immoral, will vote itself
into slavery. Only a moral, well-informed electorate will vote for men
of principle who will limit government to its proper role.
3. Our rights come from God. When God created man, He gave him
certain inalienable rights. Because rights existed prior to men joining
together to form governments, the purpose of government is only to
protect these rights. It cannot be to grant us rights that we already
have. Nor can it be to legislate out of existence rights that are
inalienable.
Our form of government is based on this fundamental truth. If we ever
abandon it, we will lose our form of government.
4. The essence of freedom is the limitation of government. Because
men are not angels, some government is necessary to secure our God-given
rights. Because government officials are men, the powers of government
must be strictly limited and constantly held in check.
The U.S. Constitution limits the powers of the Federal Government.
Nonetheless, much that the Federal Government does today is
unconstitutional. We have allowed this abuse of authority to occur
because we have forgotten basic truths. We will preserve our freedom for
future generations only if we recall the wisdom of our fathers and get back
to basics!
A Government Of Laws - Or Of Men?
BECAUSE MEN CREATED governments (and not vice versa), the rights of
government are based on the God-given rights of the individual. An
individual has the right to defend his life, liberty, and property;
therefore, he also has the right to join with others and form a
government to protect his rights. An individual does not have the right
to violate the rights of another, and neither does government.
Government should be large enough to secure our God-given rights but
not large enough to violate these rights. Anyone who understands this
comprehends the proper role of government.
If there were no government whatsoever, our rights would not be
secure. Individuals acting alone would be unable to protect their
liberty against the criminal acts of unjust men. In the absence of any
organized government, anarchy would prevail. Ultimately, the
criminals would take control and enslave their fellow citizens.
Our rights also would not be secure under a system of total
governmental control. Such a government might grant its citizens
privileges from time to time, but it could also take away those
privileges on a whim. Whenever government has total power, individuals
have none. Remember, the root of the word totalitarian is total!
Communism and Nazism are not at opposite ends of the political
spectrum as the public has been led to believe. They are ideological
twins! Both are totalitarian, and both are examples of 100 percent governmental
control. Our rights can only be secure under limited government. Liberty
is a way station between anarchy (no government) on one end of the
political spectrum and totalitarianism (total government) on the other
end.
Preserving liberty for ourselves and future generations is no easy
task. As George Washington warned, "Government is not reason;
it is not eloquence; it is force! Like fire, it is a dangerous servant
and a fearful master." Because our Founding Fathers
realized that government, like fire, had to be contained, they gave us a
government of laws and not of men. They created a republic and not a
democracy.
A democracy is majority rule and is destructive of liberty
because there is no law to prevent the majority from trampling on
individual rights. Whatever the majority says goes! A lynch mob is an
example of pure democracy in action. There is only one dissenting vote,
and that is cast by the person at the end of the rope.
A republic is a government of law under a Constitution. The
Constitution holds the government in check and prevents the majority
(acting through their government) from violating the rights of the
individual. Under this system of government a lynch mob is illegal. The
suspected criminal cannot be denied his right to a fair trial even if a
majority of the citizenry demands otherwise.
We will either be governed by laws or ruled by men. Because of man's
nature, rule by men has always ended in tyranny. Only under a government
of laws will our God-given rights be secure.
Have You Been Deceived?
QUESTION: When the Founding Fathers established our government, they
gave us: (a) a democracy, or (b) a republic?
The question is basic, and the correct answer should be known to
every schoolchild. Nevertheless, if you have been led to believe that
our country is a democracy, you have been deceived.
Not only did our Founding Fathers establish a republic, they
greatly feared democracy. James Madison, known as the father of the U.S.
Constitution, wrote in "Essay #10" of The Federalist
Papers: "... democracies have ever been spectacles of
turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with
personal security or the rights of property; and have in general been as
short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths."
Although such an attitude will surprise most Americans, it is
accurate.
The United States Constitution does not contain the word democracy.
It does "guarantee to every State in this Union a republican
form of government...." Also, when we recite the Pledge of
Allegiance to the flag, we say, "to the Republic for which it
stands," and not "to the Democracy."
The difference between a republic and a democracy was once widely
understood in America. The U.S. War Department (superseded by the
Department of Defense) taught that difference in a training manual (No.
2000-25) published on November 30, 1928. This official U.S. government
document, used at the time for the training of American military
personnel, said of democracy:
• A government of the masses.
• Authority derived through mass meeting or any other form of
'direct' expression.
• Results in mobocracy.
• Attitude toward property is communistic - negating property
rights.
• Attitude toward law is that the will of the majority shall
regulate, whether it be based upon deliberation or governed by
passion, prejudice, and impulse, without restraint or regard to
consequences.
• Results in demogogism, license, agitation, discontent,
anarchy."
It went on to state: "Our Constitutional fathers, familiar with
the strength and weakness of both autocracy and democracy, with fixed
principles definitely in mind, defined a representative republican form
of government. They 'made a very marked distinction between a republic
and a democracy * * * and said repeatedly and emphatically that they
had founded a republic.' "
If you have been misled as to the type of government we inherited, you
should ask why.
Is It Constitutional ?
THE UNITED STATES of America is a Constitutional Republic
consisting of the Federal Government and the state governments. It is not
a Democracy. The Federal Government operates under the specific
powers delegated to it by the United States Constitution, while each of
the state governments operates under a state constitution.
The U.S. Congress is not authorized to make any law it
chooses; it is bound by this Constitutional mandate. For instance, the
First Amendment states, "Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or
abridging the freedom of speech or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances." And the Tenth Amendment states, "The
powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively,
or to the people."
The Constitution authorizes the Federal Government to protect our
God-given rights and to provide for the common defense. It does not
authorize Fedgov to provide foreign aid handouts, unemployment
benefits, subsidized housing units, food stamps, agricultural price
supports, or other share-the-wealth schemes.
Tragically, much of the legislation that Congress passes is
unconstitutional. This abuse of authority has occurred because we have
lost sight of basic principles.
Your Congressman has taken an oath to uphold the Constitution.
Whenever a new bill comes up for a vote, he should ask himself: Is
it Constitutional? If it is unconstitutional, he should vote
against it. If he does not vote against unconstitutional legislation,
you should ask him why.