"That is why the U.S. system defines rights as it does, strictly as the rights to action. This was the approach that made the U.S. the first truly free country in all world history—and, soon afterwards, as a result, the greatest country in history, the richest and the most powerful. It became the most powerful because its view of rights made it the most moral. It was the country of individualism and personal independence.
Today, however, we are seeing the rise of principled immorality in this country. We are seeing a total abandonment by the intellectuals and the politicians of the moral principles on which the U.S. was founded. We are seeing the complete destruction of the concept of rights. The original American idea has been virtually wiped out, ignored as if it had never existed. The rule now is for politicians to ignore and violate men's actual rights, while arguing about a whole list of rights never dreamed of in this country's founding documents—rights which require no earning, no effort, no action at all on the part of the recipient."
-Leonard Peikoff- While I disagree with the idea of rights being earned, Peikoff is spot on. The McCain-Feingold law which directly abridges political speech - the very type of Speech the Founders sought to protect - was passed in the same era in which a court expanded Free Speech to include stripping.
True, the US does not have any of these appalling Star Chambers . . . so far. But we will. Colleges and Universities across the country have them and the Speech Codes and Re-education Penalties that go with them. Private businesses can be required by US courts to prevent their employees from offending each other and often preemptively put their employees through Re-education. We have seen public schools ban controversial speech which dissents from an approved view and more than one temporarily ban American flags to avoid offending students who might not be American. Some of our elites - and a large part of the educational elites - are more than eager to replace Freedom with Socially Acceptable and are working to use the force of government to recreate all of us in their image.
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Democracy by it's nature is rule by man at his worst. A constitutional Republic allows rule by man at his best. It may still not be good enough. History will tell us if man's shortcomings will doom him to rule by force or if he can rise above his base nature. Our founding fathers gave us as perfect a start as anyone has been able to conceive of. It is up to us to carry it forward and I am not optimistic.
I do not know that a "Constitutional Republic allows rule by man at his best". It provides a process for blocking mob rule, but does not prevent it. Those granted the power to veto bad laws or strike down unconstitutional ones must also disagree with the mob and be willing to stand up against it. A Constitutional Republic also provides incentive for elected officials to pander to voters by buying votes with the public purse, as Fatwa noted, and by supporting laws outside the purview of the gov't to please the "there oughta be a law" voters and the "I want my Mommy" voters, as X noted. From Day One of the US under the Constitution, there have been legislators who wanted to use the Federal gov't for more than its authorized purposes and even Lincoln supported Federal intervention in the economy for the benefit of farmers and American workers.
Fatwa provided another apt quote:
"You need only reflect that one of the best ways to get yourself a reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating the very phrases which our founding fathers used in their struggle for independence." - C. A. Beard
and added:
"It's distressing that most Americans neither understand our Constitution nor have read and comprehended the Federalist Papers. (The latter were especially an eye-opener for me. It would be very nice if fully half of the year spent on U.S. history in American high schools was spent on reading - and understanding - select tracts from the Federalist Papers...)"
This was very apparent in the comment section I was reading. These citizens, who either do not understand or do not respect the Constitution, are the ones who will vote for the next abridgement of our Rights and for Star Chambers to punish those of us who dare to exercise them. As, Mac said. I am not optimistic.
Gov't stays limited only as long as the citizens vote for limited gov't.
to be continued . . .

A constitutional republic works as long as the constitution is followed. When executives, legislators, or judges move outside the restrictions of the constitution they are no longer part of a republic but a criminal syndicate, ruling by brute force. Advanced forms of government only work for men (as a species, not a gender), when they choose to become sheep the system degenerates to rule by the strongest.
ReplyDeleteYou were supposed to tell me why I was wrong!
ReplyDeleteLOL! If it ever happens, I will be sure to do so.!
ReplyDeleteCousin - I am quiet but I'm here and following...
ReplyDeleteThank you.
Cousin; Be sure and check out Teh Wheel thread too. Sven and Mac have posted lots of good stuff on this there too. ( I will be bringing it over in some form or other but probably not tonight.)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Cuz. I've been watching. Good stuff. I hope Sven will find time to discuss here, too. He's always got interesting things to say.
ReplyDeleteme too. and JtB.
ReplyDelete"Gov't stays limited only as long as the citizens vote for limited gov't."
ReplyDelete"A constitutional republic works as long as the constitution is followed."
Dingdingdingding!
That's yer problem right there.
As a dear friend of mine likes to point out, "folks wants programs". This seems to be a truth.
And while I'm too pooped to elucidate at this moment, the dilemma seems to be "how do we convince our fellow citizens to totally reconsider the size and scope of gubmint?".
[gumbytheatre]
"My brain hurts!"
[/gumbytheatre]
"how do we convince our fellow citizens to totally reconsider the size and scope of gubmint?"
ReplyDeleteIt may be that it is too late. If you need to explain this it may mean the men have chosen to become sheep. Sheep can not survive free, they need a Shepard.
As I have said before, I think most Americans do not approach politics from a political theory. They look at each proposal purely on its own and think of some costs and benefits. This does not just work in favor of Big Gov't. Sometimes it works in favor of Freedom. However, this piecemeal approach will always produce more gov't and less Freedom over time.
ReplyDeleteI'll use NEA (National Entitlement to the Arts, as I like to call it) as an example.
ReplyDeleteThis program, one of many, is ridiculous. Art should "earn out" in the free market as well as anything else. It would be good for art!
Some philosophy about art and its role in society underlies my opinion, but the relevant part for this discussion is, what a frivolous program (in the past, anyway --- maybe it's been cut back present day).
Mac is right that we have chosen to be sheep in search of a shepherd. Why? Because it's the path of least resistance. Let's be helpless. Let's be taken care of. Let's never grow up.
You can pin the lack of ingenuity in corporate America on this phenomenon, too. We have traded creative problem solving to save a buck. And then we pat ourselves on the back. And then we sell out to a larger corp.
Robert Frost . . . the road not taken . . . if only.
I agree with Mac that "It may be that it is too late".
ReplyDeleteBut I also believe that appealing to folks' vested interests is a very powerful thing. Most people are quite interested in their wallets, which provides a non-trivial wedge.
Virtually everyone grumbles (or worse) over some gubmint program or other, whether it's corporate welfare, the NEA, myriad "entitlements", etc.
Larry Elder (a small-L libertarian talk radio host syndicated out of L.A.) from time to time asks the question, "leaving aside the military, what government program that you support would you be willing to give-up to ensure that you, your children and your children's children never have to pay income taxes again?".
I've found that framing the issue in such a method really hits home for a lot of folks and gets them thinking, however briefly, about the size and scope of the federal government, how it might be reduced and how slashing and burning most of it might actually be a good thing for not only themselves, but the vast majority of their fellow citizens.
It also opens the door to compromise, as "Bob" is often willing to concede that he'd be willing to give-up X (a program "Bob" supports) so long as someone else has to give-up Y (a program "Bob" doesn't support).
Which also begs the question of "how do we fund massive 'obligations' (like Social Security) after we get the government out of it?".
Some of the best (radical, yet logical) answers appeared in a book by the late Harry Browne called "Why Government Doesn't Work"; here's an excerpt:
http://www.harrybrowne.org/articles/LandOfFree.htm
(Personally, I had a lot of "differences" with Mr. Browne - particularly post 9/11 - but he presented many ideas which I believe are worthy of consideration.)
The book is written in concise, easy-to digest sections; it's actually a pretty good "bathroom book". (No pun intended)
I also have a spare copy of the book which I'd be happy to "donate to the cause". If anyone's interested, send me your mailing address and I'll get it off to you. When you're done, you can ship it off to another interested party.
Fatwa: Samizdata had a discussion on similar methods not long ago. I will try to look it up.
ReplyDeleteIt is those vested interests that make it hard to deal with. An outrageous percentage of the population gets a check from the government. People don't realize how much they are paying. All taxes should be paid once a year, shortly before election day.
ReplyDelete“Gov't stays limited only as long as the citizens vote for limited gov't.”
ReplyDeleteGovernment stays limited only as long as the governed insist that govt stay limited. Voting is but one expression of the will of the people-and I doubt that a return to limited federal govt is ever going to be brought about by our elected officials by choice, or political posturing, or arguments before the Supreme Court.
So how do you live free in an unfree world? How do you, as an individual, hold true to the founding vision of America when the Constitution itself has been mangled beyond recognition?
Sven
The best example I can think of is the "right to carry"issue. 40 states, about half the population, now have concealed carry laws. These were pushed through by the people, often in spite of the resistance of their so called representatives.
ReplyDeleteProp. 13 in CA is another example. I just don't know if there are enough men left among the sheep to take on the long and frustrating task of getting our representatives to represent us.
Hmmm. I was thinking along the lines of jury nullification.
ReplyDeleteSven
That works, too. I think a judge will throw you off if you indicate you believe in the concept, though.
ReplyDeleteHey who broke the Wheel?
ReplyDeleteBTW, dont forget about the Fallout Shelter: http://tehsqueakywheel.blogs
pot.com
/2007/02/if-youre-here-tehn-
tehres-little.html