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Sunday, July 03, 2011

Is There Anything Left To Celebrate?


It would not seem so.

The United States of America is unrecognizable to any of us who can remember a time before the mid-'60s, although the roots of our present state of siege long predate our own lives. Today a Marxist-oriented Left owns the mass media, the schools, academia, and the government.

But it's not only the Left that has leached virtue out of the Republic. Trans-national capitalists wouldn't know patriotism if it bit them, unless the bite took something out of the balance sheet.

The terrible condition we have arrived at is not due to one or the other, but to an under-the-table alliance of both.

Both want the same, for different reasons.

The Left craves absolute power on the specious grounds of creating what can never be, a heaven on earth. Such fantasies always tend toward absolute power for a Politburo (by whatever name), and a hell on earth for les citoyens or the proletariat or whatever group is the nominal beneficiary of the ruling class.

The trans-national corporations know no loyalty to anything or anyone except themselves. They transfer employees from New York to Shanghai as readily as companies used to transfer employees from Weehawken to Jersey City. Nations are just a nuisance: you never know when some nutty legislature or citizen group will try to regulate them. The world is a market, a financial playground for the People Who Matter, the CEOs and international bankers.

The Left hand does know what the Right hand is doing, and vice versa, and they shake on the deal: this nationhood thing, July 4 and all that stupid garbage, is old and in the way.

Look, you guys who run the corporations, you go outsource every job to China -- wait, the Chinese are starting to get impatient about their $5 a day, let's see, Thailand, Vietnam, whatever. And while you're at it, get rid of those middle classes, we know we can't put them in front of a firing squad like in the good old days, but you can kick them out onto the street and import Indians on HB-1 visas.

Meanwhile, we'll do the class warfare number -- we've had a lot of practice, down to a science, y'know? -- and dial up the heat with racial warfare, tell all those minorities how oppressed they are by whites and the only thing standing in their way is racism. They love that stuff, eat it three meals a day, welfare plus reparations.

And on top of that, hey, are you ready for this, we've even got a plan for the holdouts. Population replacement. We import Third World desperados by the millions, tell everybody it's good for them, the Statue of Liberty ordered it. You guys get el cheapo labor, the last of the white middle class pays the welfare bill, we get the votes. Like a Declaration of Dependence, ha ha! Win-win!

So is there anything left to celebrate?

The Left and the Corporate State agree that the United States is nothing but an idea. The Constitution, liberty, free speech, an unmuzzled press, traditional national origins, that's not what the country is about.

No, it's just an idea.

The founders of the United States of America had an idea based on their knowledge of history. They understood human nature. They understood the drunken euphoria of power. They knew that central governments aggrandize themselves against subsidiary authority and local organization. The record of mankind told them that, and they were determined to create a system that could stand against the baser part of human nature.

Their answer was to divide power and to create institutions that would maintain that division. They came up with a Constitution that restricted the central power. It said bluntly that the responsibilities of the national government were limited.

Everything else was none of its business.

That principle has taken a beating. The country was hardly a teenager when a Supreme Court justice decided that the court could decide whether a law -- federal, state, or local -- was constitutional, a "right" nowhere included in the Constitution. Congress should have ordered that jurist tried for treason, and unless he recanted he should have had his neck stretched.

It didn't happen.

So today we have nine unelected Supreme Court justices who decide, based on their own politics, whether to permit laws passed by the people's representatives. Their rule cannot be overturned.  No wonder the greatest prize a president or party can win is the lifetime appointment of a Supreme Court capo.

That was only the beginning. It's gone downhill from there, not always in a straight line, with resistance that has sometimes been successful, but still -- we now live under Washington, like a South American banana republic lives under its el Presidente or Generalissimo. [source]

July 4th, 1826

On the 4th of July 1826, on the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died.

Exactly when the Republic they cared about died is hard to define.

One reason for this difficulty is because republics don't really die from anything but neglect and neglect is not something we "do" but something "we fail" to do.

Pure republics are the only real government of the people, by the people, and for the people, because it is the only form of government that rests entirely in the power and liberty of the people and their right to choose for themselves.

What bound the people together in early America were not Constitutions or social contracts granting power to men to exercise authority one over the other, but it was the hardships and trials of settling an often hostile wilderness and the acceptance of the responsibility for one self, family and community. The voluntary application of that responsibility in charity, duty and sacrifice by members of a free society in order to survive and prosper is essential.

To provide for your family was part of the foundational and precepts of Israel and early Christianity, but caring for your neighbor's needs through voluntary charity was the essence of pure religion.

Millions struggled and died in an attempt to settle this land and create a viable republic of free souls under God. Representatives of the united colonies on July 6, 1775 explained the purpose of that long struggle with,
“Our forefathers, inhabitants of the island of Great Britain, left their native land, to seek on these shores a residence for civil and religious freedom.”
Samuel Adams stated, by August 1, 1776, within one month of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, John Adams said that when the signers of the,
“Our Union is complete; our constitution composed, established, and approved. You are now the guardians of your own liberties. We may justly address you, as the decemviri did the Romans, and say: ‘Nothing that we propose can pass into law without your consent. Be yourself, O Americans, the authors of those laws on which your happiness depends.’”
“Massachusetts Bay Charter carried it to America they ‘got out of the English realm, dominions, state, empire, call it by what name you will, and out of the legal jurisdiction of the Parliament. The king might, by his writ or proclamation, have commanded him to return; but he did not. By this interpretation, the charters accorded Americans’ all the rights and privileges of a natural free-born subject of Great Britain and gave colonial assemblies the sole right of imposing taxes.”
It was not a constitution, but the Charters that were proclaimed as the basis of our freedom.

“Accordingly, when Americans were told that they had no constitutional basis for their claim of exemption from parliamentary authority, they answered, ‘Our Charters have done it absolutely.’
‘And if one protests,’ remarked a Tory, ‘the answer is, You are an Enemy to America, and ought to have your brains beat out.’”
In truth the Charters did little more than establish an opportunity to be free. It was the everyday resolution and diligence of the Christian character in the minds and hearts of the people that established liberty for the people and by the people. It is that history of individual sacrifice that earned freedom.

George Washington, in his General Order of July 9, 1776, speaks of rights and liberties already possessed, when he said,
“The General hopes and trusts that every officer and man will endeavor so to live, and act, as becomes a Christian Soldier defending the dearest Rights and Liberties of his country.”
One definition for the word “republic” is,
“A commonwealth; that form of government in which the administration of affairs is open to all the citizens. In another sense, it signifies the state, independently of its government.”
But Americans are not very independent of their government anymore and with that simple realization an answer to the question most people are afraid to ask is provided.

Madison clarified the status of the government then with the description of “a Republic with federal form.” 
"Have we become through our own apathy and avarice a Federal government and a republic in name only?

It is of great importance in a republic not only to guard the society against the oppression of its rulers, but to guard one part of society against the injustice of the other part.
Different classes of citizens. If a majority be united by common interest, the rights of the minority will be insecure. In a free government the security for civil rights must be the same as that for religious rights.”
If the common interest of the individuals of society is their personal security over that of their neighbor then righteousness is no more, and justice will die. It is the tiny tyranny locked in every beating heart of society that collectively gives rise to despots turning the noble hopes of governments into beasts.

In a pure republic or free society you only give up what you actually choose to contribute to society, but maintain your right to choose to do so.
“Freedom is the Right to Choose, the Right to create for oneself the alternatives of Choice. Without the possibility of Choice, and the exercise of Choice, a man is not a man but a member, an instrument, a thing.”
It has been the willingness of the people to take away their neighbor's right to choose how and when to contribute to the welfare of society that has diminished freedom. It is the willingness to devour the sweat, blood, and fruits of their neighbors for personal welfare that has snared men again into a society of servants and slaves.
Madison warned us when he wrote, Rights of an American citizen was once described as:
“I believe there are more instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachment of those powers than by violent and sudden usurpations.”
“People of a state are entitled to all rights which formerly belonged to the king by his prerogative.”“In one sense, the term ‘sovereign’ has for its correlative ‘subject.’ In this sense, the term can receive no application; for it has no object in the [Original] Constitution of the United States. Under that Constitution there are citizens, but no subjects.”
“For when the [so called American] revolution took place, the people of each state became themselves sovereign;... subject only to the rights since surrendered by the constitution to the general government.”
But as we change our relationship to government, the government's relationship with us also changes. Today,
“in the United States ‘it [citizenship] is a political obligation’ depending not on ownership of land, but on the enjoyment of the protection of government; and it ‘binds the citizen to the observance of all laws’ of his sovereign.”
Originally, citizenship did not include the title or sense of subject ,but later in the United States, we see a citizenship binding subjects to the laws of a “sovereign.”

What happened?

As stated by Supreme Court Justice Field, The Declaration of Independence lists:
long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them [the freemen of the colonies] under absolute Despotism,”
 ...and goes on to say A similar list of authoritarian activities could be provided today, but are they “usurpations”?
“it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”
William O. Douglas wrote,
“We must realize that today’s Establishment is the new George III… the truth is that the vast bureaucracy now runs this country, irrespective of what party is in power… Man has come to realize that if he is to have material ‘success,’ he must honor the folklore of the corporation state, respect its desire, and walk to the measure of its thinking.”
The people have not heard or heeded the warning of William Pitt who said, “As long as we look to government to solve our problems we will always suffer tyranny.” Those signers of that declaration who appealed to the Supreme Judge of the world were willing to mutually pledge to each other their Lives, their Fortunes, and their sacred Honor with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence. The spirit in our present population is willing to pledge your fortunes with a firm reliance on the gods of government. But to covet your neighbor's fortune is listed as a crime by God.

“Who breaks no law is subject to no king.”

Republics are often not the result throwing off a tyrant, but by purging the tyrant from our own heart. It is by changing our ways so we have no need for ruling benefactors who exercise authority that will truly endow us with liberty. It has been our appetite for the dainties of the king at the expense of our neighbors that has brought us into bondage.

The great republic was described by historian Titus Livy after a civil war Senator Marcus Cicero, wrote:
"There really was, it seemed, a nation on this earth prepared to fight for the freedom of other men, and to fight at her own expense..." "There came a man whose cause was not right but evil; and his success was ... horrible. Mere confiscations of the property of individual citizens were far from enough to satisfy him. Whole provinces and countries succumbed to his onslaught, in one comprehensive universal catastrophe. Entire foreign nations were given over to ruin and destruction."

"Surely, our present sufferings are all too well deserved. For had we not allowed outrages to go unpunished on all sides, it would never have been possible for a single individual to seize tyrannical power." "Here in the city nothing is left -- only the lifeless walls of the houses. And even they look afraid that some further terrifying attack may be imminent. The real Rome has gone forever."
That once proud republic was supplanted by a new socialist Rome of dictators and oppression, which was born out of the selfishness and fear of the people who loved themselves more than their neighbor. [source]

So, why did you celebrate the fourth of July? 

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