Saturday, August 3, 2013

A Principle of The Traditional American Philosophy 2. Fear of Government-over-Man

I didn't write this. It has been at Bill Huff's www.lexrex.com.  It is from  "The Spirit of 1776" written in 1976 at our Republic under God's 200th Birthday.  It is removed -- so I'm placing it here along with "The Twelve Basic American Principles"; and Jon Roland's "Declaration of Constitutional Principles" with the connections of the following (though for a more complete listing see www.DiscoverTheNetworks.org - David Horowitz's most complete rendition, these Despotic Minions of disobedience and insubordination by lie, deception, collusion and infringements of the rights of "all men are created equal".

The United Nations - George Soros Open Society-money bags for "Obama-Saul Lucifer Alinsky / Cloward Piven - OWS (now shaved and wearing ties per  Alinsky's instruction) - Modern Marxist - "opinion without interference regardless of frontier"; Utilitarianism's "the moral rightness of an action is determined by its consequences and lying is justified if there is no harm is done."; There is no Universal Truth which does mean there is no God.  http://www.crossroad.to/Quotes/communism/alinsky.htm for the Alinsky's extermination of Religion and Morality - of We the People and of Consent of the Governed...; and  http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/

All men are created equal because I) Person is composed of a unique Body, anatomy, physiology, neurology and "Soul 1. The spiritual, rational and immortal substance in man, which distinguishes him from brutes; that part of man which enables him to think and reason, and which renders him a subject of moral government. The immortality of the soul is a fundamental article of the christian system. Such is the nature of the human soul that it must have a God, an object of supreme affection.  2. The understanding; the intellectual principle. The eyes of our soul then only begin to see, when our bodily eye are closing.";
II) God created the Universe; and man in His Own Image, i.e. He is soul in unseeable splendor -- and therefore the location of man's Immortal Soul which is accountable to God and to His son Jesus Christ for that is the "Religion" of 1620 and before which established our America, 13 Colonies, and our history to this day, as great and as erroneous as any Nation -- but far greater because the United States Ratified a Constitution derived from the Constitutions of the 13 Colonies and from the lessons, instructions, and words of God in the Declaration --- THE LAWS OF BOTH FOUNDING DOCUMENTS.
III) Oath of Office, Article II:1, clause 8 and Article VI clause 2,3, means "A solemn affirmation or declaration, made with an appeal to God for the truth of what is affirmed. The appeal to God in an oath, implies that the person imprecates his vengeance and renounces his favor if the declaration is false, or if the declaration is a promise, the person invokes the vengeance of God if he should fail to fulfill it. A false oath is called perjury.". which is to state in man's law, that each-one-person has accountability in life, liberty and pursuit of happiness in his Person of sacred honor to both our Father and His Son, and to ourselves to our unique conscience in soul -- the Holy Ghost, and duty to serve our Nation, its Posterity, the same as we serve all the roles, including love-ones of family, of life.

YOUR PERSONAL HONOR, DUTY, SERVICE is yours alone. There will be no-one standing next to you or involved in any manner, when you meet God in judgement of your immortal Soul..continuing or not.. It does not matter, one wit, what happens to you here on earth...the world of living, inanimate, indifferent objects - tools to pursue life - liberty and pursuit...  Obedicence to God and Jesus IS PROTECTION of ONE PERSON-ONE AT A TIME, and does not matter the location or government or any facit of life -- for Your Soul is Yours Alone... #5 Commandment is Honor Thy Mother and Thy Father. because they gave you - your unique-in-mankind's history-Soul; and their service, duty, obedience in love of the Creator and His Son -- is the reason for the Honor...  God has given each-one-person, among 6.8 billion on His Planet, Your unique Person - alone and among others...

It Is a magnificent Gift, beyond all earthly objects or persons, using your conscience in love and humility to Him, does surpass by far -- there are no words....just "deeds" as Patriarch Washington states.

A Principle of The Traditional American Philosophy:  2. Fear of Government-over-Man

"In questions of power, then, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution" - Thomas Jefferson (Kentucky Resolutions)

The Principle

1. A main principle of the traditional American philosophy is expressed in the phrase: fear of Government-over-Man.

Cause of Fear

2. This fear is due to the ever-present, never-changing weaknesses of human nature in government which are conducive to "love of power and proneness to abuse it," as Washington's Farewell Address warned. This means public officials' human weaknesses, especially as aggravated by the corresponding weaknesses among the self-governing people themselves. It is a truism that government's power needs only to exist to be feared--to be dominant, over the fear-ridden, without ever needing to be exercised aggressively.

Man--Good and Evil, Mixed

3. This philosophy asserts that human nature is a mixture of good and evil, of strength and weakness, and is not perfectible during life on earth. There is "a portion of virtue and honor among Mankind" and the better side of Man, the Individual, can be strengthened and made more dependable through spiritual growth. The resulting moral development is conducive to sound conduct, in keeping with conscience in the light of a personal moral code based upon religious-moral considerations. Yet history teaches that the previously mentioned weaknesses of human nature provide just cause for never-ceasing fear of Government-over-Man.

Government Like a Fire

4. Americans of the period 1776-1787 firmly believed in the soundness of the accepted maxim that "government is like a fire: a dangerous servant and a fearful master;" that, to be useful, it must be strictly controlled for safety against its getting out of hand and doing great harm. Through the generations, the people have considered that this maxim expresses one of history's most profoundly important lessons for Free Man. This maxim is based upon the knowledge that, in last analysis, government is force and must be feared and controlled accordingly. The great fear in 1787-1788 of the new, central government under the proposed Constitution was evidenced by the fact that the State Ratifying Conventions proposed scores of amendments, designed chiefly to keep under more rigid control what they considered to be this potential monster of power so dangerous to their liberties: the central, or Federal, government.

The Views of Jefferson and Madison and the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions

5. This fear was of abuse by government of power granted to it by the people, as well as of usurpation by it of power denied or prohibited to it by them, through the Constitution, to the injury if not doom of their liberties--of the God-given, unalienable rights of The Individual. Jefferson merely voiced the lesson of history--well known to, and accepted by, his fellow Americans--when he stated, in the "Diffusion of Knowledge" Bill in 1779, in the Virginia legislature:

". . . experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms [of government], those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny . . ."

Jefferson also expressed this traditional, American viewpoint in his famous writing known as the Kentucky Resolutions, as adopted in 1798 by the Kentucky legislature, in these words in part:

". . . it would be a dangerous delusion were a confidence in the men of our choice to silence our fears for the safety of our rights: that confidence is everywhere the parent of despotism: free government is founded in jealousy and not in confidence; it is jealousy and not confidence which prescribes limited Constitutions to bind down those whom we are obliged to trust with power: that our Constitution has accordingly fixed the limits to which and no further our confidence may go; . . . In questions of power then let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution."

These Kentucky Resolutions are closely akin to the contemporaneous Virginia Resolutions of 1798 adopted soon afterward by the Virginia legislature--written mainly by Madison who was, as usual, in close touch with Jefferson in this period. Both sets of resolutions were protests against what were considered and denounced as abuses and usurpations of power by the Federal government--chiefly through the Alien and Sedition Laws adopted by Congress in 1798. Such protests by a State legislature were in keeping with the remedies available to the States in such a situation - remedies contemplated by The Framers as being within the constitutional system--as discussed, for example, by Madison in 1788 in The Federalist number 46. The Sedition Act was designed to restrict freedom of speech and of the Press so as to stifle criticism of Federal officials and therefore grossly violated the Constitution; and it was opposed, for example, by John Marshall, as a member of Congress, and by Alexander Hamilton--the latter stating: "Let us not establish a tyranny." (These laws soon disappeared from the statute books, due to their widespread unpopularity which the above-mentioned 1798 resolutions had helped initially to foster.)

Precedents for Other States' Protests Such As The Hartford Convention Resolutions

6. These 1798 protests by the Kentucky and Virginia legislatures were not the first such development in the life of the Republic. A predecessor resolution of protest, for example, had been adopted by the Virginia legislature in 1790: the "Protest and Remonstrance" against the assumption by the Federal government of the war-incurred debts of the States, as being unconstitutional. This protest set a precedent for the above-mentioned 1798 resolutions. They, in turn, set precedents for similar resolutions of protest adopted by various States--in New England, the North, the Mid-west as well as in the South--during the following decades when they considered themselves to be victimized, potentially or actually, by either abuses or usurpations of power by the Federal government; such developments being the subject of comment, for example, by former President John Quincy Adams in his celebrated "Jubilee" address of April 30, 1839. (Some of these later resolutions even relied on the Virginia Resolutions of 1798 as a precedent.) An example is the set of resolutions adopted in 1815, during the war with England, by the Hartford Convention--representing Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, and New Hampshire--protesting against what were considered to be Federal usurpations, potential or actual, regarding use of the States' Militia in war operations and other national defense matters.

The View of Patrick Henry

7. In the Virginia Ratifying Convention in 1788, Patrick Henry protested with vehemence against the proposed new Constitution's lack of adequate limits on the central government's power, lack of sufficient safeguards against governmental abuses due to human weaknesses among its officials, saying:

"Show me that age and country where the rights and liberties of the people were placed on the sole chance of their rulers being good men, without a consequent loss of liberty! I say that the loss of that dearest privilege has ever followed, with absolute certainty, every such mad attempt." [Click here to read entire speech - LEXREX]

The American People's View Also Expressed in the Pittsfield Petition of 1776

8. These quoted sentiments were accepted as maxims by American leaders in general and by the American people as a whole in that generation of Free Men--free in spirit and willing to fight and die for their Freedom from Government-over-Man. This acceptance is illustrated by the below-quoted words of the Pittsfield, Massachusetts, town-meeting petition of a decade earlier, in May, 1776. It was penned by the Reverend Thomas Allen, ardent friend of American Independence and of Man's Liberty against Government-over-Man. It stated why Massachusetts needed a new, basic law of the people, a Constitution to be adopted by the people only, in part as follows:

"That knowing the strong bias of human nature to tyranny and despotism, we have nothing else in view but to provide for posterity against the wanton exercise of power, which cannot otherwise be done than by the formation of a fundamental constitution."

This petition reflected the sentiments of the frontier, "backwoods" people of Berkshire County, led by this patriot as head of "The Berkshire Constitutionalists," over a decade before the 1787 Federal Convention framed the United States Constitution. These were truly the sentiments of the American people at large. They are in harmony with the later phrasing of this idea as follows in The Federalist (number 55, by Madison):

"As there is a degree of depravity in mankind which requires a certain degree of circumspection and distrust: So there are other qualities in human nature, which justify a certain portion of esteem and confidence."

Never-changing Weaknesses of Human Nature Create Never-changing Need for Safeguards

9. The never-changing need for, and value of, constitutional safeguards against abuse, or usurpation, of power by public servants--as contemplated, and as provided for, by The Framers and Adopters of the Constitution in 1787-1788 and by those who proposed, framed and adopted the first ten Amendments (including the Bill of Rights made applicable against the Federal, or central, government only)--are due to the never-changing weaknesses of human nature in government and among the self-governing people. These weaknesses never change; therefore the need for these safeguards can never change.

The Conclusion

10. Fear of Government-over-Man was the dominant fear in that day of uncompromisingly individualistic Americans--Free Men, ever jealous of the safety of Individual Liberty, of the security of their God-given, unalienable rights against violation by government.



Quotes from The American Ideal of 1776 supporting this Principle.

1 comment:

  1. We have the most magnificent Republic under God that man could receive as a Gift from God and Jesus Christ....That we should even spend time joining the robothink-ignorance of 2009Obama-atheist-Sharia-man supreme to God and to man.. is simply a reflection of the ignorance "Of all the dispositions and habits which least to political prosperity, Religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of Patriotism who should labor to subvert these great Pillars of human happiness ---- these firmest props of the duties of Men and citizens. The mere Politician, equally with the pious man ought to respect and to cherish them. A volume could not trace all their connections with private and public felicity. Let it simply be asked where is the security for property, for reputation, for life, if the sense of religious obligation desert the oaths, which are the instruments of investigation in Courts of Justice? And let us with caution indulge the supposition, that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect the National morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle."

    We the People have the opportunity and the tools to purge evil from our Republican Form of Government under God...and We Must Do our Duty for ourselves and for our Posterity....

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