Friday, December 26, 2008

Principles of Liberty (Three)

Principle Number Three
By William L. Pressgrove

“The most promising method of securing virtuous and morally stable people is to elect virtuous leaders.”

As with principle number two, the Founding Fathers felt that it was very important for the people of this country to be virtuous and morally strong and therefore, principle three brings to the forefront the fact that the leaders have to be the examples of that virtue and morality. Throughout this country’s history there have been those who have lead the country by the virtuous and moral example and others that have been put forth the antithetical. The Founding Fathers expressed their concern about the leadership of the country. They knew if the positions of prominence in this country ever became lucrative that it would lead those seeking for money as well as power to apply for and gain those positions.

A good look at American history reveals a cycle in which leadership has gone from those who would lead this country into socialism and those who want to return the responsibility to govern back to the states and the people. At present, the country is experiencing the closest thing to total socialism as it has experienced in the history of its current Constitution. Socialism is the modern form of tyranny. Whether that tyranny is in the hands of a king (monarchy) or Congress (oligarchy) matters little. If the idea is to control every facet of life, the “cradle to grave” concept, it is the same. Virtue and morality do not seek to control other’s lives any more than is necessary to maintain the peace and prosperity of the individual.

The responsibility of the average citizen is to search out those who can and will govern the nation in a virtuous and moral manner, returning to the people their freedom as well as the responsibility for their own lives, prosperity, and wellbeing. This principle should be one of the most followed criteria when it comes to finding leadership for the country. It is almost self-evident that individuals who are virtuous and morally upright will seek solutions to problems that will be in the best interest of the people as a whole.

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