Saturday, May 16, 2009

The Principles of Liberty (Twenty-four)

Principles of Liberty (Twenty-four)

By William Pressgrove

“A free people will not survive unless they stay strong.” (The 5000 Year Leap, W. Cleon Skousen p. 260)

When I first read this principle, I wasn’t as involved in political activism as I now am. I thought I was a good citizen because I would research the candidates I could, finding whatever material I could about them, and then going to the poll and voting my conscience. Which means when I first read this principle I just viewed it very superficially. I only thought of the information in the context of protecting our country from those who would destroy it from without.

Upon reading it this time, it hit me right between the eyes. All the references used can also be applied to those elements that are seeking to destroy it from within. (Note: All the references in this essay will be to the writings found in The 5000 Year Leap by W. Cleon Skousen, pp.260-265—including the embedded references he makes to writings of the Founding Fathers.)

Does this first paragraph strike a chord with you like it did with me?

A free people in a civilized society always tend toward prosperity. In the case of the United States, the trend has been toward a super-abundant prosperity. Only as the federal government has usurped authority and intermeddled with the free-market economy has this surge of prosperity and high production of goods and services been inhibited.

He goes on to say that this prosperity also draws the attention of “the greedy aspirations of predatory nations.” “Before the nation’s inhabitants are aware, their apocalypse of destruction is upon them.” The first copy write on this book was in 1981. How prophetic were these words? It seems that we are in that very situation right now.

The theme throughout the chapter about this principle is that after all we can do to prepare for our own defense we have to rely on “Divine Providence” as our Founders did in their war for independence. The Founding Fathers were not threatened as much from within as we are today, so most of their writings reflected being prepared for enemies from without. Even with that, many of the statements they made apply to our situation today. Ben Franklin said, “Make yourselves sheep, and the wolves will eat you.” I fear that this is just what has happened.

We have trusted in those who we have, either by vote or neglecting to vote, placed in positions of responsibility in our government. I’d just like to ask how much you feel our Senators and Representatives are representing us when they only have a 9% approval rating according to the polls? At the same time 94% of them are being re-elected to office. (Statistics from the Independent Caucus organization) I asked myself how could that be? How could they have such a poor approval rating and yet be re-elected in such great numbers.

The answer came to me as I was teaching my students at school. They are masters of the strategy “divide and conquer.” You see, there are 535 members of Congress counting both the House and the Senate. Each Representative provides earmarks for his District and Senators do the same for big projects in their State. When it comes time to be re-elected, they all begin pointing fingers at all the other districts and saying that the problems in Congress are because of all the other Representatives and Senators. At the same time they play on the greed of those in their districts by reminding them just how much money they have brought into their district from the federal coffers. So we “make ourselves sheep, and the wolves” are eating us.

None of these “career politicians” ever mentions that the money to pay for the earmarks and pork barrel projects is part of a deficit budget that will be added to the National Debt. They don’t bother saying that our grandchildren and great-grandchildren to the fourth and fifth generation will be paying for the amenities that we enjoy today. They don’t tell you of the troubled times we have ahead that will mean a standard of living for our posterity that will be much lower than ours because their inheritance has already been spent.

Our Founding Fathers were no dummies. They were very well versed in the flaws of human nature because they had been first hand witnesses of those flaws in the form of the government they fought to liberate themselves from.

However, our biggest enemy has four heads. First, we have the sleeping giant of apathy that we need to awaken to a sense of duty. Second, we have ignorance that keeps people from knowing about what is truly happening. Third, we have a narcissistic greed that prevails in the poorer sector that allows them to think that it is okay to take the hard earned money from a working person and give it to those who don’t work. And fourth we have an enormous sense of individuality that keeps us from unifying and focusing on one ultimate goal. It is too easy to focus on the immediate bills and injustices that are coming from Washington. We can solve a majority of those problems by replacing the incumbents with statesmen willing to do the bidding of the people. If we devote our energy to the individual causes of bills we see need to be opposed or passed, we sap the strength from striking at the root causes of those bills—special interest paid incumbents.

In conclusion, there is an old adage that says, “Work like everything depends on you and then pray like everything depends on the Lord.” You won’t find it in many modern history books but this is just what the Founding Fathers did. They worked like their future depended on them and then they prayed like it all depended on “Divine Providence.” They knew that our future depended on our moral strength and virtue. Samuel Adams wrote, “It is the business of America to take care of herself; her situation, as you justly observe, depends upon her won virtue.” May we find the moral strength and virtue among us to unify to rectify the government and return it to the correct principles it was founded on. This is my prayer. May you all be working and praying toward the same end.