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Fearing Government
Article V Blog ^ | August 24th 2016 | Rodney Dodsworth

Posted on 08/24/2016 1:31:32 AM PDT by Jacquerie

The spark for this squib is fear, a fear of not just where our once republic is going, but where it is.

A government designed to “establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, (and) promote the general welfare,” not only doesn’t work toward these ends, it promotes policies that operate in direct opposition to them.

The high criminals of the Obama administration will never be subject to the justice they deserve. Occupy Wallstreet, Black Lives Matter, and DNC supported riots at Trump rallies foment discord rather than ensure domestic tranquility. Common Defense? Purposely importing koranimals undermines the general welfare of the society upon which all republics depend.

As a consequence, our rulers instill fear.

Are you patriotic in that old fashioned 18th century constitutional sense, but do you typically keep your mouth shut when it comes to violating political correctness? Do you wonder if donating money or time to a conservative cause will mark you for an IRS audit? Are you reluctant to display political bumper stickers or express opposition to homosexual marriage and phony climate change? Do you think the democrat efforts to ruin the lives of Catherine Engelbrecht, Tom Delay, Rick Perry, Bob McDonnell through lawfare has cowered conservatives? Do you fear what a psycho president Hillary will do to her enemies and our nation? Do you obey and respect laws in the comfort of knowing they were composed by fellow citizens who live under the same laws, or do you obey the multitude of laws and executive regulations as best you can out of fear? When various victim groups demand removal of Confederate War Memorials, can eradication of the history of our founding be far behind?

These and other legitimate fears on the part of the people typify despotic states; they are antithetical to life in republican society. It wasn’t supposed to be this way, because the “spring” of republics is virtue.

In The Spirit of the Laws (1748), Charles de Montesquieu examined that which sets, or springs monarchies, republics, and despotisms into motion. As applied to the United States, our republic was actuated by a distinct political virtue that embraced love of one’s country and love of equality set within a framework of the Laws of Nature and Nature’s God. That space in which men were free to do as they wished was called liberty, and no nation enjoyed more of it than America.

The safety of the American people is in the supreme law, our Constitution. Yet the republic it created is undone when the president, who is just a fellow citizen temporarily elevated to a position of high trust and subject to laws both statutory and supreme that govern everyone, suspends the laws as they apply to himself and his advisers. Fear replaces law when the common man is judged by a multitude of onerous and indecipherable statutes and regulations that do not apply to the president and his favorites.

Fear is the spring of despotic states. There is no occasion for virtue, for the nature of despotism requires passive, immediate obedience. Here, the immense power of the executive devolves entirely on those he decides to entrust with administration. As in 2012, is there any reason to suspect the IRS, FEC, DHS and every other executive branch agency will not work toward the destruction of conservative groups, if not the GOP nominee himself? To whom are these administrators responsible, the Constitution or the person of the president?

Fear of criticizing the president and his policies depresses the spirit and ambition of the people. Economic growth slows as the people hunker down, not to improve their condition, but to preserve what they have.

A glaring alarm in the trend toward despotism in the US can be seen in our K-16 system of education. The purpose of education in a despotic government is to debase the mind. Education must be servile and strike the heart with fear. Students have no occasion to deliberate, to doubt, to reason. Real education here is rather pointless, as illustrated in various “studies” departments that, at great expense, prepare good foot soldiers for social justice. Despotic regimes don’t allow citizens, but good slaves instead.

Actual learning here proves dangerous to both the individual and the state. Why attempt to make a good citizen? If one loves his country he will strive to break the spring of the despotic government. If he fails, he is dead. If he succeeds, it leads to the ruin of both the country and despot.

In contrast, education in a republic teaches virtue, not of the martial or self-denial sort, but rather love of the laws and country. This public, political virtue allows citizens to flourish without fear in a tranquil nation in which they find peace of mind in public prosperity, enjoyment of property, and hope of increasing it through hard work.

To inspire this love must be the principal business of education. When education of the children fails, they become degenerate and easy prey for demagogues. Republican education must be thorough and constant, lest the people lose the spring of virtue, and with it, the republic.

Fear of our rulers, of what they will do next, is no way for a once free people to live.

We are the many; our oppressors are the few. Be proactive. Be a Re-Founder. Join Convention of States.

Sign the COS Petition.


TOPICS: Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: despot; fear; montesquieu; virtue

1 posted on 08/24/2016 1:31:34 AM PDT by Jacquerie
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To: Jacquerie

Another good reason to homeschool.


2 posted on 08/24/2016 2:36:49 AM PDT by gattaca (Republicans believe every day is July 4, democrats believe every day is April 15. Ronald Reagan)
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To: Jacquerie

Aah yes, our once Republic indeed. Every time I hear one of the politicians refer to the United States as a democracy instead of a Republic I cringe. And of course never get challenged by the press. I guess Alexis de Tocqueville was correct about the eventual outcome.
If you recall he was the French historian that wrote the book “Democracy in America” which included “The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public’s money.”.

Or as the President referred to him in an address as Alex de Tocqueville.

I guess Alex wrote it after the Revolutionary War when he toured the country although I don’t believe he had a chance to visit all 57 states while he was here.


3 posted on 08/24/2016 2:58:09 AM PDT by glyptol
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To: glyptol

Little of the republican form remains. If anything, it is largely despotic, meaning arbitrary rule.


4 posted on 08/24/2016 3:18:11 AM PDT by Jacquerie (ArticleVBlog.com)
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To: Jacquerie

True. Nothing will change until the people realize whet form of government it has devolved to.

I notice that people don’t often use the phrase “it’s a free country” anymore, unless they do so with a heaping helping of irony.


5 posted on 08/24/2016 6:38:19 AM PDT by zeugma (Welcome to the "interesting times" you were warned about.)
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