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To: caveat emptor
The Establishment leaders in both Parties simply cannot understand that technology may have outstripped their ability to censor the Founders' ideas of liberty from the public discourse. This is baffling and troublesome to them.

Over the past few years, particularly since 2008, the Internet has made it possible for ordinary citizens to read the documents of their freedom in the quiet of their homes, to read all of the writings of Washington, Jefferson, the Adamses, Madison, and all the other intellectual giants of 1776 and 1787, and the populace is informed, knowledgeable and seeing through the would-be tyrants who wish to control them.

While speaking of Caesar, Jefferson said: "But steeped in corruption, vice and venality, as the whole nation was,... what could even Cicero, Cato, Brutus have done, had it been referred to them to establish a good government for their country?... No government can continue good but under the control of the people; and their people were so demoralized and depraved as to be incapable of exercising a wholesome control. Their reformation then was to be taken up ab incunabulis. Their minds were to be informed by education what is right and what wrong; to be encouraged in habits of virtue and deterred from those of vice by the dread of punishments proportioned, indeed, but irremissible; in all cases, to follow truth as the only safe guide, and to eschew error, which bewilders us in one false consequence after another in endless succession. These are the inculcations necessary to render the people a sure basis for the structure of order and good government. But this would have been an operation of a generation or two at least, within which period would have succeeded many Neros and Commoduses, who would have quashed the whole process. I confess, then, I can neither see what Cicero, Cato and Brutus, united and uncontrolled could have devised to lead their people into good government, nor how this enigma can be solved." --Thomas Jefferson to John Adams, 1819. ME 15:233

"An enlightened people, and an energetic public opinion... will control and enchain the aristocratic spirit of the government." --Thomas Jefferson to Chevalier de Ouis, 1814. ME 14:130

"An enlightened people, and an energetic public opinion... will control and enchain the aristocratic spirit of the government." --Thomas Jefferson to Chevalier de Ouis, 1814. ME 14:130

"I know no safe depositary of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education. This is the true corrective of abuses of constitutional power." --Thomas Jefferson to William C. Jarvis, 1820.

"Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves, therefore, are its only safe depositories. And to render even them safe, their minds must be improved to a certain degree." --Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia, 1782.

"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people. Enable them to see that it is their interest to preserve peace and order, and they will preserve them. And it requires no very high degree of education to convince them of this. They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty." --Thomas Jefferson to James Madison, 1787.

"Whenever the people are well-informed, they can be trusted with their own government." --Thomas Jefferson to Richard Price, 1789.

"Whenever things get so far wrong as to attract their notice, the people, if well informed, may be relied on to set them to rights.", --Thomas Jefferson to Richard Price, 1789.

From James Madison:

"Although all men are born free, and all nations might be so, yet too true it is, that slavery has been the general lot of the human race. Ignorant – they have been cheated; asleep – they have been surprised; divided – the yoke has been forced upon them. But what is the lesson?... The people ought to be enlightened, to be awakened, to be united, that after establishing a government they should watch over it."

"A well-instructed people alone can be permanently a free people."

5 posted on 09/18/2010 12:21:38 PM PDT by loveliberty2
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To: loveliberty2
Excellent point. Excellent post. Awesome quotes.

Buchanan's points are also well made, and I find myself widely in agreement with him.

There are still many legitimate differences in Conservative views on different issues: for instance Buchanan's bluntly mercantilist economics vs. the free trade orthodoxy of the Wall Street Journal crowd.

The interesting thing about the Tea Party is that it is agnostic on the wedge issues, but still has a center. That's driving the establicons crazy cause they can't triangulate and subvert it like they have most other things.

6 posted on 09/18/2010 12:53:35 PM PDT by Jack Black ( Whatever is left of American patriotism is now identical with counter-revolution.)
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