Posted on 08/18/2014 6:16:26 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
In what might have appeared to be a minor political event a few weeks back, Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) called congressman Tom Marino (R-PA) insignificant and inconsequential in a debate on the House floor. Why would the former House Speaker insult a colleague in such a manner?
She didnt count her way to this assessment; Democrats do not hold a majority of the House. Nor did she reason her way to this position, as there was nothing in Rep. Marinos argument on the immigration issue that raised empirical red flags. Perhaps it was a momentary lapse in judgment in the midst of the partisan give-and-take on an important political issue. But what if Pelosi was simply saying what she believed to be true and acknowledging what ruling class Americans think about their non-ruling class counterparts? Namely, that there are people like Pelosi, the highest-ranking female politician in American history, who get it, and people like Marino, merely a second-term congressman from gun- and religion-clinging northeastern Pennsylvania, who dont.
What is the it they dont get? The Progressive dogmas that Pelosi has internalized and Marino rejects. A hundred years ago, the first group of progressives concluded that this country needed to change in a big way. They argued explicitly for a refounding of the United States on the grounds that the only absolute in political life is that absolutes are material and economic rather than moral in nature.
Translating theory into practice, those thinkers and political storm troopers on the Right Side of History have increased the power of the state so as to produce the greatest amount of material pleasure and moral-ideational relief for societyto leave the populace, as Machiavelli put it, both satisfied and stupefied.
Convincing the American people to abandon (or at least qualify) their deep, longstanding regard for the founders was no easy task for the Progressives. It required making them over in far less heroic terms: to frame the Founding as a grand enticement, if not quite a crime, and the founders as crafty oligarchs, if not quite criminals.
No thinker advanced this thesis with greater confidence than Columbia economist Charles Beard, who wrote of the founders in his An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States (1913):
If we examine carefully the delicate instrument by which the framers sought to check certain kinds of positive action that might be advocated to the detriment of established and acquired rights, we cannot help marvelling at their skill. Their leading idea was to break up the attacking forces at the starting point: the source of political authority for the several branches of the government. This disintegration of positive action at the source was further facilitated by the differentiation in the terms given to the respective departments of the government. And the crowning counterweight to an interested and over-bearing majority, as Madison phrased it, was secured in the peculiar position assigned to the judiciary, and the use of the sanctity and mystery of the law as a foil to democratic attacks.
In Beards formulation, the framers emphasis on the rule of law, checks and balances, federalism, and equal rights for all, special privileges for none, was simply patriotic cover for a system that would prove impenetrable to the forces of economic and material progress. To accomplish their task, the founders had to artfully construct a noble lie in which our love for republican norms (embodied in the Declaration of Independence and institutionalized in the Constitution) would be greater than our disgust at the injustice of natural and circumstantial inequality.
Beards charge was not, in fact, wholly new. Even in their own day, the founders had been accused of hiding an oligarchy beneath republican robes. When Anti-Federalists first leveled the charge, James Madison reacted, in Federalist 57, with righteous indignation, challenging the critics to show just how the Constitution favored the few at the expense of the many:
Who are to be the electors of the federal representatives? Not the rich, more than the poor; not the learned, more than the ignorant; not the haughty heirs of distinguished names, more than the humble sons of obscure and unpropitious fortune. .
Who are to be the objects of popular choice? Every citizen whose merit may recommend him to the esteem and confidence of his country.
This, of course, does not mean that everyone who can vote today could vote in 1789 or that James Madison expected women, for example, to serve in the House. However, there has been no change in the formal qualifications for votersat any point in our historythat required changing the Constitution. There has been no de facto expansion of the pool of candidates for office that has encountered the least constitutional resistance.
Publius argues throughout The Federalist that the original Constitution is strictly republican. But, as Publius also argues throughout The Federalist, this is no guarantee that the people at large will enjoy the blessings of republican liberty and equality before the law or that their leaders will pursue the common good, rather than the advantage of the well-connected.
All founders, in essence, take up an impossible task. As Madison put it:
The aim of every political constitution is, or ought to be, first, to obtain for rulers men who possess most wisdom to discern, and most virtue to pursue, the common good of the society; and in the next place, to take the most effectual precautions for keeping them virtuous, whilst they continue to hold their public trust.
Better forms of regime better contribute to these purposes, but there is no form of regime that intrinsically achieves them. In a republic, the elective mode of obtaining rulers is the characteristic policyand limited terms the most effectual among numerous and various means for preventing their degeneracy.
Plainly Madison understood that even if broadly popular elections are the best means of attaining good legislators and ongoing electoral accountability the best means of keeping them honest, these are imperfect instruments.
As a result, Progressives, from the beginning of the last century down to the present day, have never lacked for opportunities to reconstruct the American regime by craftily employing a language of democratic populism.
The result, intentional or not, has been the creation of the very oligarchic state Progressives claimed to oppose. By arguing and governing as if politics is principally about the distribution of wealth (who gets what, when, and how, as leading Progressive political scientist Harold Lasswell put it), they managed to assemble, in the federal government, all the means necessary to control that distribution. As a result, controlling the state means controlling wealth.
In such circumstances, the rich will certainly have good reason to seekand, no doubt, find some success in achievingpolitical power. But, more importantly, political power has become an essential (if not the exclusive) means to acquiring wealth. Rather than an oligarchy of market winners, we get an oligarchy of the well-connectedand, with the rise of the permanent administrative state, one that is largely immune to any meaningful popular accountability.
The convergence of intentional (mostly Democratic) and accidental (mostly Republican) progressives and the happy peace between the bohemian cultural left and financial elites has deepened and institutionalized the difference between the ins and the outs. The move from Occupy Wall Street-type community organizer to Marthas Vineyard celebrity has proven to be unexpectedly easy, at least for President Obama. A few true believers aside, at the end of the day most progressive elites have come to accept that Chappaqua mansions are built on welfare state mudsills and willingly assumed their place in the new oligarchy.
The best moral and political response to self-serving progressive cynicism is summarized by Madison near the end of Federalist 57:
If it be asked, what is to restrain the House of Representatives from making legal discriminations in favor of themselves and a particular class of the society? I answer: the genius of the whole system; the nature of just and constitutional laws; and above all, the vigilant and manly spirit which actuates the people of America a spirit which nourishes freedom, and in return is nourished by it.
See how plainly and powerfully Madison asserts the fundamentally moral character of the American founding. Discriminatory laws violate the genius of our republic, its constitutional principles, and the natural rules of justice. That these ideals are not self-enforcing requires the introduction of the most important check on privilege: the people, guided by a vigilant and manly spirit nourishing and nourished by freedom.
The political challenge of our day is the revival of that spirit among the American peopleand those who champion this task, like those they champion, are anything but insignificant.
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David Corbin is a Professor of Politics and Matthew Parks an Assistant Professor of Politics at The Kings College, New York City. They are co-authors of Keeping Our Republic: Principles for a Political Reformation (2011). You can follow their work on Twitter or Facebook.
Rob Reiner says we should be “eliminated” and you can bet that Nancy Pelosi doesn’t disagree
Neither Nancy nor Rob will do any of the physical work of “eliminating” us, I fear.
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srbfl
The foundation in class inequality is in the advantage money brings in completing civil action in court that the wealthy disproportionately enjoy. The result was that the public had no way to gain redress for injuries. Hence the democratic pitch for the regulatory state, which then became a toy for the extremely rich via their tax-exempt foundations funding "the downtrodden" to bring actions advantageous to their business interests in Federal courts the general public cannot afford.
From the moment of the "ruling" in Santa Clara v. Southern Pacific Railroad granting rights equal with people to corporations under the citizenship clause of the 14th amendment, of the subsequent 307 cases brought before the SCOTUS, 19 were on behalf of people and the rest were upon behalf of corporations. "Equal protection" became protection for the wealthy. Source
Where is that "manly spirit" in a nation of ignorant drones manufactured by progressivist public education?
My firm provides legal assistance plans for about $17 a month, which helps level the playing field.
The last, the 1913 amendments retained the outward form of the American republic, yet constituted a rejection of the Framers’ constitution.
Overnight, we were transformed from a federal, into a democratic republic, in which the rise of demagogues who mouthed the words of freedom while simultaneously appealing to base motives of economic equality and class hatred was assured.
Reps of the people have given government a vast civilian army of obedient thugs ready to use every legal and physical contrivance to snuff out freedom. Unless and until the states gather in convention to reassert federalism, our descent into tyranny is assured.
Julius Caesar courted popularity so successfully that Rome gave him an army, and that army gave him Rome. Wash, rinse, repeat.
That's all well and good, but...
Back when the Constitution was written, it was no big deal for a property owner to suffer a blacksmith next door. There was lots of land and such impacts were small. But when a guy with a farm had a steel plant move next to his farm and kill it with the fumes and it came time to sue the owner for his loss, what do you think happened? This is how we got the regulatory state. It was appropriate for its time, but it's become time to move on. As things are now, one of the plant's competitors, say Mr. Carnegie, wanted to move his plant overseas and use his tax-exempt foundation to finance a greenie group to file said suit against his competitor, then we ALL lose the benefits of a free market, never learning how to make the best of the combination of technology, risk, offsets, and mitigations. That's why I wrote Natural Process and obtained its associated business method patent.
One of the best articles I’ve ever read here.
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