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Two Revolutions, Two Views of Man
Conservative Underground | July 6, 2010 | Jean F. Drew

Posted on 07/25/2010 1:37:12 PM PDT by betty boop

TWO REVOLUTIONS, TWO VIEWS OF MAN
By Jean F. Drew

As every American schoolchild has been taught, in Western history there were two great sociopolitical revolutions that took place near the end of the eighteenth century: The American Revolution of 1775; and the French, of 1789. Children are taught that both revolutions were fought because of human rights in some way; thus bloody warfare possibly could be justified, condoned so long as the blood and treasure were shed to protect the “rights of man.” The American schoolchild is assured that the American and French revolutions were both devoted to the expansion of human rights and thus were equally noble revolutions. Moreover, it is widely believed that the French Revolution was an evolution from the American one.

Rather than simply accept these ideas uncritically, comparison and contrast of the two revolutions can shed some light on what turns out to be their stark differences — as to inceptions, ostensible goals, foundational ideology, and respective outcomes.

Inceptions
There is a famous Pythagorean maxim (c. sixth century B.C.): “The beginning is the half of the whole.” That is to say, inception events have a way of profoundly influencing the course of events that follow from them; and so their analysis can give insight into the character of their development in time, and even of the motivations they configure. Less obviously, an inception event is itself the culmination of a train of social, political, and cultural development that finally “erupts,” or takes evident shape, as a concrete beginning, or precipitating event of what follows. At that point, a situation of no return has been reached: “The fat is in the fire.” There is no turning back….

And so, let us take a look at the beginnings of two revolutions:

The American:
“In London George III and his cabinet, their confidence bolstered by their huge majority in Parliament, moved toward a confrontation with the Americans. On February 2, 1775, [Prime Minister Frederick, Lord] North introduced a motion to declare the province of Massachusetts in a state of rebellion and asked the King to take steps to support the sovereignty of England. The opposition, led by Edmund Burke, decried this move as a declaration of war. But the measure passed by a majority of three to one. George III was immensely pleased….”

The King decided to send some 1,000 reinforcements to Boston, far short of the number that Governor General Thomas Gage had wanted.

“…The King and his ministers still refused to believe Gage’s assessment of the odds he faced…. Colonel James Grant — who had served in America, at one point in the same army with George Washington [in the French and Indian Wars] — declared he was certain the Americans ‘would never dare to face an English army.’… In this spirit the King … ordered Lord Dartmouth to draft a letter telling Gage that it was time to act.”

Gage promptly acted. Thanks to his spies, he knew that the Colonials were accumulating military stores at Concord, including large quantities of gunpowder. So Gage decided that a swift march on Concord to seize the powder as well as the fourteen cannon said to be in the town “would have a crippling, even demoralizing impact on the Provincial Congress’s plans to form an Army of Observation to pen the British inside Boston.”

From this decision ensued, on April 19, 1775, the opening shot — “the shot heard ’round the world” — of the American Revolutionary War, at North Bridge, Concord, Massachusetts at about 8 o’clock in the morning.

Although the Colonials already knew the British were coming to Concord and Lexington sooner or later, and for what purpose, and that the incursion would come by a night march (rare in that day) — the Americans proved early to be remarkably effective spies — what they did not know was the specific date, or whether the British forces would be moving by land — over Boston Neck — or by sea — in longboats across the Back Bay. Hence the famous signal of “one if by land, two if by sea” posted at the Old North Church, wherein observers were keeping an eye on British troop movements.

It turned out to be “two”: The British forces, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith, were subsequently debarked at Cambridge across the Charles River, from longboats attached to H.M.S. Somerset then standing guard over the Boston Harbor ferryway. This was a force of some 700 men composed of light infantrymen and “fearsome” grenadiers. From thence the body proceeded overland, on a much shorter march than would have been the case had they approached Concord via Boston Neck. The route from Cambridge to Concord led straight through the heart of the neighboring town of Lexington.

As soon as the news came that the British were moving, Paul Revere set upon his famous midnight ride “on a fast mare,” traveling west at high speed to warn the people of Concord and the surrounding towns that the British were coming. Samuel Prescott and William Dawes likewise fanned out on horseback, spreading the alert to all within earshot.

The folks at Concord, having thus been warned, working feverishly overnight, managed to remove all the military stores to safe locations. The locals felt confident they could handle the threat: After all, the town had 600 drilled and trained Minutemen on spot, and there were some 6,000 other Minutemen and Militia — a body composed of all able-bodied men between the ages of 15 and 60 — within fairly easy reach of Concord town who were already pledged to come to her aid in the event of the outbreak of actual hostilities.

The people of Concord evidently figured a show of force would suffice to deter the British officers from doing anything rash. But really what they were relying on was their expectation — based on their understanding of the so-far prevailing rules of engagement, frequently tested — that British troops would never open fire on their fellow citizens — i.e., the Colonials themselves, who were British subjects also — unless they were fired upon first. And the Americans did not intend to fire first.

In this assessment of the situation on the ground, they were sadly mistaken. In the approach to Concord, the Brits had provoked a bloody engagement at Lexington Green in which “the British light infantry unquestionably fired the first volleys, killing eight men and wounding ten.” Then the British forces continued their march into Concord, to secure the bridges of the town: The British commander Smith had detached four squadrons to visit a prominent local farm to see whether contraband might be stashed there; and feared his troops could not safely return if the North Bridge were under the control of the Colonials. In defense of the bridge, the Brits again fired first. For a moment, the Americans could not believe this was happening. “‘Goddamn it,’ one man shouted, ‘They are firing ball!’” Then their commander, Major Buttrick, “whirled and shouted, ‘Fire fellow soldiers, for God’s sake fire.’” The Americans sustained six casualties at North Bridge, all fatal. On the British side, “Two privates were killed and a sergeant, four privates and four officers were wounded.”

Then the Brits cut their losses and in disorderly retreat high-tailed it back to the security of their barracks in Boston — empty-handed. Their mission was a failure: They had not found, let alone confiscated, any military stores.

But the American Revolutionary War was officially ON….

* * * * * * *

The French:
“History will record, that on the morning of the 6th of October 1789, the king and queen of France, after a day of confusion, alarm, dismay, and slaughter, lay down, under the pledged security of public faith, to indulge nature in a few hours of respite, and troubled melancholy repose. From this sleep the queen was first startled by the voice of the sentinel at her door, who cried out to her, to save herself by flight — that this was the last proof of fidelity he could give — that they were upon him, and he was dead. Instantly he was cut down. A band of cruel ruffians and assassins, reeking with his blood, rushed into the chamber of the queen, and pierced with an hundred strokes of bayonets and poniards the bed, from whence this persecuted woman had just time to fly almost half naked, and through ways unknown to the murderers had escaped to seek refuge at the feet of a king and husband, not secure of his own life for a moment.

“This king … and this queen, and their infant children (who once would have been the pride and hope of a great and generous people) were then forced to abandon the sanctuary of the most splendid palace in the world, which they left swimming in blood, polluted by massacre, and strewed with scattered limbs and mutilated carcasses. Thence they were conducted into the capital of their kingdom. Two had been selected from the unprovoked, unresisted, promiscuous slaughter which was made of the gentlemen of birth and family who composed the king’s bodyguard. These two gentlemen, with all the parade of an execution of justice, were cruelly and publicly dragged to the block, and beheaded…. Their heads were stuck upon spears, and led the procession; whilst the royal captives who followed in the train were slowly moved along, amidst the horrid yells, and shrilling screams, and frantic dances, and infamous contumelies, and all the unutterable abominations of the furies of hell…. After they had been made to taste, drop by drop, more than the bitterness of death, in the slow torture of a journey of twelve miles protracted to six hours, they were, under a guard composed of those very soldiers who had thus conducted them through this famous triumph, lodged in one of the old palaces of Paris, now converted into a Bastile for kings….”

And thus, the French Revolutionary War was officially ON….

On the question of origins — beginnings, inceptions, precipitating events — it would appear that the American and French Revolutions do not seem to resemble one another very much. It’s difficult to draw a common understanding of what human rights might be on the basis of such disparate evidence.

On the one hand, it’s possible to see that perhaps human rights had something to do with the defense of Concord: People coming together to protect and defend their lives, liberty, and property against the tyranny of George III, who then was most corruptly usurping the ancient “rights of Englishmen” not only in America, but also back in the home isles — as the Colonials were very well aware.

People today do not appreciate how close was the tie with the “mother country” at the time, through the printed word: In that day, the London presses were offloading their publications directly onto American ships bound for Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston, as soon as the ink was dry. It was from the London press that the Colonials learned of the usurpations of individual liberty that good King George was perpetrating at home, not to mention in their own backyard. They wanted no part of it.

On the other hand, it’s difficult to see what human right is implicated in the inception event of the French Revolution — unless it be the right to commit regicide. Or maybe the right to agitate and deploy mobs as instruments of social and political change….

In the end, “Citizen Louis Capet,” formerly known as King Louis XVI of France, was tried and convicted of treason by the National Convention and was guillotined on 21 January 1793 — the only French king in history to fall victim to regicide. His queen, Marie Antoinette, was also tried and convicted of treason: She was executed by guillotine on 16 October 1793, nine months after her husband.

Ostensible Goals
It seems clear that the Americans were not seeking to kill the king, or to overthrow the traditions of the British constitutional monarchy. Rather, they were seeking a complete, formal separation from it — because they were motivated by the conviction that their historic liberties were being systematically violated by George III.

By 1775, the Americans already had a tradition of local or self-government going back some 150 years. When the king sent in his governors, who ruled autocratically as directed by himself and his council, the Americans were outraged. The maxim “no taxation without representation” was but one expression of their revulsion for what they perceived as the wholesale destruction of the historic liberties of British subjects in America. The Sons of Liberty at Boston, notably including Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, and John Hancock, eloquently argued for total separation from the British Crown — not the most popular idea at first. But the events at Lexington Green and Concord Bridge caused many to reappraise their position on this matter. In the end, complete separation was the idea that prevailed, and which was finally achieved….

So what was this notion of liberty that had the Americans so exercised? John Trenchard and Robert Gordon, writing in Cato’s Letters — serially published in The London Journal in 1721 and after, which was avidly read in America at the time — describe human liberty as follows:

All men are born free; Liberty is a Gift which they receive from God; nor can they alienate the same by Consent, though possibly they may forfeit it by crimes....

Liberty is the power which every man has over his own Actions, and the Right to enjoy the Fruit of his Labor, Art, and Industry, as far as by it he hurts not the Society, or any Member of it, by taking from any Member, or by hindering him from enjoying what he himself enjoys.

The fruits of a Man’s honest Industry are the just rewards of it, ascertained to him by natural and eternal Equity, as is his Title to use them in the Manner which he thinks fit: And thus, with the above Limitations, every Man is sole Lord and Arbiter of his own private Actions and Property....

These were the ideas that had earlier inspired the Glorious Revolution of 1688, of which the great British philosopher and political activist, John Locke (1632–1704) — a thinker enormously respected in America — was the intellectual father. Above all, Locke’s ideas constitute a theory of the individual human being. This is the same theory that inspired the American Revolution of 1775: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed….” Indeed, it appears the author of the Declaration of Independence (July 4, 1776) was strongly resonating to Locke’s essential political ideas in these passages.

Edmund Burke (1729–1797) — the great Anglo-Irish statesman, political theorist, and philosopher (who as already noted was sympathetic to the American cause) — also articulated the historic rights of Englishmen, and of all free peoples universally, as follows:

“…If civil society be made for the advantage of man, all the advantages for which it is made become his right. It is an institution of beneficence; the law itself is only beneficence acting by a rule. Men have a right to live by that rule; they have a right to justice; as between their fellows, whether their fellows are in political function or in ordinary occupation. They have a right to the fruits of their industry; and to the means of making their industry fruitful. They have a right to the acquisitions of their parents; to the nourishment and improvement of their offspring; to instruction in life, and to consolation in death. Whatever each man can separately do, without trespassing on others, he has a right to do for himself; and he has a right to a fair portion of all which society, with all its combinations of skill and force, can do in his favor. But as to the share of power, authority and direction which each individual ought to have in the management of the state, that I must deny to be amongst the direct original rights of man in civil society; for I have in my contemplation the civil social man, and no other. It is a thing to be settled by convention.

“If civil society be the offspring of convention, that convention must be its law. That convention must limit and modify all the descriptions of constitution which are formed under it. Every sort of legislative, judicial, or executory power are its creatures. They can have no being in any other state of things; and how can a man claim, under the conventions of civil society, rights which do not so much as suppose its existence?”

This last point draws attention to Burke’s understanding that the foundational rights of man declared by the French philosophes — Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité — are purely abstract rights indicating no sign of understanding of, or connection with, the actual development and maintenance of a just civil society. In other words, the philosophes envisioned man abstractly, or to put it another way, as abstracted from both nature and society as if this abstract man stands as a total end in himself, as sacrosanct, beyond any demand of society which nature assigns to him as inescapable part and participant of it. It seems the philosophes first reduce the human being to an abstraction — by taking him entirely out of the context of historical experience and traditional understandings of natural law going back millennia. Then, with man having been so abstracted, from there it is easy to dissolve him into an abstract mass: The individual is no longer the natural or even “legal” bearer of rights; rather, the legal bearer of rights is now the mass, the “group”— mankind at large or however else defined.

There is a further consideration regarding the original American founding that we should remember today: The British colony at Massachusetts was not established by means of military power — which is the usual way that states of whatever description acquire new territories. Instead, the Massachusetts Bay Colony was established by religious refugees: They were dissenters from the Church of England, the established church of which the reigning king was titular head.

Beginning with Henry VIII and extending to all his successors, the king of England entirely combined in his own person both the fundamental secular and spiritual authority of British society. But, when religious pilgrims on November 11, 1620, at Provincetown, Massachusetts, ratified what has been described as the first written constitution in human history, the Mayflower Compact, they were acting in resonance to a spiritual authority superior to that of the then-reigning king, James I — or of kings in general.

Just by making the voyage to America, the religious refugees were repudiating the authority of the king over their spiritual lives. Once there, the secular authority of the king was of absolutely no help to them. They had to shift for themselves, and basic survival was the highest priority: Almost the majority of the original colony perished during their first New England winter. They were forced to place their reliance entirely on themselves, on each other, and on God. The Mayflower Compact, moreover, made the pilgrim’s primary reliance on God perfectly explicit. Its first five words are: “In the name of God, Amen.”

Hold that thought while we turn to the French experience.

For centuries, the foundation of French society, culture, and politics had been the idea of the Etats General, of which there were three “estates”: the aristocracy, whose head was the King; the Church, whose head was the Pope; and everybody else; i.e., your average, everyday, common, “small” people….

What is known is that when King Louis XVI was decapitated, the social force of the French aristocracy was effectively decapitated with him. Also it is known that in the four-year period between the invasion of the queen’s bedchamber and the execution of the king, some 16,000 French men and women were guillotined at Paris — mainly aristocrats and other well-off people — as “enemies of the State.” Also all Church lands (probably accounting for some twenty percent of the total French real estate) and property were forcibly confiscated by the State, now reposed in a body called the National Assembly, composed by the Third Estate, the “people” of France. Thousands of clergy — bishops, priests, monks, and nuns — were murdered.

In effect the Third Estate utterly destroyed the other two: That’s the French Revolution in a nutshell.

Foundational Ideology
The French Revolution managed to kill off the first two Estates — and with that, evidently hoped to extinguish forever all aristocratic and theological ideas, pretensions, and powers regarding questions of the human condition. Indeed, the general expectation then seemed to be the Third Estate, the people, unchained from past “superstitions” and “repressions,” had at last come into its own sphere, where it could finally define and exercise true human “liberty.”

But the people were not some sort of homogeneous mass. Rather, there is a natural hierarchical order within the Third Estate similar to that found in both the aristocratic and theological estates.

In France at the time, at the top of this natural hierarchy were the people with expertise in manufacturing, commerce, banking, and law. They were the beneficiaries of the rising tide of the Enlightenment, as plentifully nourished from the side of Newtonian science.

In the rank immediately below them were the skilled craftsmen. Below this, relatively unskilled laborers. Then, the “least” of the people, the peasants/serfs who mainly were the impoverished suffering victims of the feudal order then embraced by both the aristocracy and the Church.

Thus within the Third Estate there were marked disparities of wealth, opportunity, education, talent, and ability. Yet the doctrine of Egalité erases all such distinctions: An Einstein and the most ignorant day laborer were considered “equal.” All were “equal” in the National Assembly too. On this basis, the doctrine of Fraternité, of the universal brotherhood of mankind, is blind and silent regarding the problem of: how the victims of the revolution become “non-brothers” in the first place, such that they could be destroyed with impunity by the mob, or condemned as “enemies of the state” by the National Convention and sent to the guillotine. On this basis, the doctrine of Liberté seems little more than a defense of gratuitous, passionate license that is immensely destructive to society.

Burke’s analysis of the situation in France, the condition of the National Assembly, and their combined implications, retains its extraordinary political noteworthiness to defenders of Liberty in our own day:

“It is no wonder therefore, that it is with these ideas of everything in their constitution and government at home, either in church or state, as illegitimate and usurped, or, at best as a vain mockery, they look abroad with an eager and passionate enthusiasm. Whilst they are possessed by these notions, it is vain to talk to them of the practice of their ancestors, the fundamental laws of their country, the fixed form of a constitution, whose merits are confirmed by the solid test of long experience, and an increasing public strength and national prosperity.

“They despise experience as the wisdom of unlettered men; and as for the rest, they have wrought underground a mine that will blow up at one grand explosion all examples of antiquity, all precedents, charters, and acts of parliament. They have ‘the rights of men.’ Against these there can be no prescription; against these no agreement is binding; these admit no temperament [modification], and no compromise: anything withheld from their full demand is so much of fraud and injustice. Against these their rights of men let no government look for security in the length of its continuance, or in the justice and lenity of its administration….”

Burke again reminds us a few pages later on that there is deep danger in relying on abstract rights when it comes to the organization of a just — that is “liberal,” in the sense of liberty, the root idea of classical liberalism — political society:

“The moment you abate anything from the full rights of men, each to govern himself, and suffer any artificial positive limitation upon those rights, from that moment the whole organization of government becomes a consideration of convenience. This it is which makes the constitution of a state, and the due distribution of its powers, a matter of the most delicate and complicated skill. It requires a deep knowledge of human nature and human necessities, and of the things which facilitate or obstruct the various ends which are to be pursued by the mechanism of civil institutions. The state is to have recruits to its strength, and remedies to its distempers. What is the use of discussing a man’s abstract right to food or medicine? The question is upon the method of procuring and administering them. In that deliberation I shall always advise to call in the aid of the farmer and the physician, rather than the professor of metaphysics.”

In Burke’s view — and I daresay in the view of his contemporary American readers — the French Revolution was a

“… usurpation which, in order to subvert ancient institutions, has destroyed ancient principles, will hold power by arts similar to those by which it has acquired it. When the old feudal and chivalrous spirit of Fealty, which by freeing kings from fear, freed both kings and subjects from the precautions of tyranny, shall be extinct in the minds of men, plots and assassinations will be anticipated by preventive murder and preventive confiscation, and that long roll of grim and bloody maxims which form the political code of all power not standing on its own honor and the honor of those who are to obey it. Kings will be tyrants from policy when subjects are rebels from principle.”

“Excuse me … if I have dwelt too long on this atrocious spectacle of the sixth of October 1789, or have given too much scope to the reflections which have arisen in my mind on occasion of the most important of all revolutions, which may be dated from that day, I mean a revolution in sentiments, manners, and moral opinions. As things now stand, with everything respectable destroyed without us, and an attempt to destroy within us every principle of respect, one is almost forced to apologize for harboring the common feelings of men….”

Clearly, Burke understands the French Revolution first and foremost as a “revolution in sentiments, manners, and moral opinions” — that is, it was preeminently a social, not a political revolution. Certainly that was not the case with the American Revolution. Indeed, Bernard Bailyn, eminent professor of Early American History at Harvard, has asked a tantalizing question: Was the American Revolution a revolution, or was it an evolution?

The prevailing American view at the time did not reject the ancient British tradition of natural liberty under natural law; it was rejecting King George as the traducer and usurper of this tradition. They didn’t want a king or a pope; they wanted a system of self-government that had already been in long usage in America. Ultimately they wanted a Constitution exclusively devoted to the defense of human liberty under just and equal laws. Which if history was of any guide meant that the action of the State had to be kept minimal in its scope by well-defined authority.

Most colonial Americans, being heirs of the same ancient, natural-law cultural tradition as Edmund Burke, likely would have agreed with him about this:

“…We are not the converts of Rousseau; we are not the disciples of Voltaire; Helvetius has made no progress amongst us. Atheists are not our preachers; madmen are not our lawgivers. We know that we have made no discoveries; and we think that no discoveries are to be made, in morality; nor many in the great principles of government, nor in the ideas of liberty, which were understood long before we were born, altogether as well as they will be after the grave has heaped its mould on our presumption….”

The allusion to Rousseau here is particularly instructive. Rousseau held that man is born perfectly good: He is born the “noble savage.” But as soon as he is in the world long enough, he becomes subject to a relentless process of corruption that makes him “bad” — because of the “bad institutions” of society, including churches and states, educational systems, economic organizations, and so forth. Man is victimized by society and powerless against it. “Bad institutions” are entirely to blame for human misery.

In short, Rousseau’s doctrine is directly opposed to the natural law doctrine that human beings are responsible (within limits) for whatever happens to them. Natural law theory holds that individual human beings alone have the ability to choose, decide, act; and that they are responsible for the decisions they make. And this implies the objective existence of good and evil. It also requires a universal (divine) spiritual authority to underwrite the foundational truths of the natural and moral worlds, thus to bring them into correspondence in human reason and experience.

In short, the Americans were not disciples of Rousseau…. He stands their theory of man on its very head.

Two Views of Man — Then and Now
The two revolutions have theories of man that are diametrically opposed, based on the idea of what constitutes human liberty, of the source of human rights. What Locke and Burke and the Americans held in common was the belief that human rights are the gifts of God, and are therefore inseparable from human nature itself. In other words, these rights inalienably inhere in concrete individual persons, each and every one, equally.

In contrast, on the French revolutionary view, human rights are the province of an abstraction known as “mankind.” Its doctrine is the Rights of Man — not the equal, inalienable rights of actual men. It sets up scope for the idea of “group rights,” as opposed to the idea of rights divinely vested in the individual person in such a way as to constitute his or her very own human nature. Under the French Revolution, the “metaphysicians” — Burke’s term for intellectual elites — would guide the rest of us in our understanding of such matters. In short, our rights as human beings ineluctably would be what politically powerful elites tell us they are. There is to be no higher standard of truth than that.

In the so-called post-modern world, the revolution that works overtime to kill truth wants to destroy it at its root — at the Logos. Rather than engage in fully free and fair debate, the entire project of the French Revolution seems have been the delegitimation of the idea that there is an “objective” standard by which Reality can be ascertained and judged, the root criterion for the discernment of good and evil in the actual world, by which human beings, acting according to reason and experience, can guide their lives in fruitful ways — or do the opposite. In short, once the concept of good and evil is destroyed, the human being has no firm guide by which to navigate his own personal existence.

Instead of the perennial question of good v. evil, in the post-modern world some “metaphysicians” tell us there is no objective truth at all — which logically follows from the presupposition of the “death” of God which they have, like Rousseau, already achieved in their own minds. The description of human reality thus boils down to a competition of amoral human “narratives,” or skilled opinions; but in the end still opinions. And under the principle of Egalité, one man’s opinion is just like any other man’s, neither good nor bad.

It appears we have among us today “metaphysicians” who desire, in the words of the great Anglo-American poet T. S. Eliot, to contrive and execute “systems so perfect that no one will need to be good.” And then to impose them on humanity. To succeed in this project, first they have to discredit the foundational motivating ideas of the American Revolution….

To speak of the Now: The currently sitting American president seems to be an activist of the French model. He is distinctly a post-modernist thinker, as an analysis of his words vis-à-vis his actions will show. Evidently he has no sympathy for the values, principles, and goals of the American Revolution, and has disparaged the Constitution — to which he freely swore an Oath of fidelity — on grounds that it is a “system of negative liberties” that has outlived its usefulness.

Indeed, it appears that he is doing everything in his power finally to drive a silver stake through the very heart of American liberty — the historic liberty of We the People of the United States of America, and that of our Posterity — for which the Constitution originally was “ordained and established.”

©2010 Jean F. Drew

ENDNOTES
1 Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie, The Pythagorean Sourcebook and Library, David Fideler, ed., Grand Rapids: Phanes Press, 1988, p. 97.
2 Thomas Fleming, Liberty!: The American Revolution, New York: Viking, 1997, p. 104f.
3 Fleming, p. 105.
4 Ibid.
5 Fleming, p. 112.
6 Fleming, p. 118.
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid.
9 Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France, New York: The Classics of Liberty Library, 1982, p. 105f. Note: Because this edition is a facsimile of the original publication of 1790, I’ve taken the liberty of modernizing the spelling and punctuation.
10 John Trenchard and Robert Gordon, Cato’s Letters, Vol. 1, Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, Inc., 1995, p. 406ff.
11 Burke, p. 87–88.
12 Burke, p. 85–86.
13 Burke, p. 89–90.
14 Burke, p. 116.
15 Burke, p. 119; emphasis added.
16 Burke, p. 127–128; emphasis added.


TOPICS: Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: 17750418; 18thofaprilin75; 2ifbysea; doi; frenchrevolution; godsgravesglyphs; liberty; pythagoras; revolutions; rights; totalitarianism; twoifbysea
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To: betty boop; spirited irish

581 posted on 08/22/2010 7:48:55 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: spirited irish

Finally, I am awake. It has been a slow morning. I think your 3 legged stool named spinelessness is right on. The article referenced earlier, America’s Ruling Class, made much the same distinction. For these so-called leaders being a member of the club is more important than their personal values. The nation suffers under this brand of leadership.


582 posted on 08/22/2010 10:28:49 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (They are the vultures of Dark Crystal screeeching their hatred and fear into the void ....)
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To: Amos the Prophet; Alamo-Girl; spirited irish; wagglebee; Diamond; YHAOS; Quix; Dr. Eckleburg; ...
An undying commitment to reasonableness means being able to see both (or all) sides of an argument. The result of all this gentlemanly conduct usually results in surrendering some small ground in order to maintain good fellowship. Where, precisely, does this get us? From the perspective of our adversary it simply means that we can be bullied into surrender, or, at least, hushed up.

There's a really good illustration of precisely these dynamics in the "Cordova Center" controversy at Ground Zero.... Moreover this controversy shows that enemies of our law use our law to advance their interests/designs. The "logic" here, to me, is that the proposed mosque must be built at Ground Zero, for the same reason that the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem HAD to be built on the Temple Mount, on the very footprint of the destroyed Solomon's Temple. Al-Aqsa is a monument to the victory of Islam over the West, which is to say the Judeo-Christian tradition. As I believe the Cordova Center would be also, assuming it is built.

Perhaps only Muslims understand this "logic."

Then again, your "average people" seem to get the message, as the polls are showing opposition to building the mosque at Ground Zero at around 70%. Unfortunately, the political class in NYC is blinded by their doctrinaire assumptions about "peace" and "tolerance" and "building understanding among peoples," yada yada yada. All of which assumes that The Other Side is also engaged in good-faith concern about such matters, that this is their motive for building.

The political class simply has no right to assume this. The "average people" know better, and are increasingly frustrated by the arrogance, unaccountability, and irrationality of the political class....

Thank you for your wonderful observations, dear Amos! Certainly the commitment to civility and honesty in one's dealings gives an advantage to an adversary who does not consider himself bound by these rules. A Muslim can lie to an unbeliever with impunity; Allah does not at all object to this. Indeed, lying is often necessary in order to advance the global interests of Allah.... The end justifies the means....

583 posted on 08/22/2010 11:13:55 AM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: betty boop

I suppose the underlying principle to my thesis is that it is vital to pick one’s enemies carefully. Once selected, however, there ought be no destraction from the business of absolute destruction of their ability to continue their policies.
Conservatives have been silent when falsely accused of the very sins fostered by progressives, communists, Muslims and other derelicts. When we are called racist it is absolutely certainly that a racist is using the euphemism.
Obama’s use of the vulgarism teabagger is a case in point. He is, after all, by many accounts, himself a teabagger of some notoriety. This from one who has claimed personal knowledge of teabagging.
(I trust I am not in trouble with the monitors for the use of such language.)


584 posted on 08/22/2010 11:36:14 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (They are the vultures of Dark Crystal screeeching their hatred and fear into the void ....)
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To: Amos the Prophet; Alamo-Girl; spirited irish; wagglebee; Diamond; YHAOS; Quix; Dr. Eckleburg
Conservatives have been silent when falsely accused of the very sins fostered by progressives, communists, Muslims and other derelicts.

An obvious tactic of progressives of all stripes to to blame the other guy for doing what one is already doing one's self, "behind the screen" as it were. And I certainly agree that only a racist thinks and speaks in terms of racial groups....

As you wrote, "When we are called racist it is absolutely certain that a racist is using the euphemism."

So very true, dear Amos!

585 posted on 08/22/2010 11:54:08 AM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: betty boop

~self ping~ for followup.


586 posted on 08/22/2010 12:31:52 PM PDT by ForGod'sSake (You have just two choices: SUBMIT or RESIST with everything you've got!)
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To: betty boop
Excellent case in point. Thank you so much for your wonderful essay-post, dearest sister in Christ!

I might add there is some dispute among the experts as to where the second Temple was actually located in reference to the Dome of the Rock. That might come into play if they try to make Jerusalem an international city and permit the Temple to be rebuilt. If so, then ...

Maranatha, Jesus!!!

587 posted on 08/22/2010 3:28:26 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: spirited irish; Alamo-Girl; Amos the Prophet; Quix; Dr. Eckleburg; Diamond; YHAOS
... spinelessness is the consequence of three interlocking spiritual conditions....

Thank you for your most perceptive insights on these matters, dear spirited irish! Of the three conditions you give — moral relativism, the desire for approval from our fellow men, and willful ignorance — the first seems to be the most fundamental.

Notwithstanding, it seems fair to note that not all ignorance is "willful." Some of it is deliberately promoted by our deplorable American public educational system.... For instance, when you start to see American history textbooks showing up in classrooms that begin the story of our nation with the Civil War, you know something is very wrong ... or you should know that. Sigh....

Once upon a time, education was regarded mainly as the transmission belt of a people's culture and civilization from one generation to the next. In the meanwhile students were taught critical thinking skills and habits of study that enabled them to acquire valid knowledge on their own; i.e., without being "told" what the "valid knowledge" is.

Nowadays, public education at all levels is little more than a trade school to grind out future taxpayers whose only civic responsibility is to be preoccupied with their personal lives as worker bees and taxpayers, and to leave the business of the state up to the experts.... [This is the essence of the "Prussian model" which so impressed John Dewey.] Beyond that, it's about the "socialization" of of the rising generation — not into the traditions of their inherited past, but into the "new order" the progressivists want to create, using these children as the "material" out of which to build the new order of progressivist preference....

But I digress. Bottom line for me, this "spinelessness" (as dear brother in Christ Amos succinctly puts it) is above all else a symptom of profound spiritual disorder, starting with persons, and radiating out from there into the general society.

Plato well understood that a given society is only as good (or as bad) as the generality of the goodness (or badness) of the individuals who compose it. If the preponderance of the people is disordered, then the society they form necessarily will be disordered also.

The genius of the classical thinkers was to realize (among other things) that when social disorder reaches a certain critical mass, it takes a tyrant to step in, to "clean up the mess" and set things "aright" again.... [According to progressively, increasingly debauched standards of "right.")

The problem of the order of human souls goes back to Heraclitus at least, and Plato drew on his insights. The order of souls is related to the order of natural reality itself: The universe is fundamentally lawful in its behavior. In other words, its order is subject to a universal, unchanging logos "common" to all, that is beyond finite, physical, changeable nature; thus this order, this Logos, has long been recognized (at least over the past 7 millennia of human history and experience) as divine in origin. Heraclitus put the matter this way:

Although this Logos is eternally valid, yet men are unable to understand it — not only before hearing it, but even after they have heard of it for the first time. That is to say, although all things come to pass in accordance with this Logos, men seem to be without any experience of it.... My own method is to distinguish each thing according to its nature, and to specify how it behaves; other men, on the contrary, are as forgetful and heedless in their waking moments of what is going on and within them as they are during sleep. [Fragment 1]

But though the Logos is common, the many live as if they had a wisdom of their own. [Fragment 2]

Those who are awake have a world one and common, but those who are asleep each turn aside into their own private worlds. [Fragment 89]

It is not meet [fitting or suitable] to act like men asleep. [Fragment 73]

Those who speak with the mind must strengthen themselves with that which is common to all.... For all human laws nourish themselves from the one divine — which prevails as it will, and suffices for all things and more than suffices. [Fragment 114, emphasis added]

I'm running long and so must soon conclude. First just to mention that, to Christians, this Logos is the Word of God, the Son of God, Who Is Alpha and Omega — first to last, and the order of everything in between....

Also to mention that it is very clear that for these ancient thinkers, the men who are "asleep" are suffering from a pneumopathological condition, a/k/a, a spiritual disease. Plato called it nosos — his descriptive word for the psychic condition of anoia, a word that can barely be translated into English nowadays, but which definitely suggests a flight from nous, from reason itself; Aristotle called it nosemos; the Roman statesman and philosopher Cicero later called it aspernatio rationis — that is, "contempt for reason."

I'll leave it there for now. Thank you ever so much, dear sister in Christ, for your wonderfully thought-provocative essay/post!

588 posted on 08/22/2010 4:12:35 PM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: betty boop
Nowadays, public education at all levels is little more than a trade school to grind out future taxpayers whose only civic responsibility is to be preoccupied with their personal lives as worker bees and taxpayers, and to leave the business of the state up to the experts.... [This is the essence of the "Prussian model" which so impressed John Dewey.] Beyond that, it's about the "socialization" of of the rising generation — not into the traditions of their inherited past, but into the "new order" the progressivists want to create, using these children as the "material" out of which to build the new order of progressivist preference....

So very true.

Thank you for sharing all your insights, dearest sister in Christ!

589 posted on 08/22/2010 9:32:30 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl
... there is some dispute among the experts as to where the second Temple was actually located in reference to the Dome of the Rock....

Oh, do you have a link to that handy, dearest sister in Christ? I'd like to "get up to speed" on this.... Especially because this issue "might come into play if they try to make Jerusalem an international city and permit the Temple to be rebuilt."

Thank you so much for writing!

590 posted on 08/23/2010 12:19:24 PM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: betty boop
Thank you for asking, dearest sister in Christ!

Here is a summary of the three positions proposed for the location of the Temple.

For a more detailed discussion, click here.


591 posted on 08/23/2010 3:04:28 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: betty boop
I should add one more to visualize how it could happen and what it would look like: The Peaceful Solution.

Maranatha, Jesus!!!

592 posted on 08/23/2010 3:10:09 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: betty boop

Balint Vazsonyi’s “America’s 30 Years War” has a few chapters with the exact same theme. It’s an excellent read. I highly recommend it.


593 posted on 08/23/2010 3:17:00 PM PDT by Teacher317 (remember dismember November)
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To: betty boop

Well done, dear sister. We are dealing, then, with a culture in which a preponderance of members are spiritually sick.
The particularities of this condition range from outright denial of spiritual reality to spiritual corruption including ghosts, seances, talking with the dead, reincarnation and hubris (the belief that one is god). Scientology, Mohammedism and other primitive religions yield similar spiritual sickness.
The denial of absolute reality is symptomatic of all of these diseased conditions. Your discussion is precisely on point. The rejection of absolute truth is the denial of reality. Solving this cultural condition is not complicated but it is difficult.
We must DEMAND that false doctrines be ended. Humanism, communism, collectivism, progressivism are false and malicious and must be ended. Accomplishing this requires a fanatical commitment to the truth.
Until we are willing to demand and require an end to the corruption of truth it will continue. This was my concern in my first post.
We cannot engage progressives and agnostic intellectuals in rational discourse. They are not rational because they deny the ground of rational thought, the reality of God. If they do not know Him we must witness to them until they acknowledge Him. We must never debate with them.
We know the Truth. The Truth has set us free. We must witness to our condition with every soul who has not yet met the living God.


594 posted on 08/23/2010 4:34:43 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell (They are the vultures of Dark Crystal screeeching their hatred and fear into the void ....)
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To: Teacher317; Alamo-Girl
Just ordered it, Teacher317!

Love those Hungarians.... and a classical pianist to boot! Also late director of the Center for the American Founding....

Thanks so much for the book recommendation. I'm so looking forward to reading it!

595 posted on 08/24/2010 9:48:15 AM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: Alamo-Girl
Oh thank you so very much for the link to the summary, dearest sister in Christ! Enormously valuable information there.

Plus the chilling concluding paragraph:

There is the possibility that climatic changes could take place in the Middle East, which would allow Israel to exercise control over the Temple Mount. The Antichrist may very well be the individual that institutes radical transformation in the Arab-Israeli conflict. His resolution to the conflict would certainly be cause for the world to worship the Antichrist.

Thanks again for this link!
596 posted on 08/24/2010 10:02:30 AM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: Alamo-Girl; Quix
Thank you so much, dearest sister in Christ, for the link to the "peaceful solution." It definitely cleared up some misperceptions I had.

It also makes perfect sense as a way for peaceable resolution of a thorny problem — the rebuilding of the Third Temple. The only problem I see with this proposal is that both sides must want a peaceful solution. Somehow or other, I feel fairly sure that Islam will not allow its Holy Place to be "defiled" by the presence of a Jewish Temple right next door to the Dome of the Rock, wall or no wall.

Allah is not looking for peace. He's looking for the universal submission of all mankind to himself. Or so it seems to me, FWIW.

Thanks again, dearest sister, for the excellent link!

597 posted on 08/24/2010 10:22:55 AM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: betty boop
Truly, I cannot imagine that "peaceful" solution resulting in peace though I imagine that is the reason they would use. Indeed, if they were to do such a thing, terror would not doubt quickly follow.

And so I say:

Maranatha, Jesus!!!

598 posted on 08/24/2010 10:59:59 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Amos the Prophet; Alamo-Girl; spirited irish; Quix; Dr. Eckleburg; Diamond; YHAOS
The rejection of absolute truth is the denial of reality. Solving this cultural condition is not complicated but it is difficult.

Dear brother in Christ, I absolutely affirm your first statement. The second, however, seems problematical to me.

The solution to the raging cultural condition of existence in untruth is difficult because it is complicated. It's complicated because of the plethora of different ways people can go wrong, once they're off "the God-standard."

You wrote, "We cannot engage progressives and agnostic intellectuals in rational discourse." Well, all I can say about that is from personal experience. On that basis, the statement is correct. As Eric Voegelin has pointed out, "debate" between persons who do not acknowledge a common ground of Reality are doomed from the outset. Or to put the matter another way, people who do not live in the same reality are unlikely to agree about much. Or again: People who live in First Reality do not understand people who live in a Second Reality; and vice versa. They do not even speak the same language.

Which I think is the basic point of what Heraclitus was saying, that there are two basic kinds of people: those who recognize that "the Logos is One and common" and is the very order of being itself; and those sleepers who reject the Logos, and thus withdraw into their own inner worlds, as if dreaming. [Logos is the ancient Greek word for word, truth, story, design — Koine words are remarkably "compact" compared to English, which is a "relentlessly denotative language."]

Thus it seems to me there are those who are on the "God-standard," and those who are not. Needless to say, the two camps are not exactly "eye-to-eye" on anything. They simply do not stand on the same ground, rationally or morally.

So "debates" between such parties inevitably tend to be "all heat and no light."

So if you can't get anywhere with such people with reason, with good-faith public debate, with rational persuasion, what do you do?

What you're left with is witness, just as you say, dear Amos. Your witness may not do a thing for people who refuse to be persuaded. But it might be of great help to others, those not yet thoroughly indoctrinated into such life- and reason-denying ideologies.

And of course, that witness must be of our Lord, Jesus Christ — Who is the Son of God, the Word of God Alpha and Omega, Who was God, and was with God in the Beginning, by and for Whom all Creation heavenly and earthly was made.... That witness preeminently must take the form of living in His Law, in His Love.

Other than that, I don't have a clue what to do about the fact that, nowadays, we are building a Tower of Babel [Babble] in the Public Square.

Or so it seems to me FWIW.

Thank you so much, dear brother in Christ, for your kind words, and for your excellent essay/post!

599 posted on 08/24/2010 12:17:46 PM PDT by betty boop (Those who do not punish bad men are really wishing that good men be injured. — Pythagoras)
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To: betty boop; Alamo-Girl

I was shocked to learn that the Dome of The Rock was originally built by the Caliph

AS A GIFT TO JEWS FOR A PLACE FOR THEM TO PRAY AND WORSHIP.

WHAT AN EVIL FARCE ISLAM IS.


600 posted on 08/24/2010 12:20:53 PM PDT by Quix (C THE PLAN of the Bosses: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2519352/posts?page=2#2)
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