By John W. Whitehead
November 07, 2016
“As I look at America
today, I am not afraid to say that I am afraid.”—Former presidential advisor
Bertram Gross
As history teaches us, if
the people have little or no knowledge of the basics of government and their
rights, those who wield governmental power inevitably wield it excessively.
After all, a citizenry can only hold its government accountable if it knows when
the government oversteps its bounds.
Precisely because Americans
are easily distracted—because, as study after study shows, they are clueless
about their rights—because their elected officials no longer represent
them—because Americans have been brainwashed into believing that their only duty
as citizens is to vote—because the citizenry has failed to hold government
officials accountable to abiding by the Constitution—because young people are
no longer being taught the fundamentals of the Constitution or the Bill of
Rights, resulting in citizens who don’t even know they have rights—and because
Americans continue to place their trust in politics to fix what’s wrong with
this country—the American governmental scheme is sliding ever closer towards a
pervasive authoritarianism.
This steady slide towards
tyranny, meted out by militarized local and federal police and legalistic
bureaucrats, has been carried forward by each successive president over the
past fifty years regardless of their political affiliation.
Big government has grown
bigger and the rights of the citizenry have grown smaller.
However, there are certain
principles—principles that every American should know—which undergird the
American system of government and form the basis for the freedoms our
forefathers fought and died for.
The following seven
principles are a good starting point for understanding what free government is
really all about.
First, the maxim that power
corrupts is an absolute truth. Realizing this, those who drafted the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights held one principle sacrosanct: a distrust
of all who hold governmental power. As James Madison, author of the Bill of
Rights, proclaimed, “All men having power ought to be distrusted to a certain
degree.” Moreover, in questions of power, Thomas Jefferson warned, “Let no more
be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of
the Constitution.” As such, those who drafted our founding documents would see
today’s government as an out-of-control, unmanageable beast.
The second principle is that governments
primarily exist to secure rights, an idea that is central to constitutionalism. In
appointing the government as the guardian of the people’s rights, the people
give it only certain, enumerated powers, which are laid out in a written
constitution. The idea of a written constitution actualizes the two great
themes of the Declaration of Independence: consent and protection of equal
rights. Thus, the purpose of constitutionalism is to limit governmental power
and ensure that the government performs its basic function: to preserve and
protect our rights, especially our unalienable rights to life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness, and our civil liberties. Unfortunately, the government
today has discarded this principle and now sees itself as our master, not our
servant. The obvious next step, unless we act soon, is tyranny.
The third principle
revolves around the belief that no one is above the law, not even those who
make the law. This is termed rule of law. Richard Nixon’s statement, “When the
President does it, that means it is not illegal,” would have been an anathema
to the Framers of the Constitution. If all people possess equal rights, the
people who live under the laws must be allowed to participate in making those
laws. By that same token, those who make the laws must live under the laws they
make. However, today government officials at all levels often act as if they
are royalty with salaries and perks that none of the rest of us are afforded.
This is an egregious affront to the citizenry.
Fourth, separation of
powers ensures that no single authority is entrusted with all the powers of
government.People are not perfect, whether they are in government or out of it. As
history makes clear, those in power tend to abuse it. The government is thus divided
into three co-equal branches: legislative, executive and judicial. Placing all
three powers in the same branch of government was considered the very
definition of tyranny. The fact that the president today has dictatorial powers
would have been considered a curse by the Framers.
Fifth, a system of checks
and balances, essential if a constitutional government is to succeed,
strengthens the separation of powers and prevents legislative despotism. Such checks and
balances include dividing Congress into two houses, with different
constituencies, term lengths, sizes and functions; granting the president a
limited veto power over congressional legislation; and appointing an
independent judiciary capable of reviewing ordinary legislation in light of the
written Constitution, which is referred to as “judicial review.” The Framers
feared that Congress could abuse its powers and potentially emerge as the
tyrannous branch because it had the power to tax. But they did not anticipate
the emergence of presidential powers as they have come to dominate modern
government or the inordinate influence of corporate powers on governmental
decision-making. Indeed, as recent academic studies now indicate, we are now
ruled by a monied oligarchy that serves itself and not “we the people.”
Sixth, representation
allows the people to have a voice in government by sending elected
representatives to do their bidding while avoiding the need of each and every
citizen to vote on every issue considered by government.In a country as large as
the United States, it is not feasible to have direct participation in
governmental affairs. Hence, we have a representative government. If the people
don’t agree with how their representatives are conducting themselves, they can
and should vote them out. However, as the citizenry has grown lazy and been
distracted by the entertainment spectacles of modern society, government
bureaucrats churn out numerous laws each year resulting in average citizens
being rendered lawbreakers and jailed for what used to be considered normal
behavior.
Finally, federalism is yet
another constitutional device to limit the power of government by dividing
power and, thus, preventing tyranny. In America, the
levels of government generally break down into federal, state and local
branches (which further divide into counties and towns or cities). Because
local and particular interests differ from place to place, such interests are
better handled at a more intimate level by local governments, not a
bureaucratic national government. Remarking on the benefits of the American
tradition of local self-government in the 1830s, the French historian Alexis de
Tocqueville observed:
Local institutions are to
liberty what primary schools are to science; they put it within the people’s
reach; they teach people to appreciate its peaceful enjoyment and accustom them
to make use of it. Without local institutions a nation may give itself a free
government, but it has not got the spirit of liberty.
Unfortunately, we are now
governed by top-heavy government emanating from Washington DC that has no
respect for local institutions or traditions.
These seven vital
principles have been largely forgotten in recent years, obscured by the haze of
a centralized government, a citizenry that no longer thinks analytically, and
schools that don’t adequately teach our young people about their history and
their rights.
Yet here’s the rub: while
Americans wander about in their brainwashed states, their “government of the
people, by the people and for the people” has largely been taken away from
them.
The answer: get
un-brainwashed.
Learn your rights.
Stand up for the founding
principles.
Make your voice and your
vote count for more than just political posturing.
Never cease to vociferously
protest the erosion of your freedoms at the local and national level.
Most of all, do these
things today.
If we wait until the votes
have all been counted or hang our hopes on our particular candidate to win and
fix what’s wrong with the country, “we the people” will continue to lose.
Whether we ever realize it
not, the enemy is not across party lines, as they would have us believe. It has
us surrounded on all sides.
Even so, we’re not yet
defeated.
We could still overcome our
oppressors if we cared enough to join forces and launch a militant nonviolent
revolution—a people’s revolution that starts locally and trickles upwards—but
that will take some doing.
It will mean turning our
backs on the political jousting contests taking place at all levels of
government and rejecting their appointed jesters as false prophets. It will
mean not allowing ourselves to be corralled like cattle and branded with
political labels that have no meaning anymore. It will mean recognizing that
all the evils that surround us today—endless wars, drone strikes, invasive
surveillance, militarized police, poverty, asset forfeiture schemes,
overcriminalization, etc.—are not of our making but came about as a way to
control and profit from us.
As journalist Chris Hedges
points out, “There were once radicals in America, people who held fast to moral
imperatives. They fought for the oppressed
because it was right, not because it was easy or practical. They were
willing to accept the state persecution that comes with open defiance. They had
the courage of their convictions. They were not afraid.”
Ultimately, as I make clear
in my book Battlefield America: The War on the
American People, it will mean refusing to be divided, one against
each other, by politics and instead uniting behind the only distinction that
has ever mattered: “we the people” against tyranny.
WC: 1599
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