By nttcPayday Loans

Posts tagged: Founding Fathers

Basic American Principles

By Cassandra Effect, December 24, 2009 12:21 am

Another fantastic article from Tennessee State Representative Susan Lynn’s.   She is so eloquent in describing the nature of Freedom in our country – and the perversion of it by the moochers and looters  - the Conservative Women speak TRUTH TO POWER.  They are our best hope for the future.   Palin , Bachmann and now Lynn!   be sure to get a feed subscription to her blog HERE

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Basic American Principles
Principles are important – without them we get off track and lose our way. Many believe that our federal government has lost its way while others just don’t understand why so many object to the “change” taking place today.

Let’s look at some of the foundational principles of American government; the principles that made our nation great.

The purpose of our government is to secure our rights

The Declaration of Independence established the American view of the rights of man and the duties of government. “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.” They concluded by stating that our “separate but equal station” with Britain and other governments of the world would give us “full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do.”

Our Constitution, drafted in 1787, used the Declaration of Independence as a guide to governance. The Constitution up-holds the purpose of our government, to secure our rights, and provides seventeen specific powers to the federal government in Article 1, Section 8. Two years later a Bill of Rights was added by the states in order to prevent misconstruction and abuse of federal powers; succeeding amendments bring the total number of enumerated federal powers to 30. None of those 30 powers grant general legislative authority to the federal government. In fact, such powers belong only to the states; called police powers – states pass laws to secure the rights of individuals.

So what they created is the freest county in the world – with a government that recognizes mans’ unalienable rights, and whose purpose is to secure those rights for its citizens’. In the United States, all have freedom and all understand that we can express our freedoms until we infringe upon another’s freedom. Except where individual actions may infringe on the unalienable and Constitutional rights of another, our government is to stay out of the affairs of the people and of business.

Our government cannot take-away or infringe on our rights

Our nation, our Constitutional Republic is based upon natural rights. But just what are unalienable rights and Constitutional rights? An unalienable right is a natural right granted to man by our Creator; described ever so simply as life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness in our Declaration of Independence and it is also a Constitutional right. Life is, well, life. Examples of liberty are freedom to believe, or become, or protect yourself; a right to your speech, your reputation, and the things you create. Pursuit of happiness is freedom to make your own way, own your own property or live anywhere; a right to what you earn.

Constitutional rights such as trial by jury, to bear arms and vote don’t seem natural. They are not natural, but they do serve to directly secure our natural rights. For instance, who judges our actions is very important because we can lose our liberty as punishment. Arms are not natural – but protecting yourself, especially from your own government, is a natural right. Therefore, the right to bear arms serves to secure your natural rights. The right to vote protects your right to self-determination and liberty, even speech. All in all, unalienable or Constitutional, our rights are rights which no government can take-away, question or alter, they are unalienable. No social contract can cause us to surrender these rights.

Rights are of no cost to anyone else

My freedom of speech costs you nothing. Your freedom of religion costs me nothing.

The liberal error; confusing needs with rights; confusing positive and negative

What liberals tend to do is to believe that they can “create” rights out of needs and then demand those rights from the government in the form of services – such as for health care. The liberals’ major mistake is that they not only misunderstand what rights are but they also misinterpret rights as “positive rights” – in other words, that the government has an obligation to provide a particular right to each citizen.

For example, we have laws against crime, and in the past there have been times when citizens have sued the government because the police didn’t arrive in time to prevent that crime. While you have a natural right not to be harmed, there is no right to expect that the government will prevent you from becoming a victim of a crime; the government is not at any fault or liability in this instance.

Liberals need to understand that rights are natural and negative. There cannot be a natural right to health care. Making health care a right requires infringing upon your rights and the rights of others. Aches and pains are natural but there is no natural right that someone must tend to your every ache or pain. To take resources (money, labor or goods) from one to give to another violates our natural right to our own property. For the government to force you to buy something that is not for the purpose of protecting the rights of another, such as liability car insurance, is a taking of your property in direct violation of your rights.

America is about freedom

Defending our nation from foreign invaders, serving justice through the courts and constructing an orderly monetary and bankruptcy system are enumerated powers in the Constitution. Each of those federal powers helps to secure the continuance of our government, our liberty and our property. Government financing of health care is not an enumerated power of the federal government nor is health care a natural right.

In fact today, the federal government does thousands of things not enumerated in the Constitution – and although it has become customary in Washington, this is why millions object. You can’t fundamentally change the fact that the whole point and most unique feature of our American government is that the government cannot infringe or take-away our natural, unalienable or Constitutional rights.

Federal legislators have had a good time through the 20th and now 21st century infringing on the states, and satisfying the Liberals by creating all kinds of programs and laws that spend trillions and trillions of dollars, all of it at direct expense to individual freedom and liberty and states’ rights.

What most of us want liberals to understand is that the most important basic principle of our American government is – America is about freedom. The citizen is in charge. He is not just a funding source for the federal legislators’ – there are limits to federal power and purpose. It is the American people that have always solved the problems of our nation – and we must be free in order to continue to do so.

By Rep. Susan Lynn
District 57
Tennessee

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Reports from the Patriotic Roadtrip – visiting Colonial Williamsburg

By Cassandra Effect, September 9, 2009 9:11 pm

I am heading to Washington for the 9/12 National Taxpayer Protest (www.912dc.org) – along the journey we are stopping to visit our founding fathers for inspiration.

Tuesday and Wednesday were spent in Colonial Williamsburg.  A town frozen in time – with an amazing story to tell about Americans who decided that they did not like being bossed around and treated llike second class citizens by their mother country across the Atlantic.  Its pretty much that simple really when you boil it down. 

During our two days in Williamsburg we had the privilege of hearing George Washington deliver his Farewell Address.   The whole thing!  Amazing and Moving.  Its one thing to have read his letter, and another to HEAR it.  Read it out loud to yourself – its an amazing thing!

We also witnessed the beginnings of our revolutions with Patrick Henry fomenting sedition and revolution!

We closed out trip witnessing Thomas Jefferson discuss the creation of and read aloud the Declaration of America Independence.  Again – these documents were meant to be read ALOUD – they are incredible!

I have to say that the kids enjoyed Williamsburg, but I do wonder if the lesson of the living history is better received by the adults than the children! What a wonderful trick – the adults bring the kids there to learn about US History and yet the Adults are the ones most disposed to grasping many of the concepts and lessons!

We are full of Revolutionary Era Fervor and ready for Washington DC and the 9/12 march!

 

Patrick Henry - Give me Liberty of Give me Death

 

 

Jefferson Reciting the Declaration of Independence

Other updates:

Reports from the Patriotic Roadtrip – visiting Jefferson and Madison

  • Share/Bookmark

Reports from the Patriotic Roadtrip – visiting Jefferson and Madison

By Cassandra Effect, September 7, 2009 8:27 pm

I am heading to Washington for the 9/12 National Taxpayer Protest (www.912dc.org) – along the journey we are stopping to visit our founding fathers for inspiration.

Sunday

We spent the day with Thomas Jefferson at his home Monticello.   Modern day folks often tend to think of the founding fathers as “old white men.”  But that is thinking of them after the American Revolution!  Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence when he was only 33 years old!  Monticello was beautiful, and Jefferson inventiveness is certainly showcased.  Unfortunately, the interpretation of the property is focused mostly on the home, and how the people lived them including Jefferson and his slaves.  It is clearly a paradox that the man who wrote the Declaration owned slaves and only freed 5 of them at his death.   Sadly, there was nothing in the Museum other than a few mentions in a 15 minute movie to discuss his government service, including Secretary of State, Vice President and President.   On a plus note, the cafe had great food!

Monday

We made two stops today

First we went to the Michie Tavern, which we did not have time for on Sunday.  This is a little complex on the way to Monticello and included a period Tavern, several shops and a restaurant.  The kids really enjoyed the Tavern tour which while educational, also had some fun elements including dancing a colonial reel in costume.  There is a clothing store that had period style outfits, and we bought items for the kids – my wife found a few items to wear for the 9/12 march and look like Thomas Payne – she’s gonna be a rock star on Saturday in this get up!   The restaurant at Michie Tavern has some of the best fried chicken I have had in a long time – its a little pricey for lunch, but seriously worth it!

After lunch we visited James Madison’s home Montpelier about an hour north of Monticello.  This has been the highlight of the trip so far!  It had been renovated and relaunched in 2008.  Its approach is much different than Monticello, focusing on Madison as the “Father of the Constitution.”  There is still time spent on how people lived on the property, but the FOCUS is on Madison’s immeasurable contribution to our country.

I had the privilege to have a fantastic tour guide – Don – who truly made history come alive!

As part of the tour you get to go to Madison’s Library, which held over 400o books during his day.  Books Madison  pored over to identify governments that had worked in history and to understand WHY!  On the floor by the fireplace are ink stains.  Ink which dripped off of Madison’s desk – the very spot he sat and wrote up the Virginia Plan, which was the driving force for the US Constitution.   Chills went up my spine as I imagined Madison sitting in front of me in this small room, wracking his brain to figure out a way to have a sustainable government.  How fortunate we are today for having had men like Madison who were both Revolutionaries, but also willing to give serious thought to Governing.  At this point during the tour, Don held up a pocket size copy of the Constitution and said that “the genius of this man was to give in so few words the foundation of our government that still lives on over 200 years later.  Yet the folks in Washington need 1000 pages for the stimulus recovery bill which only serves to spend money.”   Way to go Don!  Downstairs you visit the room in which Madison died.   An easel contains a placard with his Advice to My Country.  The first sentence is the most commonly quoted, but the final sentence is the more powerful, yet oft left out!

“The advice nearest to my heart and deepest in my convictions is, that the Union of the States be cherished and perpetuated. Let the open enemy of it be regarded as a Pandora with her box opened, and the disguised one as the serpent creeping with his deadly wiles into paradise.”

There is a small room on the side of the house that is dedicated to explaining Madison’s role in the Constitution as well as his thoughts and comments on other topics.  

You MUST visit this home – you will be inspired!

PS:  During our tour we ran across two other families also heading the the 9/12 protest march and doing their own version of the Founding Fathers tour!   Excellent!

  • Share/Bookmark

Panorama theme by Themocracy