Since our choices for President are
now more clear — Trump vs. Hillary — many conservatives and constitutionalists
have wrangled with the stark reality that true conservatism is relegated to the
minority in this country – at least for the time being.
Hillary Clinton is a staunch
progressive with absolutely no ideals remotely construed as conservative.
Donald Trump, even as the assumed GOP nominee, has little history of promoting
conservative ideals and principles.
We’ve endured nearly eight years of
perhaps the most anti-American Presidential Administration in U.S. history.
Economically, we see a stagnant
economy and a doubling of federal debt. Internationally, we see chaos around the
world and newly emboldened adversaries. Domestically, we face a fire-hose of
outrageous political correctness and progressive agendas that take the place of
morality, decency, privacy, and common sense.
We live in tumultuous times, and our
country strays further from both its founding principles and individual
freedom.
However, neither leading
Presidential candidate is the antidote for what ails us. Make no mistake; the
cause of the slippery slope we find ourselves on is a complete and often
contemptuous disregard for the intent and meaning of our Constitution — by many
leaders and some citizens.
Dennis
Prager recently wrote, “…America was founded to be an
idea, not another country”. In the same article, Prager also cited
Margaret Thatcher: “Europe was created by history. America was created by
philosophy”.
As conservatives, we cannot be
deterred when teaching the philosophy of this country’s founding. It is clear
that neither major political party today represents conservatives or the
Constitution. Conservatism appears to be the only political philosophy in
America today that wholly supports and represents the Constitution.
The philosophy of America,
envisioned by our Founders, is limited government, freedom, all men being
created equal, unalienable (God-given) rights, separation of powers, and the
notion of a government receiving its powers from the consent of the governed.
Calvin Coolidge, in a speech on the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence
in 1926, emphasized the anti-Constitutional and anti-American ideals of
progressivism. Coolidge said, “If all men are created equal, that is final. If
they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive
their just power from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance,
no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny
their truth and their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed
historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no
equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to
proceed in that direction cannot lay claim to progress. They are reactionary.”
Unfortunately, Coolidge’s assessment
in the denial of our founding truths is upon us. Progressives are not making
“progress”; they are moving us backwards and claiming it to be “progress”. They
are driving America toward the ever-changing and chaotic ideas of man, and away
from the unalienable rights from God. They are not making us “equal” nor do
they intend to produce equal opportunity. Rather, they force changes in
behavior and even thought with legal strong-arm tactics that end up making some
more equal than others.
With Obama as the nominal head of
this progressive philosophy, the people no longer rule. We witness almost
weekly examples of government over-reach and illegal use of Presidential
authority. We live in a time where more and more Americans look to the
government to solve their problems, to eradicate speech and actions they oppose,
and to supply their every need. Too many appear willing to give up their
freedom in return.
Our nation was not founded on the
idea that citizens should look to government to solve their problems or to
silence those they oppose. They sought to create a nation of citizens who have
equal opportunities, not equal outcomes. They understood and advocated that God
created our rights, not man.
The honorable Justice Janice Rodgers
Brown said in her Heritage
Foundation-sponsored 2015 Joseph Story lecture: “So we must ask ourselves: What were the ingredients of that mortar,
that binding spell, that gave us statesmen like Adams and Madison, judges like
Marshall and Story, and presidents like Washington and Lincoln? What made
America possible and limited government conceivable? And can we, a polity so
greatly changed, recapture the optimism and certitude of the Founders in a
world of Big Government and judge-made rights none of them could have imagined?
Or was a
republic peopled by free men a naïve and childish dream to which we wiser, more
sophisticated grown-ups should bid good riddance? Though America seemed a
miracle, was it only a product of its time, destined to fail as the
sensibilities that produced it faded from the national conscience?”
The principles of our nation’s
founding were neither childish nor naïve, and I’m sure Justice Rodgers would
agree. We know that maintaining freedom has always been difficult, and
sometimes must be fought for against great opposition. This is where we
conservatives and Constitutionalists are today! We are fighting against two
parties that sometimes speak of the Constitution, but seem unaware of what it
really says.
I passed a local church near my home
just the other day. The front sign read: “History is Changed by The Few”. We
are the few. As conservatives, championing our Constitution and freedom is our
role, and I believe that our time in history has come.
http://politichicks.com/2016/05/history-is-changed-by-the-few/
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