In a Democracy, the
majority rules. This gives voters the most power over their laws. The voters
establish the laws and are in control of the government. In a Democracy, whatever the voters approve
becomes law and the government implements and enforces the law until it is
changed by the voters. The Founders of the US rejected this model to avoid
sovereign bankruptcy of the welfare state or domination of one religion over
another. There was also the problem of size and communication.
In 1789, the US original
13 colonies occupied 360,000 square miles from Maine to the Florida border.
Travel on horseback took days and weeks and there was no telegraph.
In a Republic, voters
elect “representatives” to vote in concert with their views. By 1789, the
colonies already had 170 years to develop their own economy and it resisted
government intrusion, so the choice was a Republic with a very limited federal
government. States continued to elect
State legislatures and they were inclined to limit their power to avoid interfering
with the free market economy their family businesses relied on.
We now have a
“Republic” where elected officials rely in special interest donations to
continue to be elected. The campaign to get votes from the voters, but after
they are elected they govern according to the wishes of the special
interests.
We now have the
technology that would allow voters to vote on laws via the internet, but the
political establishment doesn’t dare suggest that we improve voter input. They would also resist restricting campaign
contributions to registered voters for candidates who would appear on their
ballot. They would certainly object to
voter suggestions that they follow the US Constitution (as written). They have
no good arguments against these reforms, so they pretend the need for these
reforms don’t exist. Instead, they rely
on a steady stream of special interest tabloid news to distract us.
Dealing with living in
our Republic would be easier if our federal elected officials would follow the
US Constitution and if our State elected officials felt some well-directed heat
from the voters.
But we are always free
to vote with our feet and choose who we associate with, but many of us choose
to stay where we are and adapt.
I was born in St.
Louis Missouri. When I was age 2 we moved to Hallettsville Texas, Providence
Rhode Island, Memphis Tennessee and Queens NY. When I was 8 years old I moved
back to St. Louis Missouri. St. Louis was an ideal place to grow up. It was
well laid out and there were lots of things to do. My grandparents lived there
and so did most of my aunts, uncles and cousins. St. Louis is a blue collar
town and Missouri is not a Right to Work State, so there were lots of union
members and Democrats. My family was conservative, wealthy, Republican and
Catholic and all attended Catholic schools. St. Louis Catholics were mostly
conservative. We were insular. We were advised not to discuss religion or
politics.
When we moved to
Salina, Kansas in 1975, I felt the most comfortable as a conservative. It was a
very conservative town in a mostly conservative State. I moved there to take a
great job, not to vote with my feet to flee union country, but I felt free to
express my conservatism in the articles I wrote for Kansas Business News and
the Salina Journal.
When we moved to
Atlanta Georgia in 1983 I met Andrew Young and knew I wasn’t in Kansas anymore.
Atlanta was divided politically, but Ronald Reagan was their choice for
President and the electronics revolution was booming. Factions co-existed
separately. There were multiple subcultures operating with rich and poor Black
Cultures and Southern Culture separate but equal. There were also
Northeasterners and Midwesterners pouring in to Atlanta. The Gay subculture was
beginning to grow. All of these groups glommed together in separate parts of
Atlanta. They were definitely voting
with their feet to stay together.
My experience living
in other States was an advantage to me. I had lived in the Midwest, the South
and the Northeast and saw the vast cultural diversity, but I wasn’t anywhere
long enough to permanently adopt the accents I was exposed to. I could,
however, adopt these accents whenever I wanted to be entertaining. I saw lots
of sub-cultures.
In my travels to
Europe, Asia and South America and my experiences with people who came to the
US from other countries, I saw our similarities and our differences. I believe
we are likely to keep both. We are creatures of our upbringing and we will be
comfortable with those who allow us to keep our similarities and our
differences. But we conservatives will fight to restore compliance with our
original US Constitution, because the alternative is sovereign bankruptcy.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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