Perhaps
you missed this small and unimpressive candidate for president, for his
physical presence was as weak as the voice that delivered his message. At
barely five feet, two inches tall, he stood up and criticized our government’s
expensive actions, focusing on the problems before us instead of engaging in
the sound bite war waged by the other candidates.
Some
in the audience craned their necks to hear his timid presentation, but most
quickly dismissed him as being horribly incompetent in today’s media society.
However, his words hit home with some people as he spoke about how Congress was
wreckfully using money to gain influence with the common voter:
“If Congress can employ
money indefinitely to the general welfare, and are the sole and supreme judges
of the general welfare, they will appoint teachers in every state and pay them
out of their public treasury, along with the education of children,
establishing in the same manner schools in every State throughout the Union.
Congress will assume provisions for the poor; and will undertake the regulation
of all roads, not just the Interstate highways. In short, everything, from the
highest object of state legislation down to the most minute object of police,
would be thrown under the power of Congress.”
O.K.,
this was (unfortunately) not said at the last debate but those are close to the
exact words that were delivered on the floor of the House of Representatives in
the late 1700’s by eventual President James Madison. Although Madison is known
as the “Father of Our Constitution,” his intelligence, principles and knowledge
would mean absolutely nothing in today’s made for TV politics and vote-buying contests.
The
great man didn’t have the teleprompter reading abilities, commanding voice and
stylish jaunt that makes today’s charismologist a presidential contender. And,
what’s worse, the average voter doesn’t understand what politicians should be
doing, because they do not understand our constitutional foundation; so, they
vote for the cool, stylish guy who gives you government goodies.
Think
about this: The two leading Democratic candidates are offering free college
education. But, they will not address the insane costs of education, possibly
because of their funding affiliations with the teacher’s unions; and they don’t
care one bit about the horrible debt they have already infected us with.
Do
you realize that we sat through a two-hour debate where not one candidate
mentioned the constitutional duties of the president? That the party that
brought on the greatest debt in the history of the planet wasn’t chastised for
their evil deed?
In
the absence of the Republican’s admonishment, the Democrats are doubling down
on the debt by offering more benefits to the citizens for their
votes. Hillary and Bernie are gaining ground by offering more
benefits from the treasury, while the voters are following them like the
zombies in the movie “The Mummy;” but, instead of chanting “Imhotep,” they’re
repeating “want more debt.”
The
Republican focus should be twofold. First, the debt must be addressed in
certain, hard-corps terms. Kurt Schlichter made it clear: They go for your
jugular, go for theirs!” He’s right. The Democrat vote-buying machine relies on
taking from the future in a war that the children can’t fight. So, I accuse
Democrats of “Fiscal Child Abuse.”
Now,
don’t be shy. If this nation means anything to any of you we have to fight for
it. We will continue to lose if we insist playing by the Marquis of Queensbury
rules against a faction that fights every way it can with lies, manipulated
data, compromised news services, money laundered through its union workers
& donors and buys votes by using taxpayer’s money.
Second,
our Constitution must be brought to the forefront in the debates, not
abandoned.
We
can use our president as a good example. The Constitution that he twice swore
to “preserve, protect and defend” orders that the President “take care that the
laws be faithfully executed.” He is to enforce the law, not change it, which is
a power of the Legislative branch alone. But our president claims that our
immigration laws are broken and need to be changed, so he refuses to enforce
them. That is an impeachable offense, yet Congress does nothing but talk.
Why
aren’t the Republicans addressing these horrible crimes against the people? Why
do I think that Donald Trump is the only candidate who will?
The
point of this letter is that we are losing our foundation because it is not
being addressed in proper terms. We have to bring our Constitution back to the
forefront in the debates and fight with the same energies as our opponents. We
have to “trump” their every call for more government by addressing the horrible
debt they’ve placed on the children. Think of this: The
extremist Democrats have given the children one of two choices: Either be born into horrible debt, or be
aborted. Some choice.
Read more at http://politichicks.com/2015/08/the-presidential-candidate-we-should-be-listening-to-and-its-not-who-you-think/
Comments
Our present-day
Madison-like candidates are probably Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, the only
Legislators who consistently vote NO on unconstitutional bills. Trump is
Madison-like enough for me as well, so far.
I think Trump is a Constitutionalist who wants the rule of law. I think Trump would be a spending
cutter. His comment about global warming
was that it is a hoax. That tells you where he stands on carbon capture. I think Trump would also demand that whatever
government does is a good deal for the voters.
He doesn’t like to overpay and get shoddy goods. Given that, I think he will fire half of the
Executive Branch.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA
Tea Party Leader
Rand Paul and Bobby Jindal share a Madison-like lack of...telegenicity, shall we say? (Because they're not unattractive, just outside the TV-pol mold.) Trump comes across as more like Clinton channelling Nixon. He may be bringing some good things back to the debate but he's still bad news: people who take him seriously are basically saying "It's acceptable for a man to lie to women."
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