An article for our readers by Ken Bowers:
I feel that we, the American people, are in a crucial crossroad. A milestone in history looms before us. I think that we have the opportunity to decide the very future of our country. Perhaps 200 years from now, some historian will write about the time when the United States Constitiution hung, as it were, by a thread and that freedom loving Americans from across the country joined forces and saved it from destruction. I firmly believe that we are that generation and now is that time. Some of us may have our names go down in history as modern day Jeffersons, Franklins, Washingtons, and Adams. We have the chance to restore our republic, to restore Constitutional freedoms that have been taken away from us, slowly, over the years.
The government has been in the freedom stealing business for a long time. They did it under various schemes and plots. The programs and clichés were numerous. Here are some of them: Freedom was taken in the name of ‘the less fortunate,’ or ‘the disadvantaged,’ or ‘to fight terrorism;’ to give us a ‘New Deal,’ or a ‘Fair Deal;’ a ‘New Frontier,’ or a ‘Great Society;’ or how about ‘compassionate conservatism’ or ‘change you can believe in.’ In all these slogans and clichés, two facts stand out. First, in each case, government got bigger and assumed more power, and secondly, we wound up with less freedom. It’s a case of cause and effect that as government power increases, freedoms decrease.
Do you want your freedoms back? So do I. I want the freedoms guaranteed under the Constitution. But in order to achieve the goal of regaining our freedoms under the Bill of Rights, we have to understand freedom as defined by the Founders, for it is THAT concept of freedom that they guaranteed us. They bequeathed us THEIR idea of freedom. In order to restore THAT kind of freedom, we have to understand it. We can never achieve a goal that we don't understand. So the logical question is, how did the Founders define freedom? Actually, their definition is quite different than how we define it today. Their definition of the term was more comprehensive. The Founders believed, as we do, in the concept of freedom from government interference. We want the government to get off our backs and out of our pocketbooks. And as far as it goes, that's not bad. But that was only a part of their idea of freedom.
They also believed that freedom was inextricably linked to personal responsibility. The two are so intertwined that if you take away a person’s responsibility over a certain aspect of their lives, you will take away their freedom. Let me explain. Recently, President Obama signed into law the Health Care Reform bill. This is a huge power grab by the government. They took away our freedom in matters of health care. Now we can go to jail for five years if we don’t get mandatory health insurance.
Now, our options for a doctor’s care will depend on a government bureaucrat instead of a personal consultation with our physician. The list of outrages found in this law goes on and on. But the government took away our freedom in health care matters when they took over our personal responsibility for health care. Normally, we have the responsibility to take care of our family’s health, but when they took that responsibility, they robbed us of our freedom. That is why the Founders never put welfare powers into the Constitution. They knew that taking away a person’s responsibility robbed them of their freedom. The people were expected to govern themselves.
So if we want the same kind of freedom as envisioned in the Constitution, we have to swear to never go to the government for any kind of subsidy, whether it be a government guaranteed small business loan, or food stamps, or aid to mothers with dependent children, or free medicine, or farm subsidies, or student grants or loans, or any of a hundred other subsidies that the government offers. They are traps. They take over our responsibility in those areas, and thereby take our freedom.
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