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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Just Who Are We Radicals And Reactionaries? The notion that a radical is one who hates his country is naïve and usually idiotic. He is, more likely, one who likes his country more than the rest of us, and is thus more disturbed than the rest of us when he sees it debauched. He is not a bad citizen turning to crime; he is a good citizen driven to despair. H.L. Mencken I have often considered the possibility that I am the guy that Mencken described. But for those involved in the traditional political realm of left and right, I am simply delusional, labeled a radical by those on the right and a reactionary by those on the left. In fact, I am neither. Rather, I am the dreaded Libertarian who believes that government, if it must exist at all, must be structurally limited. And it is clear that in that belief I am a part of a small minority. To suggest to the majority (who remain emotionally invested in the pseudo left-right paradigm) that democracy is perhaps the worst form of government will get you written off quickly. To most, such an assertion is worse than delusional. It is traitorous. Most members of the herd dont understand that the Founding Fathers likewise believed democracies were doomed to failure and that, left unchecked, ended up as nothing more than another form of tyranny: the tyranny of the majority. Everything they read and studied taught them that pure democracies:
have . . . been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths. (The Federalist, No. 10) It results in a deep and angry consternation that such a radical notion, an indictment of the revered democracy that America now exports at the end of a gun, was not suggested by the likes of radicals or reactionaries, but by James Madison, the U.S. President referred to on the White Houses own website as the Father of the Constitution. Few people believe he was radical or reactionary. Even fewer people know of his disdain for unfettered democracy. And that is unfortunate. Democracy, as a form of government, is like a ship without a rudder. It will move, but it is impossible to determine a direction. Each of the individual liberties so many Americans are proud of come from a republic with a constitution firmly protecting individual rights against intrusion by government, not a democracy that fundamentally assumes that 51 percent of the people are correct 100 percent of the time. In a pure democracy, if 51 percent of the people want to enslave a group or steal their personal property, they have the legal (and moral) right to do so. No property rights, no personal freedoms and no individual rights, regardless of genesis, are immune to a majority wanting to eliminate them. As did Madison, Ayn Rand, the often-reviled objectivist philosopher and novelist, railed against such tyranny, saying that individual rights should not be subject to a public vote and that the political function of rights is precisely to protect minorities from oppression by majorities, noting that the smallest minority on Earth is the individual. Simply put, without effective structural limitation, the majority in a democracy can (and will) oppress the minority by simply having or buying more votes. The irony of a democracy is that it functions only if it can be restrained from actually being one. Such was the idea of the framers of the United States Constitution, and they were right. Where they got it wrong was to assume a determined majority could not and would not trample the structural hurdles put in front of them. They will and they have. A good example is the 2nd Amendment, simple in its wording, clear in its intent: A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. The anti-gun minority or majority, or whatever the current polls shows them to be argues that the words do not mean what they say. In a disgraceful and intellectually deceitful rewriting of history, they suggest that the Founders meant the right to have a hunting rifle, since so many people hunted for food at that time in history. But, in fact, history tells a different story. To wit, the 2nd Amendments purpose was to ensure that if and when another government needed to be overthrown, the people would have the armament to get it done. Such clarity is lost on those with an agenda to rewrite the 2nd Amendment, and so they do. Recently, a textbook in the state of Texas for students in Advanced Placement programs quoted a new version of the old 2nd Amendment: The people have a right to keep and bear arms in a state militia. Such difference is not a simple oversight. An oversight is leaving out a marginally important phrase or a misspelling a word, not a dramatic sentence restructuring that changes the entire meaning of the sentence. And it is not as if there is any historical support for that revised language. To the contrary, Thomas Jefferson wrote: The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government. And, if that wasnt clear enough, he left no doubt of the Framers intent when he wrote: And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants. Arms meant then (and still mean today) everything necessary to fight a war against a tyrannical government, not necessarily to overthrow it but to protect oneself from its abuses. Any comment to the contrary is merely ignorance of history or the worst form of disingenuous historical revisionism. To that end, I am reminded of former Senator Daniel Moynihans admonishment: You are entitled to your own viewpoint, just not to your own facts. The ability to protect oneself from government is best evidenced in modernity by the increasingly frequent abuses of citizens by government agents. An elderly man in my hometown of Fort Worth, Texas, was killed when a half dozen police broke into his house and he pointed a gun at what he believed to be intruders. Indeed, they were intruders; but they wore badges and bulletproof vests. It turns out they had the wrong address, which government writes off as merely being a mistake and which resulted in his being killed. Murdered is a better term, if only because it is more accurate. Last week, cops killed a Florida State athlete when he ran to their car trying to get help. They shot him 11 times and used a Taser on him. A few months ago, police in Los Angeles shot up a truck carrying two women delivering newspapers. Officers riddled the pickup with bullets and shot the women because their truck was similar to a fugitives truck. In the minds of government officials, that gave the police the right to do what they did: open fire without warning. These are but examples among dozens from a rapidly growing police state the very kind the Framers worried would one day grow out of a failed Republic and a successful democracy. Rarely are the agents of government punished. The message of government is clear: We will protect our own, no matter how egregious their acts. Just as the 2nd Amendment isnt about hunting, it likewise isnt about protecting ourselves from the bad guys. Rather, it is to protect ourselves from the good guys who become bad guys, which is the eventuality of any democracy, the regrettable, but necessary, end game. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 13.
#1. To: James Deffenbach (#0)
""""noting that the smallest minority on Earth is the individual."""" Any American that quotes Alissa Rosenbaum needs to quote what she really thought about Americans. Rand said also that the " the masses are but mere lice, with barely a right to life". she was congratulated for saying so by von Mises and Hayak. Hypocrite Rosenbaum was the usual hate filled jew, nothing more. Disdain for the lice that could not stand on their own. Died in NYC, living on Social security and medicare under another name. Cruz even mouths the uttering of that sick jew.
Well, I can't help who people choose to quote in their articles. And I think you would agree that even a blind squirrel gets a nut once in a while. Personally, I have never read any of Ayn Rand's books so I actually know almost nothing about her. Other than the issue of the author quoting someone you would rather he hadn't, did you like the article? I thought it was good but then, if I hadn't thought it was good I wouldn't have posted it.
James... See my number 4...
Yeah, she was definitely wrong about that. Sometimes I think it's too bad the Indians didn't have repeating rifles or AK-47's or an armory full of SKS rifles. Their Homeland Security would have been much improved.
It's said that repeaters are what did for Custer at the Little Big Horn. The more conspiratorially minded say that someone slipped the Injuns Henrys and Winchesters because Custer was aiming for the White House.
The more conspiratorially minded say that someone slipped the Injuns Henrys and Winchesters because Custer was aiming for the White House. More likely it was his refusal take along a gatling gun that would have mowed down the offense in an unfair advantage. Similarly, he was reprimanded early on in his Plains Patrolman career for bringing the Cheyenne back to the fort with him instead of mowing down all of their villages at Washita and beyond less humanitarianly. Contrary to popular belief, I think these two battles at the start and end of his 11 year career out West were the entire extent of his "Injun Killer infamy", which cost him some status in Military circles the first time and his life the last one. The Indians had enough respect for him as a warrior to not scalp his body at the Little Big Horn. He was aiming for the Ulysses S. Grant White House through his testimony on the Trader Post corruption scandal (which was central to the impeachment process of that admin's Secretary of War, Belknap). Oops. If Americans see past the contrived character assassinations of Custer that are in-vogue these days, they might recall that Cabinet officials and others can be impeached too, even when already out of office.
I read someplace that he turned the Gatling Gun down because he didn't think it was an effective weapon in Indian warfare. It was a big bore spray & pray weapon that overheated quickly and didn't have the aiming ability of subsequent machine guns. Some writers say that it might not have been the weapons (the Cav was outnumbered in sheer count of rifles) but the fact that the troopers only fired about 20 rounds a year in training. They also had poor firing discipline.
Some writers say that it might not have been the weapons (the Cav was outnumbered in sheer count of rifles) but the fact that the troopers only fired about 20 rounds a year in training. They also had poor firing discipline. I believe that he was not much afeared of being outnumbered because he was confident in his estimations that each trained troop could take out about 10 or more Indians if they had to, even if those opponents had rifles. People say a lot of dubious things about Custer. Just a hunch, but I suspect that he may have been effectively assassinated by insider-arrangements somehow, using the Little Big Horn battle as a cover-up, because of his Trader Post corruption scandal testimony. The old Errol Flynn movie, They Died With Their Boots On, gives some insight on that D.C. War Department issue -- but not directly in reference to the impeachment process of Grant's Secretary of War, Belknap, iirc. Edited for punctuation + last sentence.
#14. To: GreyLmist, all, 4 (#13)
Most interesting thread once it swerved over to Custer - thanks.
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