On Constitution Day, good to remember many things that have made the American Republic the greatest constitutional republic in history. But at the foundation, one of the most fundamental concepts the Founders got right was a correct understanding of human nature . . .
The Founders believed that we are imperfect human beings in an imperfect world who had been endowed by God with transcendent natural rights of life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, etc. So how to solve this conundrum: imperfect human beings do what they can, not what they. . .
Should, therefore imperfect human beings should never be trusted w/ consolidated power. But a government in an imperfect world need to be created that allowed human beings to pursue and achieve God-given rights. So the Founders created a federal republic that diffused power. . .
Among the various federal branches & also to the states; the idea of federalism. Now understand what Progressives got wrong: human nature. They believed that it would be perfectly acceptable, desirable, to consolidate power into the hands of a relatively few educated elite. . .
Thus the birth of the massive Administrative State at the beginning of the 20th century. Consolidated power always ends badly. This is the challenge we face: you cannot have two very different competing philosophies of governance inside the same country; an Administrative. . .
State inside of a Constitutional Republic. If you want to understand the massive tensions breaking to the surface it really revolves around this and ultimately the question of who decides. In a constitutional republic, all power flows from the people to their representatives. . .
Who decide on behalf of the people. In an Administrative State, unelected bureaucrats decide. So if we want to truly restore the republic, the Administrative State must be significantly reduced: break the State, drain the Swamp, restore the Republic.
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Today is Constitution Day. 235 years ago in Philadelphia, 39 men signed the document & sent it to the various states for ratification. It is one of the greatest, if not the greatest, political documents ever written. Out of it came the world’s longest lasting Constitutional. . .
Republic. The founders of the Republic understood that inherent rights had been granted to every individual. They constructed the machinery of the Republic to in fact protect those rights and take none of them away. That is why the machinery of the Republic was based on the. . .
Separation of powers so that government could never become strong enough to attack or abuse inherent rights while at the same time providing for ordered liberty. Progressive Statists for the last century have been destroying the original Constitution to achieve their. . .
1776 was about principled defiance in the face of authoritarianism in which the powerful British Empire suspended many of the rights of the English colonists in the American colonies and began implementing taxes and other policies. The colonists, after years of appeals. . .
Finally realized their last recourse was armed resistance. But they based their resistance off really a fundamental belief: they had been endowed by a Creator w/ unalienable rights; life, liberty, etc. and out of those fundamental rights the ideas/beliefs in self-governance. . .
So what no earthly power had given, no earthly power could suspend or take away. The British government didn’t give the colonists their rights so they couldn’t take them away, which is what they were in fact doing. But even more than that the colonists believed that. . .
I think the only thing Conservative Inc. is good at conserving is their sinecures with nice buildings & paychecks. Because they're not conserving much of anything else. At what point does the donor community wake up and realize it's also part of the problem? By funding weak. . .
And ineffective think tanks, donors are only making the situation even worse by creating opportunity cost. Continuing to put money into the wrong places & wrong people will continue to lead to the wrong results. Ask yourself: do you think that the “conservative movement”. . .
As currently constructed can actually do anything to truly win and save this country? Anyone really paying attention knows this is a yes/no question. And the answer is no. Not even close. In fact, Conservative Inc. can’t even be trusted to side with America First on anything. . .
Here is what I was going to say tonight on Fox: 19 gutless Republicans just helped sell out the American people w/ this abominable infrastructure bill.
This bill adds anywhere from $256 billion to $400 billion to our $30 trillion deficit. But more than that, it’s not really. . .
infrastructure at all. When you add in roads, bridges, airports, major projects, you might get to 23% of this bill being about infrastructure. The rest is basically a Leftist wish list. This is a gateway bill to the Green New Deal. . .
You have anywhere from a mileage tax to $213 bil for retrofitting 2 million homes and buildings to make them more sustainable. There’s $20 bil for racial equity and environmental justice, to $10 bil for a new Civilian Climate Corp which sounds to me like Green New Deal. . .
A little history lesson: Hugh, Lord Percy, who features in my new book, The Adversaries, was one of the senior British officers in Boston in 1774-1775. In Sept 1774, he wrote back to England: "What makes an insurrection here always more formidable than in other places. . ."
"is that there is a law of this Province, which obliges every inhabitant to be furnished with a firelock, bayonet, & pretty considerable quantity of ammunition. Be sides which, every township is obliged by the same law to have a large magazine of all kinds of military stores. . .
Sept 1774 is of course when the British government is beginning to collapse in the colonies. On top of that, towns would supply the funds to help the poor buy a musket. Percy's letter from Boston back to England is here: archive.org/details/hughea…
246 years ago today, a young Boston physician by the name of Dr. Joseph Warren took the pulpit of the Old South Meeting House. He’d come to give the oration for the 5th Anniversary of the Boston Massacre. As the anniversary had fallen on a Sunday, the oration was scheduled. . .
For the next day. It was said there were 5,000 in attendance that day in a building built more for a much smaller crowd. Forty British officers came, seating themselves on the pulpit stairs, come to intimidate Warren. But he looked over their heads and spoke to the gathered. . .
Bostonians and would speak for over an hour: “Our country is in danger, but not to be despaired of. Our enemies are numerous and powerful, but we have many friends, determined to be free, and heaven and earth will aid the resolution. On you depend the fortunes of America. . .