Thursday Column
The Rights and Obligations of Liberty
"No country upon earth ever had it more in its power to attain these blessings than United America. Wondrously strange, then, and much to be regretted indeed would it be, were we to neglect the means and to depart from the road which Providence has pointed us to so plainly; I cannot believe it will ever come to pass." --George Washington

In a recent discussion with a colleague, I lamented the fact that too few American citizens understand their obligation, before all others, to support and defend our Constitution, much less, engender the ability to do so. She responded that, though she considered herself a conservative (mostly because she identifies closely with some conservative principles), understanding our Constitution was not her "passion."
My friend holds degrees from the nation's finest academic institutions and is professional in all her endeavors. However, like most Americans under 50 years of age, she never had a basic civics course and consequently has a difficult time articulating even the most fundamental constitutional principles.
The fact is, as Americans, we not only enjoy the rights affirmed by our Constitution, we have obligations to understand the mechanics of that affirmation in order to sustain it for our generation and those to come.
No matter what our calling, our occupation or our passion, we have a debt and duty as citizens to both learn about and support our Constitution, and we are obliged to do so above and before all other pursuits, for without constitutional Rule of Law, there are no other pursuits.
Of course, because ignorance is institutionalized by most government education systems, including those of "higher learning," and because ignorance is apparently considered virtuous by some social subcultures, there is little probability that a too large portion of Americans will ever comprehend this obligation, much less honor it.
Fortunately, in the words of Samuel Adams, "It does not take a majority to prevail ... but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of freedom in the minds of men."
But, what of those like my well-educated colleague, who is among America's "best and brightest", who are, however, uninformed about their obligations as citizens of the greatest experiment in human history? What of those who, as one consequence of enjoying the highest standard of living on the planet, tend to take our legacy of liberty for granted and have become complacent about its attendant responsibilities?
George Washington noted at the conclusion of the American Revolution, "The value of liberty was thus enhanced in our estimation by the difficulty of its attainment, and the worth of characters appreciated by the trial of adversity."
These days, most Americans believe that liberty is their birthright. They enjoy the (relative) personal freedom of our great society but forget the corresponding personal responsibility. For most of us have never had to fight for liberty and, thus, have little concept of its value or any sense of gratitude for its accumulated cost.
In his 1833 Commentaries on the Constitution, Justice Joseph Story wrote, "Let the American youth never forget, that they possess a noble inheritance, bought by the toils, and sufferings, and blood of their ancestors; and capacity, if wisely improved, and faithfully guarded, of transmitting to their latest posterity all the substantial blessings of life, the peaceful enjoyment of liberty, property, religion, and independence."
Likewise, John Adams noted, "Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people, who have a right, from the frame of their nature, to knowledge, as their great Creator, who does nothing in vain, has given them understandings, and a desire to know..." He added, "Wisdom and knowledge, as well as virtue, diffused generally among the body of the people, [are] necessary for the preservation of their rights and liberties."
To that end, James Madison wrote, "What spectacle can be more edifying or more seasonable, than that of Liberty and Learning, each leaning on the other for their mutual and surest support?"
James Wilson, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and one of George Washington's original Supreme Court justices, put it most concisely: "Law and liberty cannot rationally become the objects of our love, unless they first become the objects of our knowledge."
Unfortunately, this wisdom has fallen upon deaf ears. The popular support of the current Democrat hegemony is evidence aplenty of just how uninformed the majority of Americans are regarding their Constitution and the Rule of Law.
That most erudite of contemporary economists, Walter E. Williams, wrote this week in American Idea, "At the heart of the American idea is the deep distrust and suspicion the founders of our nation had for government, distrust and suspicion not shared as much by today's Americans. Some of the founders' distrust is seen in our Constitution's language such as Congress shall not: abridge, infringe, deny, disparage, violate and deny. ... Other founder distrust for government is found in the Constitution's separation of powers, checks and balances and the several anti-majoritarian provisions such as the Electoral College and the requirement that three-quarters of state legislatures ratify changes in the Constitution."
However, writes Williams, "The three branches of our federal government are no longer bound by the Constitution as the framers envisioned and what is worse is American ignorance and acceptance of such rogue behavior. ... The American people, along with our elected representatives, whether they're Republicans or Democrats, care less about what is and what is not permissible under our Constitution. They think Congress has the right to do anything upon which they can secure a majority vote, whether they have the constitutional or moral authority to do so or not."
Williams concludes, "We are losing what's made our country great. Instead of moving toward greater liberty, we're moving toward greater government control of our lives."
Indeed, I was speaking with another colleague recently who is a Slovak national -- he was a "Young Pioneer" raised under Communist tyranny in Czechoslovakia. He has spent five years undergoing the rigors required to become a U.S. citizen (I suggested he should have simply walked across the Mexican border instead), yet he questions his pursuit of citizenship now that the U.S. is rapidly devolving into the sort of tyrannical regime he left behind.
Natural-born Americans have never experienced such a regime, and so we proceed headlong into that authoritarian abyss like so many lemmings following the ignoble piper, Barack Hussein Obama, mmm, mmm, mmm.
Of such pipers, Alexander Hamilton wrote, "Of those men who have overturned the liberties of republics, the greatest number have begun their career by paying an obsequious court to the people, commencing demagogues and ending tyrants."
Regarding the wayward affections for socialism of Obama's minions, Washington wrote, "[W]e ought to deprecate the hazard attending ardent and susceptible minds, from being too strongly, and too early prepossessed in favor of other political systems, before they are capable of appreciating their own."
"If a nation expects to be ignorant -- and free," wrote Thomas Jefferson, "it expects what never was and never will be."
But, ignorance is bliss -- at least until it runs head-on into reality, and reality is just around the corner.
Samuel Adams assured us that, "No people will tamely surrender their Liberties, nor can any be easily subdued, when knowledge is diffused and Virtue is preserved. On the contrary, when People are universally ignorant, and debauched in their manners, they will sink under their own weight without the Aid of foreign Invaders."
It is for this reason that The Patriot launched the Essential Liberty Project on Constitution Day last.
Essential Liberty is the most cost effective means for educating Americans of all ages and all walks of life about the proper context for understanding our Constitution and the liberty it preserves and safeguards.
We have created through Essential Liberty a foundation to accomplish the most important task we have ever undertaken. Our mission is based on the principles outlined in the Legacy of American Liberty and will utilize a whole series of educational tools to accomplish this mission.
I will continue to write concerning the Essential Liberty Project in the next couple of months, as we move to full throttle for 2010.
We must never forget our debt of obligation to those generations of American Patriots who have extended, at great cost in their fortunes and lives, the legacy of liberty to us, and we must remain steadfast and irrevocably committed with our fortunes and lives to extend that legacy to our posterity.
61 Comments
Fred Greenstreet
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 11:59 AM
As always, Great Stuff...in all candor and dismay.."how are you going to keep 'em down on the farm"....once they've seen Washington DC...
Gary Brainard
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:07 PM
While I appreciate your grasp of Constitutional principles I feel compelled to point out something to you. You lamented that most people under 50 have never had a basic civics course. Do you know a single state run academic institution that offers such a course? My observation is that 100% teach statism, advanced federalism, whatever you want to call it, the theory that big brother is the answer to all our problems. In 1974 Paul Harvey observed that at the University of Arizona they wanted to offer a course in free enterprise. After consulting all the faculty of all of Arizona's state run institutions, they found only two that believed in free enterprise and no one that wanted to teach the course. Years ago this country accepted the notion that government education would make us a better place. We now have the culmination of that endeavor. I don't expect it to get better.
Jim Wright
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:13 PM
The liberal left has spent many years teaching lies to our children with our blessings. Many adults and kids have no idea what this country was built upon or what it stands for and have no idea what they are loosing under the current "banana republic want to be dictator who has lied his way into the white house. His goal is clear to those who choose to look and his methods have been used many times before. Please America, WAKE UP and remove this want to be tyrant before it is too late.
Scott R. Gothard
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:18 PM
I think your comments about the obligations Americans have towards their country are right on. I'm of a mind that one of the central commentaries on such obligations is the book Starship Troopers (NOT the movie, which is about special effects). The central theme running throught the book is the individual's obligations to his or her country, one example being that the privilage to vote is only won through military service or other similar service, that only those who've made a personal sacrifice become citizens, rather than just residents.
Kurt F. Hammerschmidt
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:21 PM
I agree with all that was posted. However, I have a question. Since congress has passed many laws in recent years that are NOT authorized by our constitution and they govern by the golden rule,(Those that have the gold, make the rules)how can this country reverse the slide down that this country has taken? Since avarice and greed are innate to our human behavior. Those greedy will ultimately accumulate the gold and then make the rules. I am 70 years old and I for one am desolute with despair and thankful that I will not live to see the final demise of our once great country that so many have sacrificed themselves for.
Timothy L Parker
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:28 PM
I am always humbled by your comments. I remember as a child the words of my Grandfather (WW1 vet who drove a wagon pulled by horses and picked up the wounded at the Argone Forrest) and my Mom (Navy Petty Officer, as draftsman for damage control repair) and Dad's(101st Air Borne France), comments as they recounted their lives as children and as young adults. Our freedom wasn't then and to this day remains not free.Vietnam era vet
Tim
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:29 PM
This is the first time I have ever disagreed with Alexander. The Constitution imposes no requirements or obligations on the citizens. It does, or at least tries to, limit the actions of government. Freedom and obligation are hard to reconcile. Yes, we should take an interest in what the bureaucrats try to slip past us, yes we should vote for those who believe what the Constitution says, but 'obligation'? Almost like requiring us to volunteer. I think someone tried that a few years ago, I forget his name. Eternal vigilance is indeed the price of freedom, but how can you mandate it? It has to come from within, self determination. Something totally out of favor with the elite, as long as they get theirs. Karl Marx wrote that to control a nation, you need only control the schools and the press. Look at what has happened over the past 50 years. That's what our children are taught. That's why they vote to "spread it around". (someone said that recently, but I forget his name as well)How do you mandate a commitment to freedom? If the majority doesn't want it, we are in for hard times.
Richard F. McCleery
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:33 PM
I have just finished reading the essay "The Rights and Obligations of Liberty" and again thank Mark Alexander for putting words to some of my deepest concerns for our republic.Lately I read another essay that dealt with the many conservative think tanks that essentially sit around and preach to the choir when all those resources may be better spent reaching out to our future generations.This is not the case with The Patriot Post and Mark's essays. There is such a great need to educate and inform both our nations educators and even more directly all students from grade school up in the Rights and Obligatins of Liberty I do not know where to start.Clearly the children singing their mmm mmm mmm songs are the canaries in the mines of our public( or as some may say 'government') education system.I applaud the Essential Liberty project for opening the vent shafts in our education system so that our children may breathe free the message about the Rights and Obligations of Liberty.
K. Hoy
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:34 PM
What great timing with this article!Today our package of 50 copies of the Declaration of Independence/Constitution came to the house.Even my husband and sons were more excited about that than the delivery of 50 cigars yesterday.Thank-you for the good work you do.
Craig Wright
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:50 PM
For the reasons you outline above you must support ending the Federal Reserve Banking System and restoring sound money.Fiat money allows the welfare/warfare state to operate with impunity and the government to grow without bounds.Basically, the government can not be trusted with a printing press. The supply of money should be constrained by nature and the market.In this way when the government wants to fund a project, whatever it is, it must take that money directly from the people. That is, it can not simply inflate the money supply to pay for its projects, thereby laying a shadow tax upon all of the people.I would encourage everyone to learn more about how the monetary system works and learn about the benefits of sound money. This is the root of the tree. Strike it and you destroy big government.
Karl Holz
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 12:53 PM
Please devote at least some editorial time/space to John Dewey - the "father" of modern education. It might help understanding one of the incremental steps that have taken us to where we are today. This misguided(??) individual is the father of today's morally relativistic and bankrupt education - yet universally hailed as a true hero. "John Dewey and the High Tide of American Liberalism" by Alan Ryan provides some insights.
GiGi
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 1:11 PM
Well said. It is so true our youth do not know and if the humanists have their way they will never know as the textbooks of yesteryear are long gone and with it the history of our nation and those who founded it. Sad but true.
Henry Skinner-Larsen
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 1:25 PM
So true, but we have a problem. Isaac Asimov identified it in "Foundation" where the Galactic Empire went into decline because they had advanced machinery which no one knew how to repair and keep in operation. Would you agree we cannot have a Legacy of Liberty without a Legacy of Literacy? When the American public reads at a fifth grade level and 80% read no more than one book a year (AP Ipsos poll 2008), the average person cannot or will not read "The Patriot Post", let alone the Constitution, because it is "too hard". When fathers overlook teaching their children how to ride a bicycle, those children ask to be driven everywhere. All it takes is one generation of parents refusing to pass on a love of reading, expecting "someone else" (aka the Public Schools) to carry the torch, and the love of reading is lost. We have a century of neglect. Where there is no literacy, there can be no liberty. First things first. And someone expected giving kids pizzas for reading books was going to work?
DAVID E WILLIS
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 1:28 PM
I served 25 years in the US Amry and upon initial swearing in and upon re-enlistment during my career, I was sworn to defend the Constitution and my country in accordance with all orders by those appointed over me.I feel that due to current political sitution it is hard to do.The current Code of Conduct and my personnel feelings are in conflict to continue following what I have previously sworn to do.How many Ex-military feel the same as I do?
Sid Williams
Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 1:28 PM
As a student of the law, I am bewildered by the fact that virtually no one in Congress, on either side of the isle, has questioned the Constitutionality of what they are doing. This has been so far too long. The Constitution has esentially been abandoned. I am afraid that we have progressed too far along for any meaningful change unless drastic measures are taken. A complete overhaul is in order.