Monday, July 1, 2013

Declaration

Well, the 4th is upon us.

It seems sort of counterproductive to write about the 4th as I first sit down to begin this. After all, there was so much written that led up to the Declaration. Most of those writings are far better than anything you'll see on this blog and were written by men far more knowlegable and talented than I am, that's for sure.

And then came that night when the smartest of all Americans, Thomas Jefferson himself, sat down and drug his quill across the parchment and formed the characters

IN CONGRESS, JULY 4, 1776
The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America

And then he wrote a scathing, although gentlemanly, critique of the most powerful man on the planet using concepts and grievances assembled by the most brilliant minds of those thirteen States. Some of them believed in unparalleled freedom. And others were Federalists. But they all had one thing in mind...the current government had to go.

The main team working on the Declaration was an interesting alliance. Thomas Jefferson was the young up-and-coming genius, well known for his brilliant writing. His good friend John Adams was a little older and sat at the opposite end of the political spectrum from Jefferson. Benjamin Franklin was sort of like the wise old uncle of the bunch. A genius in his own right, he offered guidance to the Congress and his wisdom was an invaluable resource in the founding of the nation.

Basically these men (mostly Jefferson, of course) laid out an organized plan: "All the people you are taxing to death and shooting holes in are angry - every last one of them. We have a God-given right to govern ourselves and if that government gets rotten we have the right to throw it away and start over. Here's a list of the absurd things you're doing to us, proving that your government is indeed rotten. We've begged you to quit and every time you just get worse."

And then the most glorious part of all. The best, most wonderful and awesome part of all. Too awesome for a paraphrase:  

"We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these united Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor."

See the "u" in "united"? Quite possibly the smallest "u" I've ever seen in all my life. Then there is the part about "Free and Independent States." S-T-A-T-E-S. Plural. Thirteen Nations, under God, Independent, with liberty and justice for all.

Watch each other's back but stay out of each other's business. Interesting concept.

Thus ends my Antifederalist rant for this article.

Back to the men with the ink. The amazing thing about the Declaration (besides it's unashamed endorsement of Antifederalism) is that it was written in the age of the Divine Right of Kings. This philosophy held that the king was the rightful ruler, ordained by God to lead the people. The Declaration was a total disregard of that philosophy and in turn professed that God's ordination rested upon each individual and that those individuals transferred that power to a limited government that would keep the basic order in society but otherwise leave men free to live their lives.

So these men assembled and composed this document to tell off the ruler of a plurality of the world while we can't clean up Congress in an election year. We have grown adults who have never lived under a Presidential administration that was familiar with the Constitution or at least one that obeyed it. Many of the usurpations listed in the Declaration are carried out daily by our current government and the founding fathers left us with the cleanest bloodless way of fixing that problem that the world has ever seen. I'm not making an endorsement this early but I will say that (as of this date) Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Chris Christie, Paul Ryan & Marco Rubio are horrible, terrible, no good, very bad candidates. Do not vote for any of them in primaries or otherwise, even as a joke.

One other note, some 87 years, to the week, after the Declaration was adopted, those States met on the field of battle, this time as enemies. They fought, not over slavery like modern history books would have you believe, but over these very principles as laid out in the founding document. During those three days, two percent of the American population ended that battle killed, captured, wounded or missing. Adjusted for modern populations, that's six million people dead, injured or otherwise unaccounted for in a single battle in a single town.

And we make excuses. "Have you ever read the Declaration if Independence?" "Nope, TLDR". "Are you familiar with Gettysburg?" "Yep, that's where Lincoln freed the slaves"."What do you know about Thomas Jefferson?" "That he's old and doesn't matter anymore."

And then they gripe when their taxes go up or when the government is reading their emails or when some other usurpation of their freedom smacks them in the face.

“There is nothing which I have found to require a greater effort of patience than to bear the criticisms of the ignorant.” - Pres. Jefferson Davis, CSA

So it goes.

Here's a friendly challenge. Sometime over the next week, read the Declaration of Independence and take a moment to remember the men that fought at Gettysburg as well as the civilian casualties and all the bystanders that worked so hard to alleviate the suffering of all involved. Maybe even take a few more minutes to try to figure out what went on there and why.

Regardless, here's hoping you have a happy 4th from everyone here at AtBiG. And on this Independence Day, may God bless the fifty united States of America.


2 comments:

  1. Very nice Sam. Gonna get my children to read it. I'm gonna borrow your Jeff Davis Quote also.

    Happy Independence Day!

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  2. Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it and share away!

    ReplyDelete