By definition, a republic is a union of
independent entities, usually associated with common business and financial
interests, favoring a restricted government role in economic life.
After winning independence from the
British in 1776, the founding fathers became engaged in a debate as to exactly
what form of government the new country should take.
Thomas Jefferson and his followers
wanted government to be the “guardian of fair play,” as arbiter of disputes,
whereas Alexander Hamilton and his followers wanted government to directly
dictate and control the process.
Those who wanted little or no
government, approximately one-third of the population at the time, were shut
out of the process because they wanted nothing to do with it in the first
place.
Obviously, those who don’t want to be
governed by others generally don’t become involved in organizing such a system.
Thus, the Republic of the United States
of America came into existence in 1776 in the form of a set of individual
democratic states, independent of each other, with a central body to deal
primarily with internal disputes, international relations and a common defense.
In 1860, Presidential candidate Abraham
Lincoln proposed an expansion of the role of the federal government, which
included a national bank, protective tariffs and mercantilism (an economic
system of strict government control of the national economy).
Ironically, mercantilism was the very
system of abuses the founding fathers revolted against.
Even though Southerners had only half
the population as the North, they had been paying 87% of all federal taxes
collected, mostly in import duties of foreign manufactured goods.
The centerpiece of Lincoln’s Republican
Party platform was a high protective tariff that would have raised existing
import duties by 250 percent.
The South was willing to secede from
the Union rather than succumb to the tyranny of the national government
controlled by the North.
In his first inaugural address,
President Lincoln stated, “I understand a proposed amendment to the
Constitution has passed Congress, to the effect that the Federal Government
shall never interfere with the domestic institutions of the States, including
that of persons held in service [slaves]. I have no objection to this amendment
being made express and irrevocable.”
This proposed amendment would have
legalized slavery in the southern states forever. Lincoln supported it as an
offering to the South not to follow through with their plans to secede from the
Union.
On March 11, 1861, delegates in
Montgomery, Alabama, adopted a new Confederate Constitution affirming that the
states were “sovereign and independent” as envisioned by the founding fathers.
This set in motion events that erupted
into the American Civil War.
Lincoln ordered federal troops to
arrest anyone critical of the war and to shut down newspapers editorializing
against it.
Lincoln's subsequent emancipation of
the slaves was primarily a strategic maneuver to weaken the Southern economy
(by reducing blacks from the southern labor force) and strengthen the Northern
Army (by adding black soldiers).
In the end, state's rights died at
Appomattox. After the Civil War, our initial Republic of independent states
became a national, centralized government.
"I
worked night and day for 12 years to prevent this war, but I could not. The
North was mad and blind, would not let us govern ourselves, and so the war
came." Jefferson Davis
The
Civil War was more about state's rights than it was about slavery. The vast
majority of Southern Rebel fighters did not own slaves -- it was the wealthy
southern plantation owners who were the slave owners. Basically, the South was
fighting for autonomy (self-government) and the North was fighting for control
of a tax base.
Thus, we were no longer a Republic and
the federal government has been expanding its power and control ever since.
Prior to the Civil War, people used the
phrase “The United States of America are …”
After the Civil War, the phrase changed
to “The United States of America is …”
Whether or not we would have been
better off remaining a Republic of independent states rather than creating a
strong centralized federal government is subject to debate.
Big government tends to become a
self-protective, ever-expanding organism that feeds relentlessly off its
subjects, demanding obedience, impeding progress, granting special favors and
curtailing individual freedom.
Ultimately, a government big enough
to give you all you want will cost you all you have.
But not to worry, we've borrowed
against the future to cover our unrestrained spending addiction, creating a
multi-trillion dollar national debt to be passed on to future generations.
Ironically, our government-controlled
public school system has children pledging allegiance to the flag of the United
States of America and to the Republic for which it stands.
Instead of indoctrinating our children
into being good little robotic patriots, perhaps we should be teaching them
that we are no longer a Republic.
And perhaps we should be advising our
children that each of them is already many tens of thousands of dollars in debt
and they haven't even started working yet to pay it off.
___________
Quote for the Day – "All the truth
in the world adds up to one big lie." Bob Dylan
___________
Bret Burquest is the author of 12 books. He lives in the Ozark
Mountains with a few dogs and where freedom is never free.
___________
-
-
No comments:
Post a Comment