Friday, February 18, 2011

Democracy

Due to the unrest in Wisconsin, I went back in my blogs and dug this one out to bring to the forefront again. We do have the right to assemble and have our voices heard. However, what we are seeing in Madison is vicious, and the signs are personally directed. The crime of our Governor is presenting a bill that the unions oppose. Please think about it.

Democracy:

With all the talk of creating democracies in the MidEast, I started wondering if that is exactly what we want.

Republic or Democracy?

Did our Founding Fathers give us a democracy? In 1789 a woman asked Benjamin Franklin what kind of government they had created. His reply was, “A Republic, if you can keep it.” Sadly, Americans are misinformed about our system of government.

James Madison in Federalist Paper No.10 warned that in democracy, “there is nothing to check the inducement to sacrifice the weaker party.” John Adams said, “Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself...,” and Fisher Ames, a Congressman during Washington’s presidency, said democracy was “the intermediate stages towards … tyranny.”

A democracy is direct government ruled by the majority, making it possible to deprive individuals of rights. This majority can vote itself handouts by electing the candidate who promises the most benefits from the public treasury. Taxes increase and incentive to produce decreases. The once productive workers drop out of the labor force and join the non-productive. Eventually, democracy fails.

The word “democracy” does not appear in the Constitution or Declaration of Independence. We pledge allegiance “to our Republic,” not “to our democracy.” The Founders established a government which was not a democracy and guaranteed to every state a “republican form” of state government.

These men structured a Constitutional Republic with checks and balances between the different branches. They designed it to protect the individual’s God-given inalienable rights. It was a government of laws, not men.

The 1928 War Department’s Training Manual No. 2000-25 described democracy as a government of the masses, resulting in mobocracy with a communistic attitude toward property. The same manual depicted a republic as resulting in liberty, reason, justice, contentment and progress. This manual was destroyed in the thirties, and by 1952 in The Soldiers Guide, we find, “Meaning of democracy. Because the United States is a democracy, the majority of the people decide how our government will be organized and run – .”

The governor of New York did not use the word “democracy” in his 1933 inaugural address, but in 1940 he used it 33 times in his annual message.

What changed? Some claim it was absolute conspiracy. Others believe it to be a matter of semantics. Does it matter? Thoreau said, “There is but little virtue in the action of masses of men.” Even De Tocqueville warned, “If ever the free institutions of America are destroyed, that event will arise from the unlimited tyranny of the majority.” More fearfully, Gorbachev stated that “according to Lenin, socialism and democracy are indivisible…”

Yes, it does matter. The difference is foundational. A republic recognizes man’s heart as being desperately wicked, needing the law structure to keep from destroying itself. A democracy depends on man’s innate goodness. The Founders gave us a republic because they wanted to protect us from democracy. We need to understand the difference, educate our children and inform our citizens to keep from sliding into what we do not want.

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Monday, November 01, 2010

Benjamin Rush - Signer of the Declaration of Independence

Who said the signers of the Declaration of Independence were not Christian? What about Benjamin Rush?

This unfamiliar signer was physician-general, president of the mint, a statesman, medical practitioner, writer, and professor of chemistry and the practice of medicine.

Dr. Rush formed the Philadelphia Dispensary, served as president of the American Society for the abolition of slavery and Philadelphia Medical society and VP of the Philadelphia Bible Society and American Philosophical Society.

When other doctors fled Philadelphia during the yellow fever outbreak, he stayed, believing God placed him there.

He argued for the use of the Bible as a school textbook, desiring to give each American family their own copy. His logic shows in his 5 assumptions:



1. Christianity is the only true and perfect religion

2. The best way to learn more of Christianity is through the Bible

3. The Bible contains more knowledge useful to man than any other
book.

4. That knowledge is most durable and useful when imparted early in
life.

5. When the Bible is not read in schools, it is seldom read in
any subsequent period of life.



Dr. Rush believed that the enemy “never invented a more effective means of limiting Christianity from the world than by persuading mankind that it was improper to read the Bible at schools.”

Politically, he declared, “The only means of establishing and perpetuating our republican forms of government is the universal education of our youth in the principles of Christianity by means of the Bible,” and that every state building in the US should have inscribed above its door, "The Son of Man Came into the World, Not To Destroy Men's Lives, But To Save Them."

This signer of our Declaration of Independence understood that our freedom comes from the truth of God Almighty found in His Word.

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