Saturday, August 12, 2006

Is the American Republic Doomed?

(This post first ran in July of 2005.)

Is our Republic doomed? Could be. It certainly appears as if that is our course.

First let me attempt, again, to clear something up. The United States is NOT, I repeat, the US is not… a Democracy! We are a Democratic Republic. In a Democracy all the citizens vote on everything the government does. Everything. All legislation is passed by a majority vote of the citizens of a Democracy. In a Democratic Republic, we elect representatives who vote for us, at least that is what they are supposed to do… represent their constituents by voting the way those constituents would vote, if they were to cast individual votes, as in a Democracy. You can judge for yourselves if your representative votes the way you’d like him, or her, to vote.

Surprised? A lot of US citizens are when they learn, for the first time, the US is not a Democracy.

However, I have begun to worry that our fate will be the same as that of world democracies through out history. Here is something Alexander Tyler said over a hundred years ago. He said:

"A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves money from the public treasure. From that moment on the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most money from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world's great civilizations has been two hundred years. These nations have progressed through the following sequence: from bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to great courage, from courage to liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to selfishness, from selfishness to complacency from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependency, from dependency back to bondage."

Thus said Alexander Tyler.

Do you see the parallels between Tyler’s pronouncement, above, and the state of the US today? Consider the European countries with their welfare states. The degradation of the US is certainly behind that of the European countries, but we are definitely on the slippery slope back into bondage. Much of our country is already at the “dependency” stage. If there is any doubt about that…look at the fight the "dependents" are putting up against the attempt by the Bush Administration to privatize Social Security.

The US Government is the single largest employer in the United States. There is something very wrong about that for a country…any country. All those government employees are “dependent” on the government.

When you take the time to think about this, really think about this, the course to which the US is committed is frightening. Very frightening.

Our government is entirely too large, and it’s reach is far to long and far to invasive. It has become so large it is self-perpetuating. It simply continues to grow for that is what it does, and does best. At some point, in the not too distant future, it will implode… collapse of it’s own weight.

Then what? Huh?

Something to think about.

Longstreet

2 comments:

  1. Privatizing social security would destroy it. Do you want to go back to what it was like before it? People worked until they died, or ate cat food and dog food. Just imagine with the stock market in the shape it is in now, what would you get every month? Government I agree is too invasive, I want them out of the business of tapping phone lines, I want them out of the bedrooms and family lives of millions of Americans. I want them out of our cars (federal seatbelt laws). I want them out period. the problem is we elect a group of power hungry, egotistical, self righteous, morons, that suffer from God complex, who vote for the highest bidder and not the will of the people. They don't do what is best for America, they do what is best for Wal-Mart.

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  2. also, longstreet, who is going to pay the administrative fees to the companies and brokers that handle the social security accounts? We will pay more a private company than we do to have it done federaly. Your return dollar for dollar would decline. Only way to keep the administration cost down would be telling investment groups that they have to do this and do it productively or they can't do any private business. Look at who is really behind the push for this and you will see investment firms hoping to win government contracts, I say if ,God forbid, it does come to pass, give them the contracts with no pay, make it their civic duty.

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