Showing posts with label American Revolutionary War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Revolutionary War. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

John Stossel: Obama Is Not King


Watching President Obama's inaugural, I was confused. It looked like a new king was being crowned. Thousands cheered, like subjects worshipping nobility. At a time when America faces unsustainable debt and terrible economic troubles, why such pomp?
Maybe it's because so many people tell themselves presidents can solve any problem, like fairy-tale kings -- or gods.
Before America's first inauguration, John Adams suggested George Washington be called "His Most Benign Highness." Fortunately, Congress insisted on the more modest title, "President."
At his inaugural, President Obama himself said, "The patriots of 1776 did not fight to replace the tyranny of a king with the privileges of a few."
But then Obama went on to say that his privileged few should force the rest of us to do a zillion things.
He said, "We must do these things, together." But what "together" means to big-government folks is that they have a vision -- and all of us, together, must go deeper into debt to pay for their vision, even if we disagree.
We can afford this, as the president apparently told John Boehner, because America does not have a spending problem.
But, of course, we do have a spending problem, and a debt problem, and the president knows this.
Just a few years ago, when George W. Bush was president, the Congressional Record shows that Senator Obama said this: "I rise, today, to talk about America's debt problem. The fact that we are here to debate raising America's debt limit is a sign of leadership failure and our government's reckless fiscal policies."
Right!
Sen. Obama went


Source: Town Hall

Friday, February 3, 2012

Black History Month: Black Southerners in Confederate gray

February marks the beginning of Black History Month – a remembrance of important people and events of African American origin that began in 1926.
 
There have been many major contributions to our nation and to our society by black Americans some that have changed history – and are continuing to do so today. One area that has never received the recognition it deserved and has even been over-looked to a certain degree was that of black Southerners who fought for the Confederacy.
 
One would have to ask, “Why haven’t we heard more about them?”
 
Ed Bearss, National Park Service Historian Emeritus, made the following statement: “I don’t want to call it a conspiracy to ignore the role of Blacks, both above and below the Mason-Dixon line, but it was definitely a tendency that began around 1910.”
 
And, Historian Erwin L. Jordan, Jr., calls it a “cover-up” which started back in 1865. He writes, “During my research on pension applications, I came across instances where black men stated they were soldiers, but you can plainly see where ‘soldier’ is crossed out and ‘body servant’ or ‘teamster’ inserted.”
 
Another black historian, Roland Young says that “he is not surprised that blacks fought ... some, if not most, would support their country, and that by doing so they were demonstrating that it was possible to hate the system of slavery and love one’s country.”
 
This same principle was exhibited by African Americans who fought for the colonies during the American Revolution, despite the fact that the British offered them freedom if they would fight for them. Peter Jennings, an early settler of Rutherford County, was one of more than… (Read more)
 
Source: Southern Heritage 411

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

LP Monday Message: Independen​ce Day

Dear Friend of Liberty,

Happy Independence Day!

I hope you're having a nice holiday, and I hope you'll have a moment today to stop and remember the significance of Independence Day.

Living in Washington, DC gives me the opportunity to see some of our nation's historical landmarks quite often. This weekend I visited the Arlington National Cemetery which includes the Tomb of the Unknowns. This evening I'm planning to watch the fireworks display at the Washington Monument.

Independence Day is a time to celebrate the tremendous accomplishment of the American Revolution. Many people throughout the nation will celebrate today while watching fireworks, and many Libertarians will be handing out copies of the Declaration of Independence as a public service to help commemorate the holiday.

Libertarian candidate and activist Travis Irvine visited recently and made this light humorous video while handing out copies of the Declaration of Independence at the Washington Monument.

Also, I want to thank the more than 130 people who have contributed so far to our $17.76 challenge.

Sincerely,

Wes Benedict
Executive Director
Libertarian National Committee

P.S. If you have not already done so, please join the Libertarian Party. We are the only political party dedicated to free markets, civil liberties, and peace. You can also renew your membership. Or, you can make a contribution separate from membership.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Come join in the Spirit of '76

Dear Friend of Liberty:

Two hundred and thirty-five years ago, freedom-loving Americans banded together to declare their independence from the King of Great Britain, and to proclaim to the entire world that men were not meant to be slaves to their government.

Today, the Libertarian Party champions those same ideals.

In celebration of Independence Day, and the unalienable rights our Founding Fathers put their lives at risk for, we are asking for a symbolic donation of $17.76 to help continue our new American Revolution.

Simply visit LP.org to rush us your special gift of $17.76.

Government is once again at a level incompatible with the freedom our Founding Fathers believed we should have. In some ways, we are even less free today than colonial Americans were under King George III. Just think about that.

Your symbolic donation of $17.76 will help to turn back this tide of tyrannical government, and help to bring in a new era of liberty and prosperity for all Americans.

How will your $17.76 help the fight for liberty?

It will help fund our fight to change ballot access laws throughout the country to give voters more choice.

It will help fund volunteer and outreach activities to bring more patriots like you into the Libertarian Party.

It will help us create videos to spread the message of our principles to a new generation of potential Libertarians.

Most of all, it will help the Libertarian Party be more effective in fighting assaults on freedom from all levels of government!

Will you donate today?

If we raise $1,776 in online donations before midnight on the Fourth of July, one of our stalwart Libertarian supporters will immediately donate another $1,776 to our party!

That represents $17.76 from just 100 of you! Don't miss the chance to be one of those proud 100. Click here to donate today.

If you feel the spirit of the American Revolution welling up inside of you, and want to donate more than $17.76, feel free to do so.

Every dollar will be used to further the cause of liberty and freedom for all Americans.

Thank you for your donations, your dedication, your support and your commitment to liberty in America.

Sincerely,

Mark Hinkle
Chair, Libertarian National Committee

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

LP Monday Message: Memorial Day and Harry Browne

Dear Friend of Liberty,

Today, Memorial Day, millions commemorate fellow Americans who have served in our military and fallen in wars.

Addressing Memorial Day can be complicated for Libertarians, not because we don't love freedom and recognize that many have sacrificed their lives, but because we have opposed many of the policies that we feel have unnecessarily--even wrongly--put American soldiers in harm's way.

America was founded by men and women who wanted independence, and many lost their lives fighting for it in the Revolutionary War.

I haven't served in the military myself, but there was a time when I could say I probably didn't have a single "anti-war" bone in my body.

Up until my mid-twenties, I was an enthusiastic conservative Republican. Not a libertarian-leaning Republican, but a genunine right-wing conservative Republican.

I wasn't a deep thinker in the area of foreign policy. I hadn't studied it much and never was a history buff. But I did understand and support free markets, and that's what I thought Republicans were for, that was the team I was on, and I reflexively defended the rest of the Republican agenda.

There wasn't a single American military action I didn't support, from the Vietnam War, to the marines in Lebanon, to the invasions of Panama and Grenada, arming the Contra rebels in central America, the first Gulf War, and all the rest.

Anytime I heard someone criticize America's military, I considered that critic an enemy, and I just tuned them out.

It wasn't until I found the Libertarian Party that I became a staunch non-interventionist.

Upon joining the Libertarian Party, I began reading much of the work by Harry Browne and other Libertarian leaders.

It seemed like for the first time I heard moral and practical arguments made against America's entry into many of our past wars. In particular, for the first time I heard rational arguments about how if America and some other countries had stayed out of World War I, then World War II and the Cold War might not have happened, and tens of millions of lives might not have been lost.

Harry Browne was the Libertarian nominee for U.S. President in 1996 and 2000. He died in 2006, but many of his articles are still available, and linked from this page. (Please be aware that some of the links on that page no longer work.)

In additional to commemorating fallen soldiers and their families, I feel it is appropriate on Memorial Day to remember people like Harry Browne who fought ideological battles in an effort to promote peace and avoid unnecessary and unjust wars and casualties.

Sincerely,

Wes Benedict
Executive Director
Libertarian National Committee

P.S. If you have not already done so, please join the Libertarian Party. We are the only political party dedicated to free markets, civil liberties, and peace. You can also renew your membership. Or, you can make a contribution separate from membership.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Memorial Day and This Republic: From the Revolution to WWI


By Zach Foster

No one ever thought the U.S.A. could handle nine and a half years of war—ten years this October—but somehow the country has muddled through it.  America can be proud of her sons and daughters, who continue to enlist, continue to serve, continue to fight, and continue to die.  Memorial Day is a special day in the year when all citizens are to pause and contemplate the price of freedom.  No, this is not just another tired and hollow patriotic slogan, though many have made it that way.

People need to think hard about what it is that makes this country—this republic and its citizens—so great.  People also need to stop and think why this country seems to be at war every generation.  Far left-wingers may put down their copy of Das Kapital long enough to spout some hateful slogans about U.S. imperialism and oil profits, etc., while far right-wingers may wave their flags in one hand and Bibles in the other, talking about how it’s our mission from God to democratize the whole planet, etc.  But really, what is it that the U.S. military accomplishes?

The Revolutionary War was a war that granted independence to thirteen North American colonies who no longer wished to be a part of their mother country.  It was largely a popular movement, though many Americans fought tooth and nail to keep the Crown in North America.  Their descendants are patriotic citizens of Canada.

The War of 1812 was a war of defense against obvious violations by the old mother country.  It was a just cause and a just war.  The Indian Wars were a mix of tragedies—some wars provoked by native tribes, and some wars provoked by settlers. Some tribes were wiped from existence or relocated, while other tribes fought old enemies side by side with the U.S. Army.  The result of the Indian Wars was the subjugation of countless nations that left many on reservations and most integrated in Western society.

The Civil War’s meaning highly depends on what region of the country the beholder is from, and what the beholder’s belief is.  To some, the Republic and the Union had to be preserved at all costs.  To others, independence from a new government ever-resembling Great Britain was a worthy cause.  To all, the war was a tragedy which literally pitted brother against brother and father against son.  Regardless of ideology, the men and women—soldiers, sailors, surgeons, and nurses both in blue and in gray, at Manassas, Shiloh, Gettysburg, Spotsylvania, Indian Territory, New Mexico, Nashville, Chicamauga, Fort Wagner, Fort Fisher, and Petersburg—fought and struggled with honor for what they believed in.  After the end, they did their best to pick up the pieces.  The country’s scars are only beginning to heal, and such a conflict—such fratricide—must never happen again.

The Mexican and Spanish wars were wars of empire, in which eager administrations wanted to flex their muscles, in which countries and peoples found themselves liberated from one master only to be ruled by a new one.  Outside the arena of politics, the American soldiers who fought in those wars were honorable soldiers who answered the call to service.  They fought hard, many of them died, and they did their duty.  There is nothing more a government can ask of its people.  Furthermore, their sacrifice led to a higher living standard for those who were brought under the stars and stripes.

World War I was a war of entanglement.  Every major power seemed to be in an alliance that eventually forced them into a war of prestige—whose army and country was the strongest—that eventually yanked the United States into the bloodiest war in human history thus far.  Many bad things happened after the war—not because our soldiers fought so bravely and selflessly—but because world leaders threw away a hard-won peace, allowing it to fester into a new hatred and a new war.  Still, it is without a doubt that the sacrifices made by American service members literally saved Paris from German occupation and liberated Belgium and Luxemburg from German subjugation.  Because of these selfless sacrifices that saved so many people, the blood and tears of the sailors who drowned in the Atlantic, the soldiers in shallow graves in Blanc Mont Ridge, and the Marines yet unidentified in Belleau Wood will never be in vain.

Continued in Part 2: From WWII to the War on Terror

Monday, February 21, 2011

Observing President’s Day: Washington

By Zach Foster

It’s no mystery that President’s Day is yet another symbolic American holiday degraded to becoming an excuse to sell cars, mattresses, and throw barbeques.  Many Americans can’t even grasp a rough idea of what the holiday represents.  This phenomenon of ignorance is not uncommon in today’s society.  Let us explore this holiday and the meaning behind it.

President’s Day was originally observed as George Washington’s birthday and became a federal holiday via an 1880 act of Congress.  It was celebrated on Washington’s actual birthday (February 22) until the mid twentieth century, when the observance of the holiday changed to the third Monday of February, making it easier for the country to rest and observe the holiday on a weekday, much like Memorial Day and Thanksgiving.  Over time, people also began to celebrate Abraham Lincoln’s birthday since he was also born in February (February 9).  Let us take a moment to observe the contributions that George Washington made for the United States.

George Washington was born to wealthy Virginia plantation owners. In his youth he grew close to the Fairfax family who helped him enter his career as a soldier in the Virginia militia.  Though his rash actions as a military surveyor helped spark the French and Indian War (known in Europe as the Seven Years’ War), his ability to learn, adapt, and lead soon paid off for the British Army and Colonial militias in battle.  After the war he retired to his plantation and was known as a skilled businessman (and his continually being ripped off by British corporations planted his seed of resentment against Great Britain).  His reputation as a military hero gave the Continental Congress confidence in his military leadership ability, landing him the position of Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army when the Revolutionary War began.

When the idea of crowning George Washington became popular after the war, he retired from the military and enjoyed a private life rather than seek power.  However, as a statesman he presided over the Constitutional Convention, subscribing to the popular belief that the Articles of Confederation were too weak to be the law of the land.  During his tenure as the First President of the United States, he managed to uphold U.S. neutrality in the British-French conflicts and presided over a free market economy.  He promoted the use of the national government for improving infrastructure and opening the western frontier to the American people.  He also promoted nationalism, saying that the name of ‘American’ must override any local attachments.  Though he agreed with the programs of the Federalist Party, he never joined a political party, believing that political parties were the basis of civil strife and division.  He believed that no President should serve more than two terms, prompting British King George III to say, “If he twice gives up power, he is the greatest man alive.”  He did.  He passed away at the age of sixty-seven.  To this day he is known as the Father of Our Country.  In 1976 President Gerald Ford posthumously promoted Washington to six-star general so that no twentieth century five-star general would outrank the Father of Our Country.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

The Revolution In Egypt Continues

By Zach Foster

Days ago Cairo was packed with jubilant crowds celebrating the resignation of long-time president Hosni Mubarak.  The dictator stepped down!  The entire world watched in awe as the Egyptians brought about a radical revolution without a shot being fired.  Marxists were giddy with the delusion that their claims of solidarity helped bring about this resignation of power to the people (the “proletariat”), and paranoid ultraconservatives continue to shake in their shoes, convinced that the Muslim Brotherhood will bring about a second Holocaust.  Many people think the revolution in Egypt has reached its climax.  All of the above are delusional.

The revolution in Egypt is far from over!  The peaceful and popular deposition of Mubarak was the easy part.  Now comes the hard part of rebuilding the government and turning it into a truly representative democratic body.  The old legislature and parts of the government were officially dissolved by the Egyptian military, and the people of Egypt must act quickly yet rationally, and they must act together. Historically, revolutions and their honeymoon phases have paved the way for reigns of terror.  Egypt is at a crossroads, and just about everyone who is aware that the revolution continues seems to be convinced that they know what is best for Egypt.  Their ego-founded opinions are semi-inspiring at best, but also worthless, because the United States cannot and will not intervene in the affairs of the rebuilding of the Egyptian government.

Egypt is at a crossroads.  One of four things will happen:

1)      The Egyptian people will take initiative, form political parties with distinct platforms, and put up candidates for election, resulting in a representative democracy.
2)      Radicalism will prevail, resulting in a dictatorship, be it under the thumb of one man, the military, a one-party state system, or a faction (where the Muslim Brotherhood fears are founded).
3)      The government will descend into anarchy, resulting in coup and counter-coup.
4)      Tensions will rise between factions, egged on by radicals and anarchists, and Egypt will be locked into a civil war.

The revolution in Egypt has inspired mass protests in countries all over the middle east where the deprivation of freedom has grown old to the masses.  The American Revolution will forever be known as the Shot Heard Round the World.  How inspiring it would be if the world transitioned into a less violent age where the situation in Egypt went down in history as the Shout Heard Round the World!

What happens now is up to the good-natured, level-headed people of Egypt.  Only time will tell.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The Inerrant Existence of the Second Amendment

By Zach Foster

A recent interview with Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer left television spectators with the impression that the Second Amendment shouldn’t really exist, and that it was only hastily thrown into the Constitution by James Madison in order to get the document ratified by the states.  Breyer stated that Madison “was worried about [political] opponents who would think Congress would call up state militias and nationalize them.  ‘That can’t happen,’ said Madison.  ‘I’ve got to get this document ratified.’”  While Breyer’s statement certainly paints a very moving picture of Madison as a man who had to make a hasty command decision in order to ensure the survival of the nation, this picture is historically inaccurate.

Writer Ed Morrissey of Hot Air dot com made an excellent point refuting Breyer’s statement by pointing out essay # 46, authored by Madison, from the Federalist Papers.  In this essay, Madison makes key statements about the citizenry being armed.

The highest number to which, according to the best computation, a standing army can be carried in any country, does not exceed one hundredth part of the whole number of souls; or one twenty-fifth part of the number able to bear arms. This proportion would not yield, in the United States, an army of more than twenty-five or thirty thousand men. To these would be opposed a militia amounting to near half a million of citizens with arms in their hands, officered by men chosen from among themselves, fighting for their common liberties, and united and conducted by governments possessing their affections and confidence. It may well be doubted, whether a militia thus circumstanced could ever be conquered by such a proportion of regular troops. Those who are best acquainted with the last successful resistance of this country against the British arms, will be most inclined to deny the possibility of it.

Besides the advantage of being armed, which the Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation, the existence of subordinate governments, to which the people are attached, and by which the militia officers are appointed, forms a barrier against the enterprises of ambition, more insurmountable than any which a simple government of any form can admit of.

Notwithstanding the military establishments in the several kingdoms of Europe, which are carried as far as the public resources will bear, the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.

Breyer makes it seem as if those calling for the addition of the Second Amendment were simply being paranoid at the idea of the standing state militias being drafted into the federal army, and James Madison supposedly agreed with this idea was absurd.  However, Madison’s own words refute the idea that he was even remotely opposed to an armed citizenry.  He clearly was in favor of the “unorganized militia” of citizens bearing arms in order to oppose a tyrannical government.  Having just gotten over a brief stint called THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR, Madison and the majority of the former underground government were all too familiar with what it was to live in terror under an army unsympathetic to the rights of the citizenry.  Furthermore, since Americans had only recently severed themselves from military rule by an ambitious government, it seemed only possible and realistic that this new government could go equally awry as King George’s monarchy.

Breyer argued that the circumstances behind the passing of certain parts of the Constituiton need to be re-evaluated and possibly changed depending on their consistency with today’s standards.  Let these circumstances be re-evaluated now.  Have the state militias been called into federal service?  The answer is an astounding YES.  The standing militias of the various states, if not temporarily absorbed by the federal army, have been called to serve the nation during times of war.  For example, regiments of state militias were called to war, often far outside of their home states, during the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, the Civil War, both World Wars, the Korean War, the Persian Gulf War, and the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Yes, the state militias still exist—they evolved into what most Americans know as the National Guard.

Not only have the old-time militias and the modern National Guard been called into federal service, but they have even been completely absorbed by the federal armed forces.  California used to have an active and professional Naval Militia with its own Marines, which were absorbed by the Department of the Navy during World War I and never released back into state service.  What then, with the state militias fighting abroad, would have protected the citizenry from invasion other than the right to bear arms?

Luckily, over twenty states have established or maintained, since the beginning, back-up militias known as State Guards whose purpose lies in supplementing the strength of the National Guard and taking over local duties when the National Guard is abroad.  Some of the most professional State Guards are the Texas State Guard, the New York State Guard, and the California State Military Reserve.  However, the strength in numbers of these State Guards does not nearly match the per-capita numbers of the State Militias after the Militia Act of 1792 was passed.  How would 1,000 California soldiers adequately protect 38 million California civilians?  They could serve as a first (or last) line of defense in the event of an invasion, but how long could they last?  This also begs a follow-up question: what about the nearly thirty states that have no back-up for their local National Guard units? Seeing as how there is little or no reason for every gun-carrying citizen to spontaneously declare war on the U.S. government, perhaps an armed citizenry is an effective method of maintaining homeland security should the armed forces ever fail to perform their defense duties.

The above paragraph is one instance of re-evaluating post-Revolutionary War reasoning in the context of today’s circumstances.  Let us analyze another valid modern circumstance: the rise of violent crime.  Penn and Teller did an excellent episode of their show B.S.! covering the pros and cons of gun rights in America.  It is a known fact that the rate of violent crime has risen many times over during the last century.  Their research and interviews showed many instances of victims unable to defend themselves from violent crime due to not carrying their firearms in obedience to anti-gun legislation on the state or federal level.  Their findings also presented guns as a deterrent to violent crime.  One compelling find was that the vast majority of guns used in violent crimes were smuggled into the country and purchased from the black market, NOT from mainstream law-abiding gun stores.

The most impressive segment of Penn and Teller’s show was the interview of an active gang assassin, who volunteered to be interviewed on the condition that his name be withheld and his face blacked out.  The assassin described himself as an “OG for life” and completely unrepentant of the people he has harmed or killed in service to his gang.  He stated defiantly that he laughs at anti-gun legislation because it only takes guns away from law-abiding citizens, not from criminals, and it only makes it easier for them to be victimized by criminals like him.  He said that if the police were to take away his gun, he would laugh and just go get another one—no—two more.  This purpose of self defense only supports the case for the arming of the citizenry, even while re-evaluating the rationale of the Second Amendment’s passing in the context of modern circumstances.

However, in order to be fair in this argument, the topic of gun regulation must be entertained.  Should guns and gun ownership be registered and regulated?  Absolutely.  Guns are valuable property and property that have the power to (and are made with the purpose of) killing human beings.  These are things that law enforcement needs to be aware of.  Registration of this type of property is harmless, as government registration is applied to other kinds of property; law enforcement agencies need to know who owns what gun, just as the DMV needs to be aware of who owns what car, and the post office needs to know who lives where.  Light regulation is also harmless, such as the federal ban on assault weapons.  Does the average citizen need a machine gun to protect himself?  No.  Does the average American need a machine gun to protect himself and his family from either a tyrannical government or an invading army?  No.  A point-blank spray of automatic fire can be far less effective than a well-aimed shot.

For example, the Zapatista National Liberation Army in southeastern Mexico has for over two decades managed to maintain autonomy and hold off the truly oppressive government army of the Mexican party-state.  The Mexican Army has the equipment of a modern army while the Zapatistas have single-shot wooden rifles, yet their 1994 uprising won the popular support of the world when the human rights abuses of the Mexican party-state were exposed.  They have made their point and continue to hold off the Mexican Army.

If these severely under-equipped guerrillas can hold their own, then millions of American citizens with finely crafted semi-automatic rifles and boxes of ammunition could probably defend their freedoms according to Constitutional law should the need ever arise (but God forbid!).  A conservative amount of regulation is a good thing.  Do Americans need to take their guns with them to Disneyland, or their children’s elementary school?  Probably not.  Should convicted felons and other criminals be allowed to own firearms?  Absolutely not, for their right to that property was justly removed through due process of law, according to Constitutional law.

Nonetheless, the necessity of American citizens to have the right to bear arms is clear and everlasting, and Madison’s support of this idea is proven by his own persuasive writing.  To insinuate that he didn’t really mean it is foolish.  Nonetheless, perhaps the socio-political relevance of the Second Amendment can be revisited in the age when there is world peace.