Traitors
to the American Revolution
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
The American
Revolution was waged against a highly centralized, nationalistic
governmental tyranny run by a king, namely, the British Empire.
The king enriched himself and his regime through the economic institution
of mercantilism, defined by Murray Rothbard as "a system of
statism which employed economic fallacy to build up a structure
of imperial state power, as well as special subsidy and monopolistic
privilege to individuals or groups favored by the state." This
system impoverished the average Englishman but was a perpetual source
of power and riches for the king and his political allies. That
is why the system lasted so long (at least two centuries) despite
the fact that it was so harmful to the average citizen.
After the Seven
Years War with France the king of England needed to pay off his
war debts, so he stepped up the application of the corrupt mercantilist
system to the American colonists. He did so with numerous taxes
and interferences with international trade that benefited British
businesses and the British state while treating the colonists like
tax serfs. The "train of abuses" delineated in the Declaration
of Independence were mostly abuses of the colonists for the purpose
of plundering them with the British mercantilist system.
There was always
a group of men in American politics who were not opposed to the
evil mercantilist system in principle. They recognized it
as a wonderful system for accumulating power and wealth as long
as they could be in charge of it. Being victimized by it
was another matter. These men, led by Alexander Hamilton and his
fellow Federalists, strived to implement an American version of
British mercantilism as soon as the Revolution was over. In doing
so they were traitors to the American Revolution and the worst kind
of corrupt, power-seeking political scoundrels.
America’s would-be
economic dictators strived mightily to "justify" their
corrupt scheme by rewriting the history of the American founding.
They made the bizarre argument that, having just fought a revolution
against a highly centralized tyranny, the founders at the constitutional
convention supposedly embraced the same kind of tyranny in the form
of a highly centralized or national government.
The Virginia
statesman John Taylor of Caroline smoked out these political scoundrels
in an 1823 book entitled New
Views of the Constitution of the United States (reprinted
in 2005 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd, of Union, New Jersey). Making
extensive use of the recently published Secret
Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention
by Robert Yates, who attended the constitutional convention, Taylor
shredded the false notions of "nationalists" like Hamilton
(and later, Clay and Lincoln).
Focusing on
Hamilton as the chief culprit, Taylor explained how the "nationalists"
did try at the constitutional convention to create a completely
centralized government, but failed. For example, he quotes Hamilton
himself at the convention as proposing a form of government such
that "All laws of the particular states, contrary to the constitution
or laws of the United States [government], to be utterly void. And
the better to prevent such laws being passed, the governor . . .
of each state shall be appointed by the general government, and
shall have a negative upon the laws about to be passed in the state
of which he is governor."
Hamilton’s
scheme was rejected, of course, and Taylor correctly commented that
"this project comprised a national government, nearly conforming
to that of England . . ." (p. 27). "By Colonel Hamilton’s
project, the states were fairly and openly to be restored to the
rank of provinces, and to be made as dependent upon a supreme national
government, as they had been upon a supreme British government"
(p. 28). Moreover, under Hamilton’s scheme "A power in the
supreme federal court to declare all state laws and judgments void"
would be "a supremacy exactly the same with that exercised
by the British king and his council over the same provincial departments"
(p. 28). Thankfully, Hamilton’s plan was rejected.
Quoting Yates’s
journal, Taylor also noted that on June 25, 1787 "it was proposed
and seconded to erase the word national, and substitute the
words United States [in the plural] in the fourth resolution, which
passed in the affirmative" (p. 29). "Thus," Taylor
wrote, "we see an opinion expressed at the convention, that
the phrase "United States" did not mean ‘a consolidated
American people or nation,’ and all the inferences in favour of
a national government . . . are overthrown" (p. 29).
Taylor understood
that the reason why Hamilton and other Federalists wanted a centralized
or consolidated government was that states’ rights would forever
stand in the way of their accumulation of power and wealth through
the mercantilist system that they hoped to impose on America. Therefore,
states’ rights must be crushed, in the eyes of Hamilton and his
followers (despite occasional lip service paid to the notion of
states’ rights).
Relying again
on Yates’s notes, Taylor wrote of how the Hamiltonians proposed
to empower the Congress to engage in a variety of economic interventions,
including "the promotion of agriculture, commerce, and manufactures"
(p. 29). A "monopoly in currency" by the central government
was another of Hamilton’s schemes that alarmed the senator from
Virginia. This was their plan for bringing British mercantilism
to America: First, consolidate political power in the central government
and destroy any semblance of divided sovereignty; then, use that
power to replicate the mercantilist British monarchy hidden behind
the rhetorical fog of American "democracy." As Taylor
described it, it was "Monarchy, its hand-maiden consolidation,
and its other hand-maid, ambition, all dressed in popular disguises
. . ." (p. 45). And, "National splendor, national strength,
and a national government, were the arguments they [the Hamiltonians]
used; but personal considerations, suggested by the prominence of
their stations, or the hopes suggested by their talents, really
forged their opinions" (p. 46). The "pretended national
prosperity, was only a pretext of ambition and monopoly . . . intended
to feed avarice, gratify ambition, and make one portion of the nation
tributary to another" (p. 46).
But the nationalists
failed in their endeavor; the Constitution created a confederacy
of states that delegated only a few enumerated powers to the central
government, which was to act as their agent, and for their benefit.
All other powers were reserved to the people or the states. It was
a federal, not a "national" government. Subsequently,
"Colonel Hamilton . . . seems to have quitted the convention
in despair, soon after the failure of his project" (p. 32).
Yates’s notes
on the convention prove definitively that "the whole people"
never had anything whatsoever to do with the ratification of the
Constitution, which was done by state conventions. There was never
any national election that created a national government. As his
journal states, quoted by Taylor (p. 32): "that the constitution
was transmitted to Congress, and by it to the state legislatures;
that these legislatures, by separate laws, appointed state conventions
for the consideration of the constitution; and that it was ratified
by the delegates of the people of each state."
Thus, "every
step in its progress," writes Taylor, "from beginning
to end, defines [the Constitution] to be a federal and not a national
act. . . . It was ratified by each state, because each state
was sovereign and independent" (p. 32, emphasis added).
Furthermore, "no negative upon state laws was delegated to
the federal government, or any department thereof, and the absence
of such a power had been enforced by its rejection."
What motivated
Taylor to write New Views of the Constitution of the United States
was the alarming fact that, by the 1820s, the men in American
politics who still dreamed of reigning over a mercantilist empire
began mis-educating the public about the true history of the founding.
They did so by repeating Hamilton’s arguments, which were so thoroughly
rejected by the convention. As Taylor described it, the public was
being told that "the devil, thus repeatedly exorcized, still
remains in the church" (p. 36). The "devil," of course,
was the notion that the states were not sovereign over the central
government that they had created as their agent. The
truth, as Taylor explained, was that "by the constitution,
the states may take away all the powers of the federal government,
whilst that government is prohibited from taking away a single power
reserved to the states" (p. 36).
It was assumed
that state sovereignty included a right of secession from the constitutional
compact. "In the creation of the federal government, the states
exercised the highest act of sovereignty, and they may, if they
please, repeat the proof of their sovereignty, by its annihilation"
(p. 37). The states "could never have conceived that they had,
by their union, relinquished their sovereignties; created a supreme
negative power over their laws; or established a national government
. . ." (p. 37). In fact, according to Yates’s journal, the
states were described at the convention as essentially being independent
nations. So much so that the journal stated: "It may safely
be received as an axiom in our political system, that the state
governments will, in all possible contingencies, afford complete
security against invasions of the publick liberty by the national
authority" (Taylor, p. 70, emphasis added).
Yates’s journal
further states: "Each state, in ratifying the constitution,
is considered to be a sovereign body independent of all others,
and only to be bound by its own voluntary act. In this relation,
then, the new constitution will be a federal and not a national
constitution" (Taylor, p. 83). This means that any one state
would have the right to secede from the constitutional compact.
It would have been considered an absurdity to argue that the right
of secession only existed by the permission of other states (which
was Lincoln’s argument).
But why all
the secrecy? Why did the framers of the constitution take an oath
not to reveal to the public what they were up to until after they
were all dead? (Madison’s notes were not published until after his
death). In a recent LRC article entitled "The Most Successful
Fraud in American History" Gary North suggested that "the
perpetrators [of any fraud] must be bound by an oath of non-disclosure,
which all of them keep until they die, yet which leaves no trail
of paper for historians to discuss." John Taylor would agree.
It was all kept secret so that "the vindicators of a federal
construction of the constitution are deprived of a great mass of
light, and the consolidating school have gotten rid of a great mass
of detection" (p. 41). Thus, "it was necessary to keep
the people in the dark" so that "the people should be
worked as puppets" (p. 41).
Taylor also
dissects and ridicules the "paradoxical arguments" of
the Hamiltonians of his day (who would soon form the Whig Party
of Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln). The advocates of "consolidated
sovereignties," Taylor noted, contend that
The greater
the [government] revenue the richer are the people; that frugality
in the government is an evil; in the people a good; that local
partialities are blessings; that monopolies and exclusive privileges
are general welfare; that a division of sovereignty will raise
up a class of wicked, intriguing, self-interested politicians
in the states; and that human nature will be cleansed of these
propensities by a sovereignty consolidated in one government.
Taylor
was being excessively polite when he labeled these absurdities as
merely "paradoxical."
Taylor
also provides a clear explanation of the so-called "supremacy
clause" of the Constitution, which many contemporary commentators
(especially Lincoln worshipping neocons) insist gives the federal
government the power to do whatever it wants to the citizens of
the states. The truth is that the language in the Constitution about
it being "the supreme law of the land" only applies to
the seventeen specific powers enumerated to the central government
in Article I, Section 8. Nothing more. The states remain the ultimate
sovereigns by the Constitution. "The constitutional laws of
the states are equally supreme with those of the federal government"
(p. 78).
John Taylor
issued his warning that "the devil is in the church" in
1823. In the coming years the new generation of "consolidationists,"
led by the likes of Daniel Webster and Henry Clay, were hard at
work repeating Hamilton’s "paradoxical" arguments in the
apparent belief that a gullible public would come to believe such
arguments if they are repeated enough. They never achieved much
success, however, thanks to the strength of the Jeffersonian, states’
rights tradition in America, which was the nation’s true political
tradition.
The Constitution
was essentially a failed attempt to overthrow the decentralized,
federalist system that was created by America’s first Constitution,
the Articles of Confederation. The delegates to the constitutional
convention were only instructed to revise the Articles, not replace
them. The first thing they did was to ignore the instructions they
were given and write an entirely new constitution. But as Yates’s
journal and Taylor’s book reveal, they failed. They only managed
to get the citizens of the states to delegate a few enumerated powers
to the central government, not to create a national government.
They succeeded in replacing the Articles, but not with their ideal,
monopolistic system.
It would
require a brutal, uncompromising dictator to overthrow the federal
system and adopt a British-style consolidated, mercantilist empire.
As Taylor wrote (p. 237): "It seems to be nature’s law, that
every species of concentrated sovereignty over extensive territories,
whether monarchical, aristocratical, democratical, or mixed, must
be despotick. In no case has a concentrated power over great territories
been sustained, except by mercenary armies; and whenever power is
thus sustained, despotism is the consequence." Furthermore,
"the ignorance and partiality of a concentrated form of government,
can only be enforced by armies; and the peculiar ability of the
states to resist, promises that resistance would be violent; so
that a national government must be either precarious or despotick"
(p. 238).
Yates’s
notes quote James Madison as warning at the constitutional convention
that "the great danger to our federal government, is the great
northern and southern interests of the continent being opposed to
each other" (Taylor, p. 248). Taylor quotes Madison to predict
the War for Southern Independence, which would occur almost four
decades later. If northern, southern, or western interests are in
sharp conflict, he wrote, and "if either can acquire local
advantages from a national supremacy, it will aggravate the geographical
danger apprehended by a Mr. Madison, a perpetual warfare of intrigues
will ensue, and a dissolution of the union will result" (p.
249).
This
is where the role of the brutal, uncompromising dictator enters
into American political history. The crusade for a consolidated,
monopolistic government began as soon as the Revolution ended. Some
seventy-five years later Taylor’s worst fear was realized: a consolidated,
mercantilist empire was finally cemented into place, and it did
require "a mercenary army" to succeed. Lincoln’s army
included literally hundreds of thousands of conscripts and European
mercenaries who finally snuffed out the Jeffersonian, federalist
system of states’ rights with the bloodiest war in human history
up to that point.
The
New England Yankees and their Midwestern brethren continued to rewrite
history in the ensuing decades so that books like Robert Yates’s
journal of the constitutional convention and John Taylor’s book
on the Constitution are virtually unheard of in America. The whitewash
of American history has been very thorough indeed.
September
12, 2006
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His
next book, to be published in October, is Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
(Crown Forum/Random House).
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org
|