The Real Meaning of the Fourth of July
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
Contrary to
popular myth, the men who signed the Declaration of Independence
were not great Americans. Instead, they were great Englishmen. In
fact, they were as much English citizens as Americans today are
American citizens. Its easy to forget that the revolutionaries
in 1776 were people who took up arms against their own government.
So how is it
that these men are considered patriots? Well, the truth is that
their government didnt consider them patriots at all. Their
government considered them to be bad guys traitors, all of
whom deserved to be hanged for treason.
Most of us
consider the signers of the Declaration of Independence to be patriots
because of their courage in taking a stand against the wrongdoing
and tyranny of their own government, even risking their lives in
the process.
Yet not even
the patriotism and courage of these English citizens constitutes
the foremost significance of the Fourth of July, any more than the
military victory over their governments forces at Yorktown
does.
Instead, the
real significance of the Fourth of July lies in the expression of
what is undoubtedly the most revolutionary political declaration
in history: that mans rights are inherent, God-given, and
natural and, thus, do not come from government.
Throughout
history, people have believed that their rights come from government.
Such being the case, people havent objected whenever government
officials infringed upon their rights. Since rights were considered
to be government-bestowed privileges, the thinking went, why shouldnt
government officials have the power to regulate or suspend such
privileges at will?
The Declaration
of Independence upended that age-old notion of rights. All men
not just Americans have been endowed by God and nature, not
government, with fundamental and unalienable rights. Governments
are called into existence by the people and exist at their
pleasure for one purpose: to protect the exercise of these
inherent rights.
What happens
if a government that people have established becomes a destroyer,
rather than a protector, of their rights? The Declaration provides
the answer: It is the right of the people to alter or even abolish
their government and establish new government whose purpose is the
protection, not the destruction, of peoples rights and freedoms.
The Constitution
and the Bill of Rights must be construed in light of that revolutionary
statement of rights in the Declaration of Independence. The American
people used the Constitution to bring the federal government into
existence but also, simultaneously, they used that document to limit
the governments powers to those expressly enumerated in the
Constitution. With the Constitution, people limited the powers of
their own government in a formal, structured way, with the aim of
protecting their rights and freedoms from being infringed upon by
that same government.
Why did Americans
deem it desirable and necessary to limit the powers of the federal
government? Because they feared the possibility that their new government
would become like their former government against which they had
had to take up arms. While they recognized the necessity for government
as a means to protect their rights they also recognized
that the federal government was the greatest threat to their rights.
By severely limiting the powers of the federal government to those
enumerated within the Constitution, the Framers intended to encase
the federal government within a straitjacket.
Even that was
not sufficient for the American people, however. As a condition
for approving the Constitution, they demanded passage of the Bill
of Rights, which emphasized two deeply held beliefs: (1) that the
federal government, not some foreign entity, constitutes the greatest
threat to the rights and liberties of the American people; and (2)
that the enumeration of specific rights and liberties, both substantive
and procedural, would better ensure their protection from federal
infringement.
On the Fourth
of July we celebrate the patriotism and courage of those English
revolutionaries who were willing to pledge their lives, fortunes,
and sacred honor in defense of the most revolutionary declaration
of rights in history that mans rights come from God
and nature, not from government.
July
7, 2008
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2008 Future of Freedom Foundation
Jacob
Hornberger Archives
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