Secession,
the Second Amendment and Sun Tzu
by Russell D. Longcore
by
Russell D. Longcore
Recently by Russell D. Longcore: Does
Secession Without a State Militia Make Any Sense?
In the 6th
Century BC, Chinese warrior Sun Tzu wrote The
Art of War. It has been the definitive treatise on waging
war for 26 centuries now. Only thirteen chapters, it was translated
first in 1782 when a French Jesuit priest living in China,
Joseph Amiot, acquired a copy of it, and translated it into French.
Subsequent translations have honed the text into English.
The book is
available for free through The Gutenberg Project at: The
Art of War. I strongly recommend this short read, as the truth
can be used in many areas of human interaction.
For this article,
I shall concentrate on his writings about waging war by deception.
Here are some of his thoughts.
Chapter
1:18 All war is based on deception.
Chapter
2:2 Supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance
without fighting.
Chapter
2:18 If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear
the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the
enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat.
Chapter
6:8 That general is skillful in attack whose opponent does not
know what to defend; and he is skillful in defense whose opponent
does not know what to attack.
Chapter
6:9 O divine art of subtlety and secrecy! Through you we learn
to be invisible, through you inaudible; and hence we can hold the
enemy's fate in our hands.
Chapter
6:12 If we do not wish to fight, we can prevent the enemy from
engaging us even though the lines of our encampment be merely traced
out on the ground. All we need do is to throw something odd and
unaccountable in his way.
The general
concept that I want you to take away from these verses is that in
order to win many battles, you must keep your enemy off balance,
deceived and confused about your strategies and tactics. If you
can attack him at many weak points, he will have to respond, and
therefore, you control both the location and the tempo of the battle.
This will be important in the thoughts and questions below.
I’ve been writing
lately about secession and the well-regulated militia, and how they
should be inextricably tied to one another. From the reactions I’m
receiving from readers, this concept seems to be somewhat new to
them.
Specifically,
I and other writers have referred to the truest meaning of the Second
Amendment to the United States Constitution, which states: "A
well-regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a Free
State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not
be infringed."
How many millions
of words have been written about the Second Amendment?
Starting with
the 1856 Dred Scott decision by the Supreme Court, to the National
Firearms Act of 1934 and up to this day, Americans have seen infringement
upon infringement piled upon them. But, do you remember in your
lifetime hearing of ANY of those regulations that dealt with the
security of a Free State?
Could it be
that the arguments made over the last 150 years about gun control...
the laws and regulations passed by states and the Federal government...and
any talk about personal safety, crime prevention, hunting and sport
shooting...have been a clever diversion away from the clear intention
of the words of the Second Amendment?
Think about
it from a purely tactical viewpoint. If you and I are in an argument
about a certain topic, and I can get you to engage in a related
topic that looks important, but completely diverts you from the
real issue, I’ve won. I can drag you around by your nose ring for
as long as you want to argue about what matters LEAST. Meanwhile,
I can do pretty much what I want in regard to the real issue.
It is the same
as General Tzu’s admonition to attack the enemy where he is weakest,
combined with his recommendations to attack at multiple weak locations
simultaneously. The enemy will expend itself defending its weak
points while you conquer.
Isn’t this
what Washington and most of the states have done? They have enacted
gun legislation and regulations that force citizens to challenge
them in the very courts that the tyrants control. Meanwhile, the
politicians subtly changed our states and our nation.
The Second
Amendment is the effort of the Founders to guarantee that the sovereign
states would protect a mechanism whereby the states might thwart
Federal tyranny through armed resistance, if only as a last resort.
Now, there is nothing in the Amendment about any "last resort."
Common sense dictates that all efforts to settle any difference
would proceed peaceably first. And, when a well-regulated state
militia is a day-to-day reality, it acts as a deterrent merely by
its existence. Thugs seldom attack armed people.
Go ask Switzerland
if a militia works. They haven’t been invaded in nearly 500 years.
Washington
and the state legislatures have bleached out the reality of the
well-regulated state militia from the American fabric. Meanwhile,
Americans have been hoodwinked into fighting about whether or not
they can carry a gun with or without a permit, or packing heat in
a bar or restaurant. While those turf wars raged, Washington absorbed
the sovereignty of the states, and made the states into serfdoms.
So, can you
now see that because "A well-regulated Militia...is...necessary
to the security of a Free State, the right of the people to
keep and bear arms shall not be infringed?"
States need
to reclaim their sovereignty by revitalizing their state militias.
Through the militia, states will once again gain their true freedom
to regulate the Federal Government that once was their servant.
And, in the failure of the exertion of state sovereignty to control
the actions of Washington, the unhappy states may secede knowing
that they are capable of defending their decision from all who would
attempt to use force to prevent their exit.
January
2, 2010
Russell
D. Longcore [send him
mail] is president of Abigail Morgan Austin Publishing Company.
He is married to "his Redhead" Julie, has three wonderful children
and three even more wonderful grandchildren. Visit his secessionist
website at: www.DumpDC.com.
Copyright
© 2010 Russell D. Longcore. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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