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Recapturing
the Spirit of Independence
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
This week Americans
will gather around the grill, attend parades and watch fireworks
displays, all in the celebration of the signing of our Declaration
of Independence. At the same time, we will have thousands of
bureaucrats, troops and agents stationed in countries across the
globe being paid by American tax dollars.
On the anniversary
of our declaring our own independence from the British, it is certainly
appropriate that we reflect on the nature and spirit of independent
nationhood. While our founding fathers were individual men in a
historically unique situation, they posited that the principles
upon which they rested our national independence were timeless.
If we truly
honor the men who brought about Independence Day, we would do well
to spend at least as much time reflecting on the Declaration of
Independence, and the principles upon which it is based, as we spend
at the cookouts, parades, and fireworks displays. With the trend
toward globalism that has been with us for the past century, we
should be specifically thoughtful about how our celebration of independence
can be made consistent with the policies that have been advocated
by the American government as well as many of the nations
elite or what we used to call the Eastern Establishment.
I believe there
is no way to square our nations traditions and reverence for
independence with the globalist policies these elites are currently
pursuing. The American concept of independent nationhood inscribed
in our Declaration cannot be maintained if we are going to pursue
a policy that undermines the independence of other nations. National
independence is an idea, and the erosion of the independence of
other nations only serves to erode that idea.
At
the same time, if we allow the erosion of that idea, by ignoring
it in certain instances, we will be contributing to its erosion
in all times and nations, even our own. In this way our nations
independence is linked with the independence of all nations. The
sooner we realize this truth, and enact a foreign policy that is
consistent with it, the sooner we will be able to recapture the
spirit of independence.
In
addition, as our founding fathers understood, the idea of national
independence is inseparable from that of constitutional republicanism.
Only the safeguards and limitations that are enshrined in a constitutionally-limited
republic can prohibit a nation from lurching toward empire. Recognizing
these same protections is also the very best way to eliminate the
need for civil wars and the violence of civil strife.
Moreover, this
constitutional republicanism is essential to protecting the individual
rights and self-determination that is at the heart of our Declaration.
As we celebrate the 231ist anniversary of our nations birth,
I hope every person who reads or hears this will take the time to
go back and read the Declaration of Independence. Only by recapturing
the spirit of independence can we ensure our government never resembles
the one from which the American States declared their separation.
July
4, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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