First Principles
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
Thomas Jefferson,
in his first inaugural speech, listed what he called "the essential
principles of our government and consequently those which ought
to shape its administration."
Rather than
quote him verbatim, I'm going to list those principles so we can
see how far we have strayed from our beginnings.
The first
was equal and exact justice to all men, whatever their state or
persuasion, religious or political. This is a principle that needs
working on every single day. Today, justice is too often for sale.
That is a problem the legal profession needs to work on.
The second
principle is peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations
entangling alliances with none. Misname it "isolationism"
all you want, but it is the wisest policy advocated by the wisest
of our Founding Fathers.
The third
was support of the state governments in all their rights as the
most competent administrations for our domestic concerns and the
surest protection against anti-republican tendencies. This one has
been largely abandoned so that many people today consider the states
to be merely administrative units of the federal government. This
should not be allowed to continue. It used to be considered axiomatic
that the best government was the government closest to the people.
Federal encroachment on states is one of our biggest problems.
The fourth
was preservation of the general government in its whole constitutional
vigor as the sheet anchor of peace at home and safety abroad. The
original purpose of the constitutional government was to represent
all the states in such things as foreign policy and war while, as
James Madison put it, in time of peace doing only about 5 percent
of the governing. Here again, we have strayed far.
The fifth
he described as a jealous care of the rights of election by the
people. As with all of these principles, this one is never complete,
as we can see by occasional election fraud and by the tendency of
some to deny the people an opportunity to vote on key issues.
The sixth
is absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority. He said
this was the vital principle of republics to which there was no
appeal but to force. That's so true. As much as it pains me to admit
it, the only time we didn't follow that principle resulted in a
war that cost 600,000 Americans their lives. The majority elected
Abraham Lincoln, and my Southern ancestors refused to acquiesce.
Another principle
was a well-disciplined militia, something we have entirely abandoned.
The supremacy
of the civil over the military was No. 8. This one we've observed.
Next comes one we have not observed economy in the public
expense and the honest payment of our debts.
Then come
the encouragement of agriculture and commerce; the diffusion of
information and the arraignment of all abuses at the bar of reason;
freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of the person
under habeas corpus; and trial by juries impartially selected. Habeas
corpus and trial by juries are being denied people whom the Bush
administration designates as "enemy combatants," though
no official state of war exists between us and any nation.
Notice,
too, how often these days that government wishes to substitute coercion
for diffusion of information. Too often the government prefers to
mandate vaccinations, for example rather than educate
people about their benefits. Jefferson said that should we wander
from these principles in error or alarm, we should retrace our steps
to regain the road that leads to peace, liberty and safety.
He was a hell
of a lot smarter than today's politicians.
March
24, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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