Sleep Well Tonight. Your National Guard Is...Overseas?
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
I
was a teenager when America sat at the brink of nuclear war, with
President Kennedy positioned nose-to-nose with the Russians over
the missiles stored at the Bay of Pigs. In my home my father tried
to prepare a 'safe room' of sorts, stockpiling water and canned
food. In the event of a nuclear attack, he planned for us to go
to that room, where we would, hopefully, survive.
At
school we constantly discussed the possibility of destroyed futures
– no graduations; no relationships; no lives. For me there was but
one point of comfort, and that was the nightly public reminder,
"Sleep Well Tonight; Your National Guard Is Awake."
It
may have been my youthfulness that allowed me to put such faith
in that phrase, but I really did sleep better. I pictured the National
Guard members at their posts; spending those nights watching the
sky; protecting me from harm. Now, however, when I hear that National
Guard units have been deployed overseas, I do not sleep well – in
part because that very action angers me so deeply.
These
deployments infuriate me because I believe it is unlawful to send
any members of state militias, i.e. 'National Guard,' beyond the
borders of this country, and that doing so exceeds the privileges
of the President, and violates the trust, and the earliest traditions,
of the American people – in citizen militias, minutemen, non-interventionist
philosophies, Constitutional limitations on the powers of the executive
branch of the government.
Citizen
militias began in 1636 when settlers organized armed men to protect
the colonies. General George Washington later proposed the establishment
of a formal militia "to maintain peace and protect us from foreign
invaders." The Guard considers its charter to be the Constitution
of the United States, specifically Article I, Section 8, Clause
15. "Clause 15 provides that the Congress has three constitutional
grounds for calling up the militia – 'to execute the laws of the
Union, suppress insurrection and repel invasions.' All three standards
appear to be applicable only to the Territory of the United States"
(from
Constitutional charter of the Guard).
Article
I, Section 8, recognizes the States' rights in retaining militias
and reserves the appointment of militia officers and training to
the States. Article IV, Section 4 provides that the federal government
"shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form
of government," protects each State against invasion and, at State
request, the federal government is to protect the States in the
event of domestic violence (from
charter of the Guard, Article IV, Section 4).
The
Militia Act of 1792 placed certain requirements on the militia:
all able-bodied men between the ages of 18 and 45 had to serve;
to equip themselves; to attend annual practices, or musters. The
act also arranged for the militias to be organized, as directed
by the State legislatures, into divisions, including regiments,
battalions, companies. Note that the States still held supervision
and control over the militias, and that the act of 1792 continued
in force for 111 years.
In
1867, Lincoln's Congress took the unconstitutional step of suspending
the right of the Southern States to organize their militias, and
used the U.S. Army to enforce martial law over the South during
Reconstruction. Public anger and reaction to the expansion of the
military's role in civilian life brought about the Posse Comitatus
in 1878, which was designed to limit federal powers over the militia
being put in use against the population, by stating, "…it shall
not be lawful to employ any part of the Army of the United States…for
the purpose of executing the laws, except on such cases and under
such circumstances as such employment of said force may be expressly
authorized by the Constitution or by any act of Congress…" (Guard
history – Posse Comitatus).
Congress
must have interpreted "…except…expressly authorized by…Congress…"
as an open invitation to eventually modify the entire character
of the State militias. Woodrow Wilson's National Defense Act of
1916 mandated the use of the term "National Guard" in place of the
historical names that identified each militia with its own individual
State – Michigan Militia, Ohio Militia…; expanded the Guard's role
as the primary reserve force; dictated the number of drills; and
gave the President greater powers. The Constitutional intent for
the militias was further compromised and violated with each successive
piece of legislation: The National Defense Act Amendments of 1920,
The National Guard Mobilization Act of 1933, and finally with The
Total Forces Policy of 1973, which also saw the end of the draft.
Now
we find ourselves 'home alone,' while our Constitutional State militias
are withdrawn from our States and sent abroad to provide foreign
aid, build hospitals and schools in foreign lands, and be a first
line of defense in foreign wars, rather than a last line of defense
to protect the States and the national borders from foreign invaders.
I am appalled.
I
consider any Congressional legislation that changed the intent,
organization and control of State militias, to be unlawful acts
that have unconstitutionally allowed for unintended expansion of
Federal powers. I find it disgraceful that Congress would violate
the original intent of Article I, Section 8, Clause 15, and enact
legislation that has forced State citizen militias to 'metamorphosize'
into a national organization that is now deployed outside of the
United States.
Our
Founding Fathers did not even want a standing army, and they surely
would not approve of our armed forces being sent far and wide, becoming
involved in international situations, various and sundry. I believe
that these wiser men would be especially angry and offended that
state militias are being sent abroad, as well.
The
National Guard now has a tradition of deployment in several wars
but it is wrong, and I, for one, do not like it. Neither do I approve
the loss of their protective presence, as they travel around the
globe serving international 'humanitarian' purposes, such as distributing
food and building schools and clinics. I certainly do not want them
deployed as an early and primary strategy of war in foreign lands.
The
National Guard units belong in their respective States; protecting
the people of their respective States; available to their States
in the event of emergencies. Exceptions to those limitations would
be emergencies that are extensive, cross state lines, or threaten
our borders.
I
believe that governors have a responsibility to dispute and refuse
to obey unconstitutional laws, and thus the responsibility to prevent
our Guard members from deployment overseas. Such prudence is especially
vital now, with terrorist alerts, and with 'homeland security' the
buzzword of the administration. I believe that every governor should
demand that every National Guard member be immediately returned
to the States.
I
believe that we should insist that the President and Congress use
the national armed forces for their interventionist plots and ploys.
Our federal taxes pay for military bases and active military personnel.
There is no Constitutional right, and certainly no common sense,
in forcing NG members – college students having to quit classes
mid-semester; fathers and mothers having to leave young children
– to be deployed overseas! Send the active duty military, if you
must, but leave our National Guard at HOME.
I
want to sleep well tonight, and every night. For any number of reasons,
we citizens of individual states could find ourselves in need of
assistance and protection. We must be able to depend on our citizen
militias. We should insist that Congress reverse any and all legislation
that illegally allowed a federal takeover of the State militias.
Governors,
please take your Constitutional powers, as well as your Constitutional
rights, seriously. The 'united States' of America is the goal for
which our forefathers fought and died. They did not sacrifice lives
and homes so that we would have an all-powerful Federal STATE. They
sacrificed so that each individual State could retain its powers,
including the power to maintain and control their militias. Based
in each state. Awake and on-guard.
Near
us as we sleep.
October
10, 2005
Linda
Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] is an educational
consultant, homeschooling mom, and public school special ed teacher.
She is available for presentations, inservices, and workshops.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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