-Caveat Lector-

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America - It's NOT a Democracy

Sat Nov 2 21:16:35 2002
208.152.73.191

It's NOT a Democracy
http://www.strike-the-root.com/columns/bommarito/bommarito11.html

by Joseph S. Bommarito [EMAIL PROTECTED]

November 2, 2002

The public education system teaches that we live in a democracy, in which
the government is ruled by the majority. The founders of the country were
students of government and knew that democracy was essentially mob rule
with a thin veneer of legality and that the democracies of history had
failed. No self-respecting person of that era would call himself a democrat.

A pre-Revolutionary statement by an anonymous Bostonian reflected a common
belief that it was better to be ruled by one tyrant 3,000 miles away than
by 3,000 tyrants a mile away. Historian Alexander Fraser Tytler wrote then
that “A democracy . . . can only exist until a majority of voters discover
that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury.”

If not by democracy, then how do former subjects of a monarchy ensure
freedom? Alexander Hamilton wrote, "We are now forming a republican form of
government. Real liberty is not found in the extremes of democracy . . . .
If we incline too much to democracy, we shall soon shoot into a monarchy,
or some other form of dictatorship."

The Constitution therefore states, “The United States shall guarantee to
every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government . . . .”

The Constitution is a framework for government that is purposefully
difficult to amend. The executive, legislative, and judicial branches of
government were designed to provide checks and balances on each other. An
additional check on power was that the three parties to legislation were to
serve different constituencies.

- The House of Representatives was intended to be the only representative
body for the people, with members elected democratically from specific
districts.

- Members of the Senate were appointed by their respective state legislatures.

- The office of president was decided by electors, of which each state had
at least three. The vice-president was the presidential candidate who
received the second largest number of votes, ensuring a balance of opinion
in the executive branch.

This provided the foundation for a government of limited power whose
principal obligation was to protect the rights and liberties of the people.
This charter of power from the people was not intended to be changed easily
or to be a “living document,” subject to the whim of the moment. After the
Constitutional Convention of 1787, Benjamin Franklin, when asked what had
been wrought, responded, “A republic, if you can keep it.”

But today we are continually subjected to chants of “our democracy,” “this
is a democracy,” and “to restore our democracy” by politicians who should
know better, having sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution.

As early as the 1830’s, Alexis de Tocqueville noted how little Americans
valued freedom as opposed to equality. He wrote, "Democratic institutions
awaken and foster a passion for equality which they can never entirely
satisfy." Equality of condition, of position, of peace and comfort became
more important than freedom for people to achieve what they could. The
weeds of democracy had started springing up in the fields of freedom.

Democracy gained more in 1913 when the balance of legislative power was
changed by the Seventeenth Amendment, which provided for direct election of
senators by the people. The Senate then represented the same constituencies
as the House. Each presidential election now resounds with calls for the
abandonment of the electoral system in favor of a popularly elected chief
executive.

Democracy advanced further in 1913 (it was a very bad year) when the income
tax amendment gave Congress the power to tax one class of citizen in order
to enrich others. This also gave Congress the excuse to snoop into our
personal business, the revenue to create new and ever-larger welfare-state
programs, and the ability to become power-brokers and the chief grantors of
favors.

The 1930’s saw President Franklin D. Roosevelt redefine freedom with
his “Four Freedoms” speech. Since then, people expect to have not only
freedom of speech and religion, but also freedom from fear and from want,
all provided by the government, of course, and paid for with other peoples’
money.

Roosevelt threatened to “pack” the Supreme Court, which then quickly
approved programs previously considered unconstitutional. The Court now
routinely finds hidden meaning within the plain language of the
Constitution, often in the welfare clause. Constitutional architect James
Madison had written, “With respect to the words general welfare… To take
them in a literal and unlimited sense would be a metamorphosis of the
Constitution into a character which there is a host of proofs was not
contemplated by its creators.” But the Court routinely uses the welfare
clause without regard to original intent.

Power-lusting politicians prostitute themselves by offering
taxpayer-provided goodies to any group that delivers votes. The largest
special interest group has become the fifty percent of income earners who
pay virtually no tax but receive benefits paid for by the other fifty
percent. As H. L. Mencken once observed, “. . . government is a broker in
pillage, and every election is sort of an advance auction sale of stolen
goods.”

The limited government envisioned by the founders guaranteed a maximum of
individual freedom. But freedom can be messy, a little chaotic. The
benefits of freedom often go to dissidents whose speech and acts may
disrupt the tranquility of daily life. Consequently, people have lost the
realization that freedom helps everyone in the long run, not to achieve
some artificial level of equality, but to improve their conditions.

Democracy promises equality at the cost of freedom and everyone quickly
reaps the benefits of equality. A law is passed and benefits flow as from a
mountain spring. But the long-term cost will be loss of self-reliance and
an increasing dependence on government.

The inherent vice of freedom is the unequal sharing of the blessings; the
inherent blessing of equality will be the equal sharing of misery.

As long as people value equality over freedom and enrichment over
enterprise, the shackles of dependence will grow ever tighter and we will
return to a type of medieval serfdom with bureaucrats and politicians in
place of nobles and kings.

discuss this column in the forum
http://www.strike-the-root.com/cgi-local/yabb/ YaBB.pl?board=root_strikers

Joe Bommarito is a free-lance living and
writing in Chatham County, Georgia with his lovely wife and three generally
libertarian-minded felines.

freelance

2. a person who acts according to his principles and is not influenced by
any group; an independent.

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