-Caveat Lector-

WJPBR Email News List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Looking ahead

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--


© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com


Thinking carefully about the future is one of the tests of the maturity of a
republic, and one in which the example of wise leaders can be crucial. One
reflects, for example, upon Winston Churchill spending long years warning a
British people who yearned for peace that they must remain vigilant against
German rearmament. Churchill neglected his own private interests, so taken up
was he with the future of his country. A somewhat different example appears
to have been set by the venality and corruption of Bill Clinton in the last
days of his presidency -- as is now coming to light in the revelations of a
tangled web of presidential pardons, political contributions and personal
connections.

I am often asked these days what the future holds for Alan Keyes, a question
usually connected to my recent adventures in the arena of elective politics.
I welcome the question, because it gives me a chance to let people know about
a project that is much nearer to my heart than the pursuit of political
office. My own ambition in public life is simple -- to help renew the
foundations of American liberty. And I have founded the Declaration
Foundation, a non-profit educational organization, because I believe that the
most important work toward the renewal of moral identity -- which is vital to
the future of this republic -- will occur outside of competitive politics.
The challenge the Declaration poses to us is something that is greater than
politics. The Declaration Foundation is a non-partisan attempt to aid the
restoration of the common ground on which we stand together, whatever our
backgrounds as Americans.

It is easy to deny that we have such common ground. Or, perhaps worse, the
usual discussion of major issues today would suggest that the only thing we
have in common is base passions and greed. The nation was founded on the
claim of a nobler basis of our unity, a claim enshrined in the Declaration
but nearly forgotten today. If we don't soon remember and renew that claim
then we shall continue down the road of a debased and dejected freedom that
will in the end become such a burden to us, such a violation of our dignity,
that we shall gladly give it up. Nothing is so opportune for tyrants as a
people tired of its liberty. The 20th century showed clearly that the most
"civilized" people, looking upon the consequences of their abuse of freedom,
can be quite ready to deliver themselves into the arms of tyrants who promise
to clean things up.

To avoid the curses of disordered liberty, we will have to recapture the
understanding of our freedom which leads it to produce decency and order, and
to produce as well a nation in which we can take pride. The great turning
points of American life -- the Revolution, the Civil War, the Civil Rights
Movement -- have been those moments when, as a people, we faced a crossroads.
Down one road, we could see the future implied by our Declaration and, down
the other, the future implied by our abandonment of it. In such moments, so
far, we have always eventually chosen to take the Declaration road. The
Declaration Foundation is dedicated to helping us prepare to do so again.

The country will be prepared to take such action when the people again make
the logic of the Declaration the basis for their decisions about the
important issues of our life as Americans. But how can we expect people to
respect in their hearts principles they don't even know about anymore? How
can we ask them to accept in their choices, and be governed in their actions,
by a logic that they cannot even reason through? Something has to be done to
restore our sense of the relevance of this great founding document and the
principles it enshrines.

The crucial Declaration truth we must help each other remember is that the
Declaration is not just a creed of liberty, or even of equality. The famous
opening lines of the Declaration are also, in their very formulation, a creed
of authority and responsibility, laying out the discipline which we, as a
people must accept at every level if we are to be free. Human rights, and
human equality, come from the Creator rather than from human will. This means
that the entire structure of civilized life based on respect for human
equality and unalienable rights has a deeper premise -- respect for the
existence and authority of God, and our duty to respect His will. Freedom is
not an unlimited license; it is not an unlimited choice. Freedom is in fact,
in the first instance, a responsibility before the God from whom we come.

This may sound like a religious doctrine, rather than a creed to govern
public life. But the Founders intended the Declaration to be a bridge between
the Bible and the Constitution, between the basis of our moral faith and the
basis of our political life. If we allow the bridge to be torn down, then
what we will have is a chasm between this nation's life and its moral
foundations. And into that chasm will fall every hope we have for the future.
I consider the Declaration Foundation a kind of "infrastructure restoration,"
working to rebuild the bridge and prevent disaster.

The task requires not bricks and mortar, but that we take up once again the
task of understanding what these principles mean, and of challenging our
minds to make use of them in dealing with the practical issues that we face
every day.

The Declaration is not, as some suggest, a fine sounding collection of
abstractions, remote from the realities of life. Rightly understood, it
provides us with a disciplined way of reasoning toward agreement on issues we
are told cannot be reasoned about. It is possible to come to rational
conclusions about good and bad, right and wrong, liberty and tyranny, so long
as we remember the principles which must guide us in our thinking.

For example, the logic of the Declaration teaches that if we claim the
authority to decide whether the child in the womb is a human or not we are
denying the authority which is the basis for all our rights. Similarly, the
responsible understanding of freedom that is implied in the Declaration
requires rejection of the homosexual marriage agenda. The foundation of the
family is actually an understanding that, in that relationship, there is a
necessary responsibility and obligation which transcends self-gratification
by establishing permanent obligations to the child that may be born of it.

To those who reject such principles, we simply say that they should not
complain when their own rights are violated -- because in rejecting the
Declaration they have rejected the basis of their own claims to rights.

The Declaration Foundation will attempt to restore a better understanding of
the historical context which produced our great founding document, and help
people begin to apply the principles of that document to specific issues,
particularly those which require moral judgment and reasoning. One of our
major objectives will be to develop a curriculum that once again focuses on
the history of America precisely as the history of our efforts to realize the
promise of the Declaration. In education, in law, and in public policy, we
want to begin to inspire people once again to have the boldness of their
Declaration convictions.

Our first major step in this effort is the publication of an extraordinary
book, "America's Declaration Principles in Thought and Action," by the
President of the Declaration Foundation,. Richard Ferrier, Ph.D. and his
colleague Dr. Andrew Seeley, Ph.D. I invite you to visit the Foundation’s web
site to preview my introduction to the volume, as well as its first chapter,
“The Declaration of America.” The book is available for purchase and
download on the site, or by mail. We intend it to be read, distributed, and
discussed by anyone who wants to remember what it means to be an American. We
believe it is a model of the kind of carefully reasoned consideration of the
real meaning of the Founding that can recall our fellow citizens to their
citizen vocation. The book is particularly crafted, as I mention in the
introduction, "to help the young citizens of America to understand how the
principles of the American founding are crucial to the pursuit of happiness
which is their birthright."

Like anything really worth doing, renewing the resolve of the American people
to be a people of the Declaration will be the work of a long time, much love,
and much patience. I am committed to devoting my life to it and invite all
those who have expressed interest in my various public activities to join me
in this one. It is a work of charity that we can begin now -- that does not
require waiting for an election cycle or raising millions of dollars. It is a
work we can carry on in our homes, our schools, and our churches. And it will
bear great fruit in the people around us, if we are faithful to it.

We have, as has every generation of Americans, the privilege of looking, like
Moses, into the promised land. But given the nature of that promise, we shall
never live to get there. For this is a promise that is always being kept, and
never quite fulfilled: a promise that each generation must renew, and
respect, and rebuild. I hope the Declaration Foundation will be a way for us
to pledge ourselves to that renewal and engage in that rebuilding. If we
devote ourselves to the task, I believe we can pass on to our children intact
that heritage of freedom which is our real responsibility and their true
legacy.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--

Former Reagan administration official Alan Keyes, was U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Social and Economic Council and 2000 Republican presidential
candidate.




*COPYRIGHT NOTICE** In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107,
any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use
without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for nonprofit research and educational
purposes only.[Ref. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml ]

Want to be on our lists?  Write at [EMAIL PROTECTED] for a menu of our lists!

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substancenot soap-boxingplease!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright fraudsis used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to