ANOTHER INDEPENDENCE
DAY RANT
Neal Ross/June 19, 2008
The other evening I was watching my local
news channel and they were talking about how, due to the
dryness of the fields, they may have to cancel some of
the Independence Day firework shows. That triggered a
thought that they ought to replace them with readings
and discussions of the U.S. Constitution. Although
Independence Day celebrates the Declaration of
Independence, I think a discussion of the principles
found in the Constitution would be a suitable substitute
for a fireworks show. Then I thought, no one would come
to hear someone discuss the Constitution. Therein lies
the subject of this article, no one seems to care about
our Constitution, the system of government it describes,
and what it means to be a citizen of these United
States.
I find it interesting that during the religious holidays
of Easter and Christmas some of the television networks
broadcast movies with a religious theme such as the Ten
Commandments with Charlton Heston. Why then, since we
are in the midst of the process of selecting our next
President, and to a lesser degree certain Congressman
and Senators, does nobody seem to care about the
document that outlines the duties of these elected
representatives?
I am pretty sure that, by now, most people are aware
that there are two candidates running for president who
get all the media attention, Senators Barack Obama and
John McCain. However distasteful it is to me, one of
those men will most likely be our next President.
With that in mind, I find it interesting that in a 2006
MSNBC interview, Barack Obama made the following
statement, "I always believe that ultimately, if people
are paying attention, then we get good government and
good leadership. And when we get lazy, as a democracy
and civically start taking shortcuts, then it results in
bad government and politics."
Senator Obama must have foreseen his future nomination
when he said that, otherwise he would not have run.
First of all the Senator does not understand that we do
not have a democracy, we have a representative republic.
Just repeat the Pledge of Allegiance and see if you can
find where it says, "I pledge allegiance to the United
States of America, and to the democracy for which it
stands..."
Next up, the Senator does not even know how many states
there are in this country. He claims to have visited 57
of them, "It is just wonderful to be back in Oregon and
over the lat 15 months we've traveled to every corner of
the United States. I've now been in fifty uh seven
states, I think one left to go. One left to go, Alaska
and Hawaii I was not allowed to go to even though I
really wanted to, but my staff would not justify it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpGH02DtIws
It could be said that he made a simple slip of the
tongue, that he actually meant 47 states. But then that
would still suggest he thinks there are only 49 states.
I wonder which one he left out?
I do not wish for people to think that I am picking on
Senator Obama and that I support Senator McCain. Hardly,
Senator McCain, in my opinion, is as much a walking,
talking piece of human excrement as Senator Obama.
There are two quotes that pretty much sum up how I feel
about politicians in general, including the two primary
candidates running for President. The first is by H. L.
Mencken, "A good politician is quite as unthinkable as
an honest burglar." The other is by comedian Robin
Williams, "Politics: 'Poli' a Latin word meaning 'many';
and 'tics' meaning bloodsucking creatures"
What does it say about our country, and we as a people,
that these two men are the best this country can come up
with for President? Does it suggest, as Senator Obama
himself stated, that we have gotten lazy and are
therefore getting bad politics and politicians? Or is it
as Theodore Roosevelt said, "The most successful
politician is he who says what the people are thinking
most often in the loudest voice."
Clarence Darrow once said, "When I was a boy I was told
that anybody could become President; I'm beginning to
believe it."
I hate to do this, but Senator Obama, once again, may
have described exactly how we got to the point where we
are having to choose between him and Senator McCain for
the highest office in the land. In May of 2004, Senator
Obama stated, "People are whupped. I'm whupped. My wife
is whupped. Unless it's your job to be curious, who
really has the time to sit and ask questions and explore
issues?"
That, my friends, is pure nonsense. I work my tail off
almost every day, yet I still come home and research,
write, and stress out over the future of my country
because of people who claim they are too whupped to take
the time to research the issues. That is the definition
of apathy, and Plato had this to say about apathy, "The
price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by
evil men."
It is not just that we are apathetic, we also have very
short term memories. Our country has been on the
downhill slide for many years, but people are oblivious
to it. Years ago Georg Friedrich Hegel said the
following, "What experience and history teach is this-
that people and governments never have learned anything
from history, or acted on principles deduced from it."
How many remember a certain governor from Arkansas who
ran for, and was elected as President, who was just as
slick and charismatic as Senator Obama? How many
remember that this President once said, "We can't be so
fixated on our desire to preserve the rights of ordinary
Americans..."
The old Chinese proverb says ""Fool me once shame on
you, fool me twice shame on me." Is America about to be
fooled again?
Former Supreme Court Justice, William O. Douglas once
said, "As nightfall does not come all at once, neither
does oppression. In both instances, there is a twilight
when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And it is
in such twilight that we all must be most aware of
change in the air - however slight - lest we become
unwitting victims of the darkness."
However, since we are so 'whupped', we don't see the
darkness falling upon our nation. We have been led to
believe that the only viable candidates for office shall
emanate from either the Republican or the Democratic
parties. Thomas Jefferson had this to say about
political parties, "I never submitted the whole system
of my opinions to the creed of any party of men
whatever, in religion, in philosophy, in politics, or in
anything else, where I was capable of thinking for
myself. Such an addiction is the last degradation of a
free and moral agent. If I could not go to heaven but
with a party, I would not go there at all."
We have been led to believe that our government is the
cure for all that ails us and that only through their
benevolence can we obtain security and happiness. The
guidelines concerning the powers granted government
which are found in the Constitution are forgotten, just
as Arthur Schlesinger said, "For most Americans the
Constitution had become a hazy document, cited like the
Bible on ceremonial occasions but forgotten in the daily
transactions of life."
Those who blindly follow a candidate because of the
political party they belong to, or because they are too
'whupped' to research the issues, should ponder what
Albert Einstein once said, "...for those who would
joyously march in rank and file, they already earned my
contempt, for they were given a large brain by accident
when a spinal chord would have sufficed."
Our country is worth saving, the idea that all men are
created with the unalienable rights of life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness are not things that we
should let slip away because we are 'whupped'.
Samuel Adams once said, "The liberties of our country,
the freedom of our civil Constitution, are worth
defending at all hazards; and it is our duty to defend
them against all attacks. We have received them as a
fair inheritance from our worthy ancestors: they
purchased them for us with toil and danger and expense
of treasure and blood, and transmitted them to us with
care and diligence. It will bring an everlasting mark of
infamy on the present generation, enlightened as it is,
if we should suffer them to be wrested from us by
violence without a struggle, or to be cheated out of
them by the artifices of false and designing men."
Unfortunately I am realizing that far too many people,
as a friend recently told me, "...that most people do
not support a civilization and are not concerned with
what, why, when, and who make a civilization function.
Most people are interested in a dry roof, reasonable
health, good food sex and easy to use toilets. After
that, most people are concerned with becoming
undisciplined hedonists with their free time and surplus
capital or borrowed capital."
Americans care more about sports, video games, the
lifestyles of celebrities, and reality television than
they do about the affairs of their nation. Let me tell
you, reality television has nothing on what is
unfolding, and has been, for years in this country. Our
rights are slowly being stripped away from us by the
very people whom we elect to watch over them. It does
not seem that this will change much either, not when we
have two candidates who, in a perfect world, probably
couldn't get a job flipping hamburgers at McDonalds.
To quote Edward Langley, "What this country needs are
more unemployed politicians." To quote myself, "What
this country needs is some comprehensive government
reform."
The framework for good governance is there if only
people would read it and apply it to how they choose
their elected representatives. However, as long as they
remain too 'whupped' nothing is going to change.
http://neals-soapbox.blogspot.com/2008/06/another-independence-day-rant.html
©Copyright
2008, Neal Ross, All Rights Reserved

Neal Ross is
48 years old, and works at a major dried fruit
packaging plant. He has been married for 18 years
and has a very smart 16 year old son. He likes to
write, grow bonsai, fish , and do wood carvings.
"I am extremely
interested and active in politics because I see the way
my home state of California and our nation in general is
going and it saddens and worries me. Our elected
representatives no longer understand, or if they do they
choose to ignore, their Constitutional obligations. It
is our job, and one I take seriously, to remind them of
their shortcomings."
Neal Ross is dedicated
to saving America from itself and a corrupted version of
our Constitutional government. Please contact Neal at
bonsai@syix.com for permission to reprint his
articles.
Neal's writings can be found at:
http://www.neals-soapbox.blogspot.com