Monday, August 4, 2014

Major Crises Confronting the Voting Populace Today


Major Crises Confronting the Voting Populace Today

Introduction

Various people are incessantly approaching us about political issues, mostly trying to attract votes, win an election, enter or stay in office.  Frequently, these individuals have no clue why they should be running, are ignorant of policy issues, and know nothing about what sort of platform they should be building.  This paper spells out in outline the major issues facing the voting populace today, as I see them.  All of these have reached epidemic proportions, the perfect storm; they are all at crisis level.  Most of them have been festering in our society for over a hundred years, from the mid-nineteenth century, during the era of the American Civil War: as such they are deeply ingrained in our society and have become normative of expected behavior.

This is to say these festering wounds form the ethos of our society.  Nevertheless, that ethos was built, largely because of the Civil War, and the Industrial Revolution over which it was fought; if it was built it can be razed, rebuilt, or whatever else is necessary to repair it.  If this ethos was built, and it was, it supplanted a previous ethos, it is an unlawful contender and usurper of the lawful government of America.  If we hope to go anywhere, we need to rediscover who we are, what we stand for, and thus restore our lawful and rightful ethos, which is the government of the people.  Do the people have a God given right to be governed?  Thus, how shall they be governed?  This is our ethos, our rule for proper public conduct.

Ethos is only one facet of this problem: the other facets being our logos, the words which we chose to logically address this problem, so we need to be careful here, we cannot afford to stumble any longer; and our pathos, the experience and pain which we have long endured as the result of error and malice, and for which we will continue to experience pain as we seek to correct past wrongs.

  1. The Bible, Church, State Crisis
  2. The Constitutional Law Crisis
  3. The Energy Crisis
  4. The Banking and Monetary Crisis
  5. The Healthcare Crisis
  6. The Education Crisis
  7. The Euthanasia Crisis
  8. The Sexuality Crisis
  9. The Security Crisis
  10. The Federal Land Crisis

The Bible, Church, State Crisis

This is obviously a Bill of Rights issue, and it is widely misinterpreted and misunderstood.

Briefly put, our Constitution and Nation were built on the Bible.  There is deeply ingrained in every fiber of our founding law, the idea that our freedom depended upon the higher authority of Divine guidance and God’s Law.  Granted, there were a wide variety of opinions on this matter coming from Christians of every stripe, Deists, and others.  We clearly do not have a Christian Nation by this definition, but we certainly have a Bible Nation.  The idea that the Bible be disallowed from our conversation and law, or that the Ten Commandments may not be posted, or that the Bible not be taught in our schools, is a logical absurdity, a contradiction, an oxymoron.  In particular, the posting of the Ten Commandments is fundamental to our rule of law and any notion that it should be given equal space with satanic or sharia law is equally contradictory, even ludicrous.  The Constitution of the United States does not mandate logical argument from and including the Bible; but it most certainly protects it and provides for it.  Where is this written?  It is not specifically stated any place of which I’m aware, but the incessant use and wording of our founding fathers makes it abundantly clear that this was their intent.  So much so, that this is beyond dispute by anyone appraised of the facts.

Our Constitution and Nation were not built on any particular church.  Hence, there is no constitutional preference for any one church.  Taxes may not be levied to support the establishment of a church.  This equally prohibits the establishment of an American civil religious cult, paid for at the taxpayer’s expense.  Yet, here we are with an American Religion, I don’t know what else to call it, paid for at the taxpayer’s expense; a religion which has nominated the chief executive officer as its high priest; and which regularly hands down laws that bind individual churches and businesses.  This is the very thing our Federal Constitution was designed to prohibit.  At the same time, this very same provision protects the right of any of these independent churches to argue their viewpoint of law from the Bible.

Finally, Our Constitution and Nation were built on this idea of law.  It should be clear that our States were not built on this idea of law.  As a matter of fact, most of the original thirteen colonies were established on specific Christian Charters: some Calvinist, some Roman Catholic, and one Quaker.  Even without Charter Baptists, Lutherans, and many others were all guaranteed a voice.  That being said, our Constitution draws a clear line of distinction between Federal and State law: thus, while the Federal government is prohibited from any establishment of religion, State governments are not prohibited from so creating an established church: not by Federal law.  Consequently, it is the duty of the several States to declare such disestablishment polices in their particular state constitutions, if that is what the people of the individual state wish.  At law, the people of the several States are free to change such policies as they wish, with the voting process provided.  The Federal government has no right of intrusion into this arena of law.  Federal law concerning the disestablishment of religion has no authority within the several States: it simply provides that no Federal taxes will be collected for establishment; it equally allows that state taxes may be collected for such establishment if the people so desire.

This issue is now a crisis specifically because our Federal leaders by design, and our State leaders by default have created a de facto establishment of Federal religion, which must be overthrown, else we will have no freedom whatsoever.  At the same time there is nothing in these Constitutional provisions that prohibits teaching the Bible or having prayer services in our schools: it simply isn’t there, it is a State issue.  By the same token, there is nothing here to warrant the intrusion of other systems of law, outside of the Bible, to allow such systems equal voice under the law.  Again, an individual state may provide for another basis of law, if that is the will of the people, but the Federal government may not make such a provision without the amendment of its Constitution.

The Constitutional Law Crisis

The Constitution of the United States has long been in crisis.  This is true because nobody wants to obey it.  If we are to talk about and have a rule of law, we must obey the Constitution of the United States or lawfully amend it.  That being said, nobody wants to do this.  Everybody from the Chief Justices of the Supreme Court to the lowest level of public servant; from the richest of the ultra-rich to the poorest of the poor; from the most intelligent to the foolish; from the most highly educated to the least learned of all; everybody in practice wants and does circumvent the Constitution of the United States, the second highest law of the land, on a daily basis.  We have already established the fact, from the Framer’s use of the Bible, that the Bible is in fact the highest law of the land.  As long as we are willing to live by circumvention of constitutional law, we have no rule of law at all: we are living with a self-deception.

The subversion of the Constitution began with the Industrial Revolution, perhaps as early as 1760, somewhat from wood and other such biofuels, but largely from the increasing development and use of coal to power rotary steam engines (1781).  However, the Industrial Revolution got its next real boost around 1858 (Ontario), 1896 (California), 1897 (Oklahoma), 1923 (Texas),[1] with the increasing use of oil to fuel internal combustion engines (1850).[2]  This use really took off after 1900 when United States oil production began to increase at around 7% a year.  Factories replaced farms; convenience increasingly replaced practicality, and personal freedoms.

Financially, the subversion of the Constitution began with Chase (d. 1873)[3], and the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank (1913),[4] limitation (1944) and abandonment (1976) of the gold standard with its replacement by pure fiat money.[5]  Chase was soon eclipsed by power brokers such as J. P. Morgan,[6] and the like; who with a handful of powerful and wealthy families rapidly took control of the nation.

Politically, the subversion of the Constitution began as early as Lincoln (d. 1865),[7] whose cabinet contained several power brokers.  The religious attitude of the day fostered this development.  Social Darwinism infected the churches.  Wealthy and powerful Christians thought it their duty to suppress and lead.  This fueled and supported the most cruel, unjust, and violent domination of minority groups: black, Hispanic, Indian, oriental, poor white, women, and others too weak to defend themselves against the powerful machinations of the oligarchy.  On the other hand, the system did not approach full power until the executive office was first used to write, rather than to enforce law (ca 1920).[8]  This was soon followed by the use of Federal taxes to dictate State law (ca 1935).[9]  With the levers in place to circumvent the police powers of the Constitution it was all downhill from then on.[10]

The prostitution of the Supreme Court.  In a gradual transition, the Supreme Court has expanded its “right” of Judicial Review, to reinterpret, according to its own political whim, the plain meaning of the law, thus changing its clear original intent.[11]  Most especially egregious is the ruling that money is the equivalent of a vote, thus removing the legal franchise of the voter and handing it to the ultra-wealthy.[12]  In order to create an illusion of integrity the Supreme Court occasionally hands down a constitutionally correct vote to maintain its appearances.  Otherwise it’s business as usual, defrauding the public in the court room.

We can argue for the proper exercise of the police powers until we are blue in the face.  There will still be future executives who try to circumvent posse comitatus.  The loss by default of the several States is largely their own fault.  State governments chose to turn a deaf ear to the cries of the populace for relief from oppression in dozens of areas.  The result was a movement to let Sam do “it”; now that Sam is doing “it”, no one is pleased with the outcome and/or its attendant loss of freedom.

The only way to escape this crisis is by the strict interpretation of the Constitution.[13]  We have got to find a way to put federally mandated police powers programs back in the hands of the several States.

The Energy Crisis

Currently, we have no real Federal energy policy, nor have we had one since Carter (ca 1975).[14]  Perhaps we don’t need a Federal energy policy.  Perhaps we really need State energy policies.  That being said, it is impossible to conduct international affairs, and interstate commerce without massive expenditures of energy.  The problem is that the accurate disclosure of resources and the scientific theory associated with such disclosure is in question.  At the present time the United States Geological Survey (USGS) appears to be the only reliable report of proved reserves and undiscovered resources (unproved, the distinction rests on whether drilling and/or production has taken place).  At least in public news and business advertising the USGS reports are called into question on a daily basis.  This debate over the facts, by both sides of the argument, causes them to be in doubt.  We need a means to force accurate and full disclosure of all the energy facts.  Without these facts, we have no basis for planning, whatsoever.  As the USGS reports now stand we are at risk of running out of natural gas, natural gas liquids, and oil (gasoline) in a relatively short time period (roughly a few decades).  Coal, by way of contrast, might last a few centuries.  Then we turn out the lights, and shut down all the vehicles.  This is fundamental to the job shortage issue, and a primary reason that any rebound in jobs will be largely artificial.  I think jobs will rebound, once we discover that we must return to an agrarian economy: then there will be a demand for field hands.  We might hope to once again become a nation of small family farms.  If this is not a crisis, I do not know what it takes to constitute a crisis.

The Banking and Monetary Crisis

We already showed under Constitution issues that real money doesn’t exist.  What we have is fiat money: paper and electrons.  We have not investigated the endless string of Federal bailouts that cater to the ultra-rich.  These will continue as long as the ultra-rich continue to own and control our government, from the Supreme Court to the lowest level of bureaucracy.  Neither of these, however, is the primary crisis that concerns me here: although they are certainly related.

The crisis to which I refer, is the crisis of Debt Slavery.  Our nation has been locked in debt at every level since Chase (d. 1873).  Little is done without leverage.  Most of this debt is corrupt, oppressive, predatory, and highly usurious.  If we bothered to read our Bibles we would know that this is very wrong.  Energy is real money, the greatest threat to national security.  Debt is the second greatest threat to national security and to every other social issue facing our nation today.  We have become a society focused on what we get, rather than what we give.  We ourselves are increasingly defined by money, rather than by our contribution to mankind.  Our debt enslaves us, so that we are no longer free (except in vacuous name).  Our lives are consumed in the service of interest rates.  This is an unjust crisis from which our Federal and States governments should be protecting us at law.  On the contrary, our Federal and States governments are promoting this social evil.

The Healthcare Crisis

This is obvious since it’s in the news every day.  This is not a Federal issue, it is a State police powers issue.  Yet, it does no good to tear down the Federal system without a reasonable State system to replace it.  Had the States got off their legislative tail feathers, and gone to work on this issue, the contemporary problem probably would not exist.  It will probably take a conference of the fifty governors to take this out of the hands of the Federal government.  There are dozens of reasons why centralized control does not and cannot work.  We will now learn this painful lesson one more time as pathos teaches us wisdom.

At a fundamental level, medicine is primarily a relationship between a doctor and a patient: beyond protecting that relationship from fraud, it doesn’t require much regulation.  We have failed in this matter of protecting the patient from fraud, because we have turned the medical practice into a profit center, rather than being the professional social service it started out to be.  Medicine is now mostly about selling pharmaceuticals and services, not about rendering real community service: for medicine is also defined by money.  At the governance level, medicine is a State issue.  At the practical level, medicine is a local, personal, private issue: a privileged discussion between two people.

The Education Crisis

There are a few things to say about education beyond repeating verbatim the Healthcare Crisis.  At a fundamental level, education is primarily a relationship between a teacher and a pupil in which the teacher seeks to engage the students: beyond protecting that relationship from fraud, it doesn’t require much regulation either.

Administrators are not teachers, nor can they be, and for the most part administrators know nothing about teaching.  Yet, we continue to hand down regulation after regulation: No Child Left Behind, standardized testing, teacher training mandates; all of which ignore the fact that teaching is at its core a customized, not a standardized discipline.  Also trampled in the dust is the fact that a horse can be lead to water, but not forced to drink.  The person who does not wish to be educated, will never become educated, so there is no real point in punishing teachers, or schools over that which is impossible to accomplish by logos.  The education resistant person may learn from pathos, but no amount of standardized testing will ever get the job done.  All that these Federal “fixes” accomplish is forcing the teacher to teach the test, or otherwise rig the results.

College is not a need or a right for all.  Neither is high school.  Some pupils do not wish to become students, and have no desire to finish.  This is a free country (it used to be).  Let the pupil follow his/her desire and drop out.  Let that be a matter between the parent and the child.  We used to offer skilled trades, shop, and home economics as viable alternatives to an academic path.  Let the pupil follow his/her bent: help them on the way.  Many that chose trades, or business as a high school option, finished high school and decided they needed more education in College.  These are choices, not matters of coercion.  At the governance level, education is a State issue.  At the practical level, education is a local, personal, private issue: a privileged discussion between two people and parents.  Education is in loco parentis, not in loco polis.

The Euthanasia Crisis

The Death Culture is trampling over all kinds of religious sensibilities, without regard for the Constitution.  You are free to want what you want, but I should be under no compulsion to approve of it or provide it for you.  This amounts to an overthrow of an ethos that stood for over 1850 years.  Because you hold a different opinion, you have no right to overthrow that ethos.

Perhaps some consideration should be given to the centuries of ancestors who will not be pleased with your changes.  Perhaps some consideration should be given to the fact that this is the same path that Nazi Germany went down in WWII, and which we so roundly and righteously condemned.  This path may prevail, but I can guarantee that history will also rise up and condemn it.

What is driving this death march to its absurd conclusion?  The fact that our personhood is defined by money more that by contribution; more by lifestyle than by love.  A life of contribution and love demands sacrifice, and we are unwilling to sacrifice because sacrifice interferes with the things our greedy heart’s desire.

The Sexuality Crisis

More of the same as with the Death Crisis.  A person who has no respect for life will have little respect for his/her God designed and given sexuality.  No amount of pseudo-science can overthrow what is fundamentally a moral issue.  As with Euthanasia, this is a basic violation of Church and State, without any regard for the right of Bible over State.

The National Security Crisis

Have you got it figured out?  Without energy and money we cannot protect our borders, let alone pose ourselves as the saviors of the world (capitalism uber alles).[15]

We are running out of energy.  We are deeply, irrecoverably enslaved by debt to the point where we can no longer even afford to pay the interest, let alone the principal.  Within decades our military could be turned into a defenseless parking lot.

Without a commitment to freedom we will not will to remain free; our borders will continually invaded by countless invaders, not just teenagers from the south.

Without real problem solvers going after the problem, we are not apt to find a practical solution.  Politicians are not problem solvers; neither are bureaucrats.

Hmmm….  We must salute and ought to send support to the governor of Texas, who is handling his end of the problem the way it should be handled.  State action at State borders.  Since the Texas State borders are national borders, we owe Texas both moral and financial support.

The Federal Land Crisis

At least one State is dominated by the 90% Federal control of land.  Most of this is land that should be entirely under the purview of State police powers.  Doubtless the Federal government needs land for the exercise of its lawful responsibilities.  The Federal government should be forced to justify its need for such land, and failing that, return it to State, local, or private control.

Summary

Certainly, there are other issues that could and should be added to this discussion.  Suffice it to say that no person who is ignorant of these issues, has no related policy plans, and no proposals for remedy of these and other pressing problems has any business running for Federal or State office.  This business of electing people because they have a sweet smile, or are members of my club, or have distinguished themselves in some other field of service has got to stop.  Good governance is the only thing at stake here, and arriving at good governance is the only issue a candidate for elected public office need defend.  Instead we continue to elect candidates whose only qualifications are cosmetic, sartorial, or tonsorial; whose only defense is, “I’m nice.”



[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_the_United_States
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_internal_combustion_engine
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmon_P._Chase
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Federal_Reserve_System
[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_standard
[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._P._Morgan
[7] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln
[8] for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodrow_Wilson
[9] for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Deal
[10] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_power_(United_States_constitutional_law)
[11] for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicial_review_in_the_United_States
[12] for example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._Federal_Election_Commission
[13] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strict_constructionism
[14] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Carter
[15] There is a vast gulf fixed between free enterprise and capitalism.  We are on record as promoting capitalism, not free enterprise.  We are slaves in a feudal baronage, the vassals of robber barons, who control our voting, education, and lives.

No comments:

Post a Comment