Does anyone else find the Revolutionaries efforts in vain? We need to remember that most Americans have abandoned and are even against the Founding Principles of confederalism (free and independent states protecting individual liberty which does not take away sovereignty from another) and the most basic human right of all: secession.
So we need to not only celebrate. Rather, more so than celebrate, we need to think about returning to the Founding principles that only a few members of the Federal government unconditionally support and which only a superminority of Americans support.
Why does the whole Supreme Court reject the Founding principles of right of secession? Why has every President starting at least with James Buchanan (and many before him) rejected the most basic and important human right of all? How could 90% of the colonists in 1776 America support secession while today, no more than 70% of Americans support a human right that is non-aggressive?
Is the Supreme Court, President, and Congress right by rejecting the Founding Principles (non-interventionism, no standing military, civil liberties, sound money, free markets, and all other negative rights) that they're supposed to protect? Why have they abandoned and rejected negative rights and favored positive rights? Did the Federalist party kill the American Revolution and its principles of secession, confederalism, and consent of the governed? If not, when was the American Revolution subverted in your opinion? Was it the people? How do you think Jefferson would feel about the American State today? What about Hamilton and Lincoln?
I personally feel that the Federal Government is wrong in abandoning confederalism. They're against the Founding Principles in supporting wars of American aggression, patents, central banking, government money, forced globalism, economic regulations, theft, taxation, heavy taxation, suspension of civil liberties, collective arms ownership and collective bearing of arms (including standing armies), entangling alliances, and foreign aid.
I think that while the American Revolution was subverted by the elites (the ruling class) upon the ratification of the Constitution, I think that the majority of the voters including the elites since the Civil War as well as almost 1/2 before the Civil War, have perpetuated the subversion of the Founding Principles.
I know Thomas Jefferson would be very unhappy with the Federal government and with perversion of his message, mainly progressives, modern liberals who invoke his name (FDR, Bill Clinton, Obama) corporatists, and especially neocons who lie by saying they're for liberty (Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Barry Goldwater Sr, Reagan) invoking his name, while I know Hamilton and Lincoln would be very proud of what has happened, the tyranny of what they installed, and all 3 men would certainly have a different outlook on centralized democracy than when they were alive, because the will of the majority of American citizens wishes to continue the tyranny Hamilton and Lincoln installed, which Jefferson warned against.
As this is what I said, the facts I mentioned were 100% accurate, my opinions certainly differ from those of most people so that's why I asked for opinions on the subject matter
So we need to not only celebrate. Rather, more so than celebrate, we need to think about returning to the Founding principles that only a few members of the Federal government unconditionally support and which only a superminority of Americans support.
Why does the whole Supreme Court reject the Founding principles of right of secession? Why has every President starting at least with James Buchanan (and many before him) rejected the most basic and important human right of all? How could 90% of the colonists in 1776 America support secession while today, no more than 70% of Americans support a human right that is non-aggressive?
Is the Supreme Court, President, and Congress right by rejecting the Founding Principles (non-interventionism, no standing military, civil liberties, sound money, free markets, and all other negative rights) that they're supposed to protect? Why have they abandoned and rejected negative rights and favored positive rights? Did the Federalist party kill the American Revolution and its principles of secession, confederalism, and consent of the governed? If not, when was the American Revolution subverted in your opinion? Was it the people? How do you think Jefferson would feel about the American State today? What about Hamilton and Lincoln?
I personally feel that the Federal Government is wrong in abandoning confederalism. They're against the Founding Principles in supporting wars of American aggression, patents, central banking, government money, forced globalism, economic regulations, theft, taxation, heavy taxation, suspension of civil liberties, collective arms ownership and collective bearing of arms (including standing armies), entangling alliances, and foreign aid.
I think that while the American Revolution was subverted by the elites (the ruling class) upon the ratification of the Constitution, I think that the majority of the voters including the elites since the Civil War as well as almost 1/2 before the Civil War, have perpetuated the subversion of the Founding Principles.
I know Thomas Jefferson would be very unhappy with the Federal government and with perversion of his message, mainly progressives, modern liberals who invoke his name (FDR, Bill Clinton, Obama) corporatists, and especially neocons who lie by saying they're for liberty (Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Barry Goldwater Sr, Reagan) invoking his name, while I know Hamilton and Lincoln would be very proud of what has happened, the tyranny of what they installed, and all 3 men would certainly have a different outlook on centralized democracy than when they were alive, because the will of the majority of American citizens wishes to continue the tyranny Hamilton and Lincoln installed, which Jefferson warned against.
As this is what I said, the facts I mentioned were 100% accurate, my opinions certainly differ from those of most people so that's why I asked for opinions on the subject matter
