Republics and
Democracies
by Robert Welch
Without the proper
foundation, Liberty will crumble!
Robert
Welch founded The John Birch Society in 1958 and led it until just prior to his
death in 1985. This essay was first delivered as a speech at the Constitution
Day luncheon of We, The People in Chicago, on September 17, 1961. The
principles he espoused in that speech are timeless. The American Republic will
endure only so long as those principles are sufficiently understood by each
succeeding generation of Americans.
[Editor's
note: The John Birch Society has a reputation in some circles as a bunch of
extreme right-wing anti-Communist kooks. If this is your view, reading the
following essay may lead you to change your mind. It would seem that the
widespread acceptance of this derogatory view of the John Birch Society is the
result of persistent slander by those who wish to destroy the U.S. republic by
turning it into a democracy - the tyranny of the majority. The only thing that
I might differ with in this essay is laying the blame on
"Communists". What Welch meant exactly by this term is not clear,
though of course the old-style Soviet Communists were as about as opposed to
individual liberty (other than their own) as it is possible to be. In this respect they resemble fascists of
all times, including those currently in positions of power behind their desks
in Washington, D.C., New York, Sacramento, London, Paris, Brussels and many
other places. If one reads the term "communist" in this essay to mean
"opposed to libertarian principles of individual freedom" I think one
will not mistake the author's meaning.]
The Origin of the Idea of a
Republic
The
first scene in this drama, on which the curtain clearly lifts, is Greece of the
Sixth Century B.C. The city of Athens was having so much strife and turmoil,
primarily as between its various classes, that the wisest citizens felt
something of a more permanent nature, rather than just a temporary remedy, had
to be developed - to make possible that stability, internal peace, and
prosperity which they had already come to expect of life in a civilized
society. And through one of those fortunate accidents of history, which
surprise us on one side by their rarity and on the other side by ever having
happened at all, these citizens of Athens chose an already distinguished fellow
citizen, named Solon, to resolve the problem for both their present and their
future. They saw that Solon was given full power over every aspect of
government and of economic life in Athens. And Solon, applying himself to the
specific job, time, and circumstances, and perhaps without any surmise that he
might be laboring for lands and centuries other than his own, proceeded to
establish in "the laws of Solon" what amounted to, so far as we know,
the first written regulations whereby men ever proposed to govern themselves.
Undoubtedly even Solon's decisions and his laws were but projections and
syntheses of theories and practices which had already been in existence for a
long time. And yet his election as Archon of Athens, in 594 B.C., can justly be
considered as the date of a whole new approach to man's eternal problem of
government.
There
is no question but that the laws and principles which Solon laid down both
foreshadowed and prepared the way for all republics of later ages, including
our own. He introduced, into the visible record of man's efforts and progress,
the very principle of "government by written and permanent law"
instead of "government by incalculable and changeable decrees" (Will
Durant). And he himself set forth one of the soundest axioms of all times, that
it was a well-governed state "when the people obey the rulers and the
rulers obey the laws." This concept, that there were laws which even kings
and dictators must observe, was not only new; I think it can be correctly
described as "western."
Here
was a sharp and important cleavage at the very beginning of our western
civilization, from the basic concept that always had prevailed in Asia, which
concept still prevailed in Solon's day, and which in fact remained unquestioned
in the Asiatic mind and empires until long after the fall of the Roman Empire
of the East, when Solon had been dead two thousand years.
The Tyrants of Democracy
Unfortunately,
while Solon's laws remained in effect in Athens in varying degrees of theory
and practice for five centuries, neither Athens nor any of the Greek
city-states ever achieved the form of a republic, primarily for two reasons.
First, Solon introduced the permanent legal basis for a republican government,
but not the framework for its establishment and continuation. The execution,
observance, and perpetuation of Solon's laws fell naturally and almost
automatically into the hands of tyrants, who ruled Athens for long but
uncertain periods of time, through changing forms and administrative procedures
for their respective governments. And second, the Greek temperament was too
volatile, the whole principle of self-government was too exciting - even
through a dictator who might have to be overthrown by force - for the Athenians
ever to finish the job Solon had begun, and bind themselves as well as their
rulers down to the chains of an unchanging constitution. Even the authority of
Solon's laws had to be enforced and thus established by successive tyrants like
Pisistratus and Cleisthenes, or they might never have amounted to anything more
than a passing dream. The ideal was there, of rule according to written laws;
that those laws were at times and to some extent honored or observed
constituted one huge step towards - and fulfilled one prerequisite of - a true
republic.
But
the second great step, of a government framework as fixed and permanent as the
basic laws were supposed to be, remained for the Romans and other heirs of
Greece to achieve. As a consequence Athens - and the other Greek city-states
which emulated it - remained politically as democracies, and eventually learned
from their own experiences that it was probably the worst of all forms of
government.
But
out of the democracies of Greece, as tempered somewhat by the laws of Solon,
there came as a direct spiritual descendant the first true republic the world
has ever known. This was Rome in its earlier centuries, after the monarchy had
been replaced. The period is usually given as from 509 B.C. to 49 B.C., Rome
having got rid of its kings by the first of those dates, and having turned to
the Caesars by the second. But the really important early date is 454 B.C.,
when the Roman Senate sent a commission to Greece to study and report on the
legislation of Solon. The commission, consisting of three men, did its work
well. On its return the Roman Assembly chose ten men - and hence called the
Decemviri - to rule with supreme power while formulating a new code of laws for
Rome. And in 454 B.C. they proposed, and the Assembly adopted, what were called
The Twelve Tables. This code, based on Solon's laws, became the written
constitution of the Roman Republic.
The
Twelve Tables, "amended and supplemented again and again - by legislation,
praetorial edicts, senatus consulta, and imperial decrees - remained for nine
hundred years the basic law of Rome" (Durant). At least in theory, and
always to some extent in practice, even after Julius Caesar had founded the
empire which was recognized as an empire from the time of Augustus. What was
equally important, even before the adoption of The Twelve Tables, Rome had
already established the framework, with firm periodicity for its public
servants, of a republic in which those laws could be, and for a while would be,
impartially and faithfully administered.
For,
as a Roman named Gaius (and otherwise unknown) was to write in about 160 A.D.,
"all law pertains to persons, to property, and to procedure." And for
a satisfactory government you need as much concern about the implementation of
those laws, the governmental agencies through which they are to be
administered, and the whole political framework within which those laws form
the basis of order and of justice, as with the laws themselves which constitute
the original statute books. And the Romans contrived and - subject to the
exceptions and changes inflicted on the pattern by the ambitions and
cantankerous restlessness of human nature - maintained such a framework in
actual practice for nearly five hundred years.
The
Romans themselves referred to their government as having a "mixed
constitution." By this they meant that it had some of the elements of a
democracy, some of the elements of an oligarchy, and some of those of an
autocracy; but they also meant that the interest of all the various classes of
Roman society were taken into consideration by the Roman constitutional
government, rather than just the interests of some one class. Already the
Romans were familiar with governments which had been founded by, and were responsible
to, one class alone: especially "democracies," as of Athens, which at
times considered the rights of the proletariat as supreme; and oligarchies, as
of Sparta, which were equally biased in favor of the aristocrats. Here again
the Roman instinct and experience had led them to one of the fundamental
requisites of a true republic.
Checks and Balances
In
summary, the Romans were opposed to tyranny in any form; and the feature of
government to which they gave the most thought was an elaborate system of
checks and balances. In the early centuries of their republic, whenever they
added to the total offices and officeholders, as often as not they were merely
increasing the diffusion of power and trying to forestall the potential tyranny
of one set of governmental agents by the guardianship or watchdog powers of
another group. When the Tribunes were set up, for instance, around 350 B.C.,
their express purpose and duty was to protect the people of Rome against their
own government. This was very much as our Bill of Rights was designed by our
Founding Fathers for exactly the same purpose. And other changes in the Roman
government had similar aims. The result was a civilization and a government
which, by the time Carthage was destroyed, had become the wonder of the world,
and which remained so in memory until the Nineteenth Century - when its glories
began receding in the minds of men, because it was surpassed by those of the
rising American Republic.
Now
it should bring more than smiles, in fact it should bring some very serious
reflections, to Americans, to realize what the most informed and penetrating
Romans, of all eras, thought of their early republic.
It
is both interesting, and significantly revealing, to find exactly the same
arguments going on during the first centuries B.C. and A.D. about the sources
of Roman greatness, that swirl around us today with regard to the United
States. Cicero spoke of their "mixed constitution" as "the best
form of government." Polybius, in the second century, B.C., had spoken of
it in exactly the same terms; and, going further, had ascribed Rome's greatness
and triumphs to its form of government. Livy, however, during the days of
Augustus, wrote of the virtues that had made Rome great, before the Romans
had
reached the evils of his time, when, as he put it, "we can bear neither
our diseases nor their remedies." And those virtues were, he said,
"the unity and holiness of family life, the pietas (or reverential
attitude) of children, the sacred relation of men with the gods at every step,
the sanctity of the solemnly pledged word, the stoic self-control and gravitas
(or serious sense of responsibility)." Doesn't that sound familiar?
But
while many Romans gave full credit to both the Roman character and their early
environment, exactly as we do with regard to American greatness today, the
nature and excellence of their early government, and its contribution to the
building of Roman greatness, were widely discussed and thoroughly recognized.
And the ablest among them knew exactly what they were talking about.
Democracy,"
wrote Seneca, "is more cruel than wars or tyrants." "Without
checks and balances," Dr. Will Durant summarizes one statement of Cicero,
a monarchy becomes despotism, aristocracy becomes oligarchy, democracy becomes
mob rule, chaos, and dictatorship." And he quotes Cicero verbatim about
the man usually chosen as leader by an ungoverned populace, as "someone
bold and unscrupulous ... who curries favor with the people by giving them
other men's property".
If
that is not an exact description of the leaders of the New Deal, the Fair Deal,
and the New Frontier, I don't know where you will find one. What Cicero was
bemoaning was the same breakdown of the republic, and of its protection against
such demagoguery and increasing "democracy," as we have been
experiencing. This breakdown was under exactly the same kind of pressures that
have been converting the American Republic into a democracy, the only
difference being that in Rome those pressures were not so conspiratorially well
organized as they are in America today. Virgil, and many great Romans like him
were, as Will Durant says, well aware that "class war, not Caesar, killed
the Roman Republic." In about 50 B.C., for instance, Sallust had been
charging the Roman Senate with placing property rights above human rights. And
we are certain that if Franklin D. Roosevelt had ever heard of Sallust or read
one of Sallust's speeches, he would have told somebody to go out and hire this
man Sallust for one of his ghost writers at once.
About
thirty years ago a man named Harry Atwood, who was one of the first to see
clearly what was being done by the demagogues to our form of government, and
the tragic significance of the change, wrote a book entitled Back To The
Republic. It was an excellent book, except for one shortcoming. Mr. Atwood
insisted emphatically, over and over, that ours was the first republic in
history; that American greatness was due to our Founding Fathers having given
us something entirely new in history, the first republic - which Mr. Atwood
described as the "standard government," or "the golden
mean," towards which all other governments to the right or the left should
gravitate in the future.
Now
the truth is that, by merely substituting the name "Rome" for the
name "United States", and making similar changes in nomenclature, Mr.
Atwood's book could have been written by Virgil or by Seneca, with regard to
the conversion of the Roman Republic into a democracy. It is only to the extent
we are willing to learn from history that we are able to avoid repeating its
horrible mistakes. And while Mr. Atwood did not sufficiently realize this fact,
fortunately our Founding Fathers did. For they were men who knew history well
and were determined to profit by that knowledge.
Antonyms, Not Synonyms
Also,
by the time of the American Revolution and Constitution, the meanings of the
words "republic" and "democracy" had been well established
and were readily understood. And most of this accepted meaning derived from the
Roman and Greek experiences. The two words are not, as most of today's Liberals
would have you believe - and as most of them probably believe themselves -
parallels in etymology, or history, or meaning. The word "democracy"
(in a political rather than a social sense, of course) had always referred to a
type of government, as distinguished from monarchy, or autocracy, or oligarchy,
or principate. The word "republic", before 1789, had designated the
quality and nature of a government, rather than its structure. When Tacitus
complained that "it is easier for a republican form of government to be
applauded than realized," he was living in an empire under the Caesars and
knew it. But he was bemoaning the loss of that adherence to the laws and to the
protections of the constitution which made the nation no longer a republic; and
not to the fact that it was headed by an emperor.
The
word democracy comes from the Greek and means, literally, government by the
people. The word "republic" comes from the Latin, res publica, and
means literally "the public affairs." The word
"commonwealth," as once widely used, and as still used in the
official title of my state, "the Commonwealth of Massachusetts," is
almost an exact translation and continuation of the original meaning of res
publica. And it was only in this sense that the Greeks, such as Plato, used the
term that has been translated as "republic." Plato was writing about
an imaginary "commonwealth"; and while he certainly had strong ideas
about the kind of government this Utopia should have, those ideas were not
conveyed nor foreshadowed by his title.
The
historical development of the meaning of the word "republic" might be
summarized as follows. The Greeks learned that, as Dr. Durant puts it,
"man became free when he recognized that he was subject to law." The
Romans applied the formerly general term "republic" specifically to
that system of government in which both the people and their rulers were
subject to law. That meaning was recognized throughout all later history, as
when the term was applied, however inappropriately in fact and optimistically
in self-deception, to the "Republic of Venice" or to the "Dutch
Republic." The meaning was thoroughly understood by our Founding Fathers.
As early as 1775 John Adams had pointed out that Aristotle (representing Greek
thought), Livy (whom he chose to represent Roman thought), and Harington (a
British statesman), all "define a republic to be - a government of laws
and not of men." And it was with this full understanding that our
constitution-makers proceeded to establish a government which, by its very
structure, would require that both the people and their rulers obey certain
basic laws - laws which could not be changed without laborious and deliberate
changes in the very structure of that government. When our Founding Fathers
established a "republic," in the hope, as Benjamin Franklin said,
that we could keep it, and when they guaranteed to every state within that
"republic" a "republican form" of government, they well
knew the significance of the terms they were using. And were doing all in their
power to make the feature of government signified by those terms as permanent
as possible. They also knew very well indeed the meaning of the word
"democracy", and the history of democracies; and they were
deliberately doing everything in their power to avoid for their own times, and
to prevent for the future, the evils of a democracy.
The Founders Knew the
Difference
Let's
look at some of the things they said to support and clarify this purpose. On
May 31, 1787, Edmund Randolph told his fellow members of the newly-assembled
Constitutional Convention that the object for which the delegates had met was
"to provide a cure for the evils under which the United States labored;
that in tracing these evils to their origin every man had found it in the
turbulence and trials of democracy ..."
The
delegates to the Convention were clearly in accord with this statement. At
about the same time another delegate, Elbridge Gerry, said: "The evils we
experience flow from the excess of democracy. The people do not want (that is,
do not lack) virtue; but are the dupes of pretended patriots." And on June
21,1788, Alexander Hamilton made a speech in which he stated:
It had been observed that a pure
democracy if it were practicable would be the most perfect government. Experience has proved that no
position is more false than this. The ancient democracies
in which the people themselves deliberated never possessed one good feature of government. Their very character was tyranny;
their figure deformity.
Another
time Hamilton said: "We are a Republican Government. Real liberty is never
found in despotism or in the extremes of Democracy." Samuel Adams warned:
"Remember, Democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts and
murders itself! There never was a democracy that 'did not commit
suicide.'" James Madison, one of the members of the Convention who was
charged with drawing up our Constitution, wrote as follows:
... democracies have ever been
spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security, or the
rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths.
Madison
and Hamilton and Jay and their compatriots of the Convention prepared and
adopted a Constitution in which they nowhere even mentioned the word
"democracy", not because they were not familiar with such a form of
government, but because they were. The word "democracy" had not
occurred in the Declaration of Independence, and does not appear in the
constitution of a single one of our fifty states - which constitutions are
derived mainly from the thinking of the Founding Fathers of the Republic - for
the same reason. They knew all about democracies, and if they had wanted one
for themselves and their posterity, they would have founded one. Look at all
the elaborate system of checks and balances which they established; at the
carefully worked-out protective clauses of the Constitution itself, and
especially of the first ten amendments known as the Bill of Rights; at the
effort, as Jefferson put it, to "bind men down from mischief by the chains
of the Constitution," and thus to solidify the rule not of men but of
laws. All of these steps were taken, deliberately, to avoid and to prevent a
democracy, or any of the worst features of a democracy, in the United States.
And
so our Republic was started on its way. And for well over a hundred years our
politicians, statesmen, and people remembered that this was a republic, not a
democracy, and knew what they meant when they made that distinction. Again,
let's look briefly at some of the evidence.
Washington,
in his first inaugural address, dedicated himself to "the preservation ...
of the republican model of government." Thomas Jefferson, our third
president, was the founder of the Democratic Party; but in his first inaugural
address, although he referred several times to the Republic or the republican
form of government he did not use the word "democracy" a single time.
And John Marshall, who was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court from 1801 to
1835, said: "Between a balanced republic and a democracy, the difference
is like that between order and chaos."
Throughout
the Nineteenth Century and the early part of the Twentieth, while America as a
republic was growing great and becoming the envy of the whole world, there were
plenty of wise men, both in our country and outside of it, who pointed to the
advantages of a republic, which we were enjoying, and warned against the horrors
of a democracy, into which we might fall. Around the middle of that century,
Herbert Spencer, the great English philosopher, wrote, in an article on The
Americans: "The Republican form of government is the highest form of
government; but because of this it requires the highest type of human nature -
a type nowhere at present existing." And in truth we have not been a high
enough type to preserve the republic we then had, which is exactly what he was
prophesying.
Thomas
Babington Macaulay said: "I have long been convinced that institutions
purely democratic must, sooner or later, destroy liberty or civilization, or
both." And we certainly seem to be in a fair way today to fulfill his dire
prophecy. Nor was Macaulay's contention a mere personal opinion without
intellectual roots and substance in the thought of his times. Nearly two
centuries before, Dryden had already lamented that "no government had ever
been, or ever can be, wherein timeservers and blockheads will not be
uppermost." And as a result, he had spoken of nations being "drawn to
the dregs of a democracy." While in 1795 Immanuel Kant had written:
"Democracy is necessarily despotism."
In
1850 Benjamin Disraeli, worried as was Herbert Spencer at what was already
being foreshadowed in England, made a speech to the British House of Commons in
which he said: "If you establish a democracy, you must in due time reap
the fruits of a democracy. You will in due season have great impatience of
public burdens, combined in due season with great increase of public
expenditure. You will in due season have wars entered into from passion and not
from reason; and you will in due season submit to peace ignominiously sought
and ignominiously obtained, which will diminish your authority and perhaps
endanger your independence. You will in due season find your property is less
valuable, and your freedom less complete." Disraeli could have made that
speech with even more appropriateness before a joint session of the United
States Congress in 1935. In 1870 he had already come up with an epigram which
is strikingly true for the United States today. "The world is weary,"
he said, "of statesmen whom democracy has degraded into politicians."
But
even in Disraeli's day there were similarly prophetic voices on this side of
the Atlantic. In our own country James Russell Lowell showed that he recognized
the danger of unlimited majority rule by writing:
Democracy gives every
man the right to be his own oppressor.
W.
H. Seward pointed out that "Democracies are prone to war, and war consumes
them." This is an observation certainly borne out during the past fifty
years exactly to the extent that we have been becoming a democracy and fighting
wars, with each trend as both a cause and an effect of the other one. And Ralph
Waldo Emerson issued a most prophetic warning when he said: "Democracy
becomes a government of bullies tempered by editors." If Emerson could
have looked ahead to the time when so many of the editors would themselves be a
part of, or sympathetic to, the gang of bullies, as they are today, he would
have been even more disturbed. And in the 1880's Governor Seymour of New York
said that the merit of our Constitution was, not that it promotes democracy,
but checks it.
Across
the Atlantic again, a little later, Oscar Wilde once contributed this epigram
to the discussion: "Democracy means simply the bludgeoning of the people,
by the people, for the people." While on this side, and after the First
World War had made the degenerative trend in our government so visible to any penetrating
observer, H. L. Mencken wrote: "The most popular man under a democracy is
not the most democratic man, but the most despotic man. The common folk delight
in the exactions of such a man. They like him to boss them. Their natural gait
is the goosestep." While Ludwig Lewisohn observed: "Democracy, which
began by liberating men politically, has developed a dangerous tendency to
enslave him through the tyranny of majorities and the deadly power of their
opinion."
The Prerequisite for
Revolution
But
it was a great Englishman, G. K. Chesterton, who put his finger on the basic
reasoning behind all the continued and determined efforts of the Communists to
convert our republic into a democracy. "You can never have a
revolution," he said, "in order to establish a democracy. You must
have a democracy in order to have a revolution."
And
in 1931 the Duke of Northumberland, in his booklet, The History of World
Revolution, stated: "The adoption of Democracy as a form of Government by
all European nations is fatal to good Government, to liberty, to law and order,
to respect for authority, and to religion, and must eventually produce a state
of chaos from which a new world tyranny will arise." While an even more
recent analyst, Archibald E. Stevenson, summarized the situation as follows:
"De Tocqueville once warned us," he wrote, "that: 'If ever the
free institutions of America are destroyed, that event will arise from the
unlimited tyranny of the majority.' But a majority will never be permitted to
exercise such 'unlimited tyranny' so long as we cling to the American ideals of
republican liberty and turn a deaf ear to the siren voices now calling us to
democracy. This is not a question relating to the form of government. That can
always be changed by constitutional amendment. It is one affecting the
underlying philosophy of our system - a philosophy which brought new dignity to
the individual, more safety for minorities and greater justice in the
administration of government. We are in grave danger of dissipating this
splendid heritage through mistaking it for democracy."
And
there have been plenty of other voices to warn us.
So
- how did it happen that we have been allowing this gradual destruction of our
inheritance to take place? And when did it start? The two questions are closely
related.
For
not only every democracy, but certainly every republic, bears within itself the
seeds of its own destruction. The difference is that for a soundly conceived
and solidly endowed republic it takes a great deal longer for those seeds to
germinate and the plants to grow. The American Republic was bound - is still
bound - to follow in the centuries to come the same course to destruction as
did Rome. But our real ground of complaint is that we have been pushed down the
demagogic road to disaster by conspiratorial hands, far sooner and far faster
than would have been the results of natural political evolution.
These
conspiratorial hands first got seriously to work in this country in the
earliest years of the Twentieth Century. The Fabian philosophy and strategy was
imported to America from England, as it had been earlier to England from
Germany. Some of the members of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society, founded
in 1905, and some of the members of the League for Industrial Democracy into
which it grew, were already a part of, or affiliated with, an international
Communist conspiracy, planning to make the United States a portion of a
one-world Communist state. Others saw it as possible and desirable merely to
make the United States a separate socialist Utopia. But they all knew and
agreed that to do either they would have to destroy both the constitutional
safeguards and the underlying philosophy which made it a republic. So, from the
very beginning the whole drive to convert our republic into a democracy was in
two parts. One part was to make our people come to believe that we had, and
were supposed to have, a democracy. The second part was actually and
insidiously to change the republic into a democracy.
The
first appreciable and effective progress in both directions began with the
election of Woodrow Wilson. Of Wilson it could accurately have been said, as
Tacitus had said of some Roman counterpart: "By common consent, he would
have been deemed capable of governing had he never governed." Since he did
become President of the United States for two terms, however, it is hard to
tell how much of the tragic disaster of those years was due to the conscious
support by Wilson himself of Communist purposes, and how much to his being merely
a dupe and a tool of Colonel Edward Mandell House. But at any rate it is under
Wilson that, for the first time, we see the power of the American presidency
being used to support Communist schemers and Communist schemes in other
countries - as especially, for instance, in Mexico, and throughout Latin
America.
It
was under Wilson, of course, that the first huge parts of the Marxist program,
such as the progressive income tax, were incorporated into the American system.
It was under Wilson that the first huge legislative steps to break down what
the Romans would have called "our mixed constitution" of a republic,
and convert it into the homogenous jelly of a democracy, got under way with
such measures as the direct election of Senators. And it was under Wilson that
the first great propaganda slogan was coined and emblazoned everywhere, to make
Americans start thinking favorably of democracies and forget that we had a
republic. This was, of course, the slogan of the first World War: "To make
the world safe for democracy." If enough Americans had, by those years,
remembered enough of their own history, they would have been worrying about how
to make the world safe from democracy. But the great deception and the great
conspiracy were already well under way.
New Deal or Double Dealing?
The
conspirators had to proceed slowly and patiently, nevertheless, and to have
their allies and dupes do the same. For in the first place the American people
could not have been swept too fast and too far in this movement without enough
alarms being sounded to be heard and heeded. And in the second place, after the
excitement of World War I had sunk into the past, and America was returning to
what Harding called "normalcy," there was a strong revulsion against
the whole binge of demagoguery and crackpot idealism which had been created
under Woodrow Wilson, and which had been used to give us this initial push on
the road towards ultimate disaster. And during this period from 1920 until the
so-called Great Depression could be deliberately accentuated, extended, and
increased to suit the purposes of the Fabian conspirators, there was simply a
germination period for the seeds of destruction which the conspirators had
planted. Not until Franklin D. Roosevelt came to power in 1933 did the whole
Communist-propelled and Communist-managed drive again begin to take visible and
tangible and positive steps in their program to make the United States
ultimately succumb to a one-world Communist tyranny. Most conservative
Americans are today well aware of many of those steps and of their
significance; but there are still not enough who realize how important to
Communist plans was the two-pronged drive to convert the American republic into
a democracy and to make the American people accept the change without even
knowing there had been one. From 1933 on, however, that drive and that change
moved into high gear, and have been kept there ever since.
Let's
look briefly at just two important and specific pieces of tangible evidence of
this drive, and of its success in even those early years.
In
1928 the U.S. Army Training Manual, used for all of our men in army uniform,
gave them the following quite accurate definition of a democracy:
A government of the masses.
Authority - derived through mass meeting or any form of 'direct' expression. Results in mobocracy. Attitude
toward property is communistic - negating property rights. Attitude toward law is that the will of the majority
shall regulate, whether it be based upon
deliberation or governed by passion, prejudice, and impulse, without restraint
or regard to consequences. Results
in demagogism, license, agitation, discontent, anarchy.
That
was in 1928. Just when that true explanation was dropped, and through what
intermediate changes the definition went, I have not had sufficient time and
opportunity to learn. But compare that 1928 statement with what was said in the
same place for the same use by 1952. In The Soldiers Guide, Department of the
Army Field Manual, issued in June of 1952, we find the following:
Meaning of democracy. Because the
United States is a democracy, the majority of the people decide how our government will be organized
and run - and that includes the Army, Navy, and Air Force. The people do this by electing representatives,
and these men and women then carry out
the wishes of the people.
Now
obviously this change from basic truth to superficial demagoguery, in the one
medium for mass indoctrination of our youth which has been available to the
Federal Government until such time as it achieves control over public
education, did not just happen by accident. It was part of an overall design,
which became both extensive in its reach and rapid in its execution from 1933
on. Let's look at another, less important but equally striking, illustration.
Former
Governor Lehman of New York, in his first inaugural message in 1933, did not
once use the word "democracy". The poison had not yet reached into
the reservoirs from which flowed his political thoughts. In his inaugural
message of 1935 he used the word "democracy" twice. The poison was
beginning to work. In his similar message of 1939 he used the word
"democracy," or a derivative thereof, twenty-five times. And less
than a year later, on January 3, 1940, in his annual message to the New York
legislature, he used it thirty-three times. The poison was now permeating every
stream of his political philosophy.
Spreading the Big Lie
By
today that same poison has been diffused, in an effective dosage, through
almost the whole body of American thought about government. Newspapers write
ringing editorials declaring that this is and always was a democracy. In
pamphlets and books and speeches, in classrooms and pulpits and over the air,
we are besieged with the shouts of the Liberals and their political henchmen,
all pointing with pride to our being a democracy. Many of them even believe it.
Here we have a clear-cut sample of the Big Lie which has been repeated so often
and so long that it is increasingly accepted as truth. And never was a Big Lie spread
more deliberately for more subversive purposes. What is even worse, because of
their unceasing efforts to destroy the safeguards, traditions, and policies
which made us a republic, and partly because of this very propaganda of
deception, what they have been shouting so long is gradually becoming truth.
Despite Mr. Warren and his Supreme Court and all of their allies, dupes, and
bosses, we are not yet a democracy. But the fingers in the dike are rapidly
becoming fewer and less effective. And a great many of the pillars of our
republic have already been washed away.
Since
1912 we have seen the imposition of a graduated income tax, as already
mentioned. Also, the direct election of Senators. We have seen the Federal
Reserve System established and then become the means of giving our central
government absolute power over credit, interest rates, and the quantity and
value of our money; and we have seen the Federal Government increasingly use
this means and this power to take money from the pockets of the thrifty and put
it in the hands of the thriftless, to expand bureaucracy, increase its huge
debts and deficits, and to promote socialistic purposes of every kind.
We
have seen the Federal Government increase its holdings of land by tens of
millions of acres, and go into business, as a substitute for and in competition
with private industry, to the extent that in many fields it is now the largest
- and in every case the most inefficient - producer of goods and services in
the nation. And we have seen it carry the socialistic control of agriculture to
such extremes that the once vaunted independence of our farmers is now a
vanished dream. We have seen a central government taking more and more control
over public education, over communications, over transportation, over every
detail of our daily lives.
We
have seen a central government promote the power of labor-union bosses, and in
turn be supported by that power, until it has become entirely too much a
government of and for one class, which is exactly what our Founding Fathers
wanted most to prevent.
We
have seen the firm periodicity of the tenure of public office terrifically
weakened by the four terms as President of Franklin D. Roosevelt, something
which would justly have horrified and terrified the founders of our republic.
It was the fact that, in Greece, the chief executive officers stayed in power
for long periods, which did much to prevent the Greeks from ever achieving a
republic. In Rome it was the rise of the same tendency, under Marius and Sulla
and Pompey, and as finally carried to its logical state of life-rule under
Julius Caesar, which at last destroyed the republic even though its forms were
left. And that is precisely one reason why the Communists and so many of their
Liberal dupes wanted third and fourth terms for FDR. They knew they were thus
helping to destroy the American Republic.
We
have seen both the Executive Department and the Supreme Court override and
break down the clearly established rights of the states and state governments,
of municipal governments, and of so many of those diffusers of power so
carefully protected by the Constitution. Imagine, for instance, what James
Madison would have thought of the Federal Government telling the city of
Newburgh, New York, that it had no control over the abuse by the shiftless of
its welfare handouts.
We
have seen an utterly unbelievable increase in government by appointive
officials and bureaucratic agencies - a development entirely contrary to the
very concept of government expounded and materialized by our Constitution. And
we have seen the effective checking and balancing of one department of our
government by another department almost completely disappear.
Destroying Our Republic
James
Madison, in trying to give us a republic instead of a democracy, wrote that
"the accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judicial, in
the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary,
self-appointed, or elective, may justly be denounced as the very definition of
tyranny." The whole problem for the Liberal Establishment that runs our
government today, and has been running it for many years regardless of the
labels worn by successive administrations, has not been any divergence of
beliefs or of purposes between the controlling elements of our executive,
legislative or judicial branches. For twenty years, despite the heroic efforts
of men like Taft to stop the trend, these branches have been acting
increasingly in complete accord, and obviously according to designs laid down
for them by the schemers and plotters behind the scenes. And their only
question has been as to how fast the whole tribe dared to go in advancing the
grand design. We do not yet have a democracy simply because it takes a lot of
time and infinite pressures to sweep the American people all of the way into so
disastrous an abandonment of their governmental heritage.
In
the Constitution of the American Republic there was a deliberate and very
extensive and emphatic division of governmental power for the very purpose of
preventing unbridled majority rule. In our Constitution governmental power is
divided among three separate branches of the national government, three
separate branches of State governments, and the peoples of the several States.
And the governmental power, which is so divided, is sometimes exclusive,
sometimes concurrent, sometimes limited, at all times specific, and sometimes
reserved. Ours was truly, and purposely, a "mixed constitution."
In
a democracy there is a centralization of governmental power in a simple
majority. And that, visibly, is the system of government which the enemies of
our republic are seeking to impose on us today. Nor are we "drifting"
into that system, as Harry Atwood said in 1933, and as many would still have us
believe. We are being insidiously, conspiratorially, and treasonously led by
deception, by bribery, by coercion, and by fear, to destroy a republic that was
the envy and model for all of the civilized world.
Finally,
let's look briefly at two or three important characteristics of our republic,
and of our lives under the republic, which were unique in all history up to the
present time.
First,
our republic has offered the greatest opportunity and encouragement to social
democracy the world has ever known. Just as the Greeks found that obedience to
law made them free, so Americans found that social democracy flourished best in
the absence of political democracy. And for sound reasons. For the safeguards
to person and property afforded by a republic, the stable framework which it
supplied for life and labor at all levels, and the resulting constant flux of
individuals from one class into another, made caste impossible and snobbery a
joke.
In
the best days of our republic Americans were fiercely proud of the fact that
rich and poor met on such equal terms in so many ways, and without the
slightest trace of hostility. The whole thought expressed by Burns in his
famous line, "a man's a man for a' that," has never been accepted
more unquestioningly, nor lived up to more truly, than in America in those
wonderful decades before the intellectual snobs and power-drunk bureaucrats of
our recent years set out to make everybody theoretically equal (except to
themselves) by legislation and coercion. And I can tell you this. When you
begin to find that Jew and Gentile, White and Colored, rich and poor, scholar
and laborer, are genuinely and almost universally friendly to one another again
- instead of going through all the silly motions of a phony equality forced
upon them by increasing political democracy - you can be sure that we have
already made great strides in the restoration of our once glorious republic.
And
for a very last thought, let me point out what seems to me to be something
about the underlying principles of the American Republic which really was new
in the whole philosophy of government. In man's earlier history, and especially
in the Asiatic civilizations, all authority rested in the king or the conqueror
by virtue of sheer military power. The subjects of the king had absolutely no
rights except those given them by the king. And such laws or constitutional
provisions as did grow up were concessions wrested from the king or given by
him out of his own supposedly ultimate authority. In more modern European
states, where the complete military subjugation of one nation by another was
not so normal, that ultimate authority of the ruler came to rest on the theory
of the divine right of kings, or in some instances and to some extent on power
specifically bestowed on rulers by a pope as the representative of divinity.
In
the meantime the truly western current of thought, which had begun in Greece,
was recurrently, intermittently, and haltingly gaining strength. It was that
the people of any nation owed their rights to the government which they
themselves had established and which owed its power ultimately to their
consent. Just what rights any individual citizen had was properly determined by
the government which all of the citizens had established, and those rights were
subject to a great deal of variations in different times and places under
different regimes. In other words, the rights of individuals were still
changeable rights, derived from government, even though the power and authority
and rights of the government were themselves derived from the total body of the
people.
The Key Word is
"Inalienable"
Then
both of these basic theories of government, the eastern and the western, were
really amended for all time by certain principles enunciated in the American
Declaration of Independence. Those principles became a part of the very
foundation of our republic. And they said that man has certain inalienable
rights which do not derive from government at all. Under this theory not only
the Sovereign Conqueror, but the Sovereign People, are restricted in their
power and authority by man's natural rights, or by the divine rights of the
individual man. And those certain inalienable and divine rights cannot be
abrogated by the vote of a majority any more than they can by the decree of a
conqueror. The idea that the vote of a people, no matter how nearly unanimous,
makes or creates or determines what is right or just, becomes as absurd and
unacceptable as the idea that right and justice are simply whatever a king says
they are. Just as the early Greeks learned to try to have their rulers and
themselves abide by the laws they had themselves established, so man has now
been painfully learning that there are more permanent and lasting laws which
cannot be changed by either sovereign kings or sovereign people, but which must
be observed by both. And that government is merely a convenience, superimposed
on Divine Commandments and on the natural laws that flow only from the Creator
of man and man's universe.
Now
that principle seems to me to be the most important addition to the theory of
government in all history. And it has, as I said, at least tacitly been
recognized as a foundation stone and cardinal tenet of the American Republic.
But of course any such idea that there are unchangeable limitations on the
power of the people themselves is utterly foreign to the theory of a democracy,
and even more impossible in the practices of one. And this principle may
ultimately be by far the most significant of all the many differences between a
republic and a democracy. For in time, under any government, without that
principle slavery is inevitable, while with it slavery is impossible. And the
American Republic has been the first great example of that principle at work.
THE NEW AMERICAN /
JUNE 30, 1986
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