Readjustment of our national life By Robert T. Smith Barack Obama famously promised -- and through his proxies in the Biden Administration is now delivering -- "fundamental change" to America by expanding the role of the federal government more than any time since FDR. In line with former President Obama's Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel's infamous quote, FDR never let a crisis go to waste, using the Depression to accomplish a restructuring of politics and the economy. He knew how ambitious his program was. From FDR's 1934 State of the Union speech:
The FDR revolution overcame America, and it passed without the typical bullets and blood attendant to other revolutionary events. In what is now a clearly prophetic discussion of our current political dilemma, the then author and editorial-writer-in-chief of the Saturday Evening Post, Garet Garrett explained the template for the conquest of America that fomented via FDR's New Deal. Garrett wrote among his many works the political monograph The Revolution Was, published in 1944. In the above-referenced tome, Mr. Garrett laid out the New Deal game plan, the promise of security and stability in exchange for individual freedom. The crisis that provided the opportunity for the revolutionaries to formulate and implement the New Deal was the Great Depression. The following key concepts from Mr. Garrett's referenced literary work, while a bit dated, should look familiar.
While these enumerated concepts were unique to the situation at the time of the Great Depression, the general approach remains starkly similar to today's, manipulate the currency and economy to control the people. The federal government has grown extra-constitutionally large and unsustainable over the decades since the New Deal. The function of a constitutional republic is really just forgotten history to most in our country. It's over, and Americanism lost. If a restoration is to occur, a new republic is needed, because the thoughts and character of the former framers and the conditions that gave rise to our once-great republic no longer exist. While there are many formulas, ideas, and approaches to reverse the current reality, at the root there remains a single concept that must be restored if there is to be any hope, the sovereignty of the individual. The Declaration of Independence spoke of individual life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness as the core of the philosophy that characterizes our country. The Declaration of Independence did not provide this sovereignty, it simply denoted these sovereign rights, bestowed by our maker, and referenced their authority over all others, targeting government particularly as a construct of, and subservient to We the People. Collectivism abhors individualism. The collective cannot stand competition from sovereign individuals or an authority greater than itself. All square pegs must fit in the round holes of the society for the collective to be managed and operated. Once, sovereign citizens instituted government, now, We the People are the responsibility of the government. The pot has taken control over the potter. The government will control our banks, businesses, use of energy, and apparently now, even our very bodies through health care. Little is left of the American paradigm of the sovereign individual. Symbolically, we can look forward to the next 4th of July for what remains of the idea of America, although most people likely mark the day by celebrating nothing more than a fascination with pyrotechnics and an undying love of hot dogs. Robert T. Smith is an environmental scientist who spends his days enjoying life and the pursuit of happiness with his family. He confesses to cling to his liberty, guns and religion, with antipathy toward the arrogant ruling elites throughout the country.
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