Students of American history will
recall the many grievances against King George III that were called out in the
Declaration of Independence. Among them were the following:
“He has erected a multitude of New
Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out
their substance.”
“ …imposing Taxes on us without
our Consent”
“…depriving us in many cases, of the benefit of Trial by Jury”
“He has combined with others to
subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by
our laws”
I cite
those indictments because they represent a few that still affect us to this
day.
But,
rather than a monarch being the source of such unconscionable anguish, it is
our very own Presidents – Obama and those before him -- that have been guilty
of such crimes against our people.
It was
never intended to be this way.
In the
years that followed the signing of that sacred document on July 4, 1776, the
Founding Fathers utilized their newfound independence to fashion a government
that was beholden to the people (rather than a people that were beholden to the
government). Knowing full well the flaws that come with Kings, they created a
republic, and for it a Constitution that clearly called out the limited powers
and responsibilities of our federal government.
In just
over 1,000 words they defined the role of the Executive – the President –
someone who theoretically replaced the role of the King but had limited powers.
The President could not make laws, exert taxes and fees, and declare war among
numerous other things that Kings took for granted. A President’s duties were
few: He was to be the face of our nation, the Commander in Chief of our armed
forces, the appointer of judges and ambassadors, and he was to execute the laws
created by Congress.
Although
the ultimate law of the land – the Constitution – clearly and concisely
identifies the legal role of the President, we’ve seen the office stray from
those limitations. And, despite
protestations by the Grand Old Party, this is nothing new to the office since
President Barack Obama came into power. Every President of our lifetimes has
been as despotic as kings, including alleged small government types like Ronald
Reagan. They do as they shouldn’t and do as they want, and it’s an unfounded
power granted them – just look at what the electorate expects our next
president to do!
This
addiction to centralized, unconstitutional power dates back to the days of
Lincoln, a man who had no consideration for the Constitution and was painted as
a hero for it. Lincoln opened the floodgates that led to the modern and popular
interpretation of the presidency that allows Presidents to declare war (our
last Constitutional war was World War II), suspend trial by jury and exert
indefinite detention, and use their administrative offices to make regulations
(which are laws), impose taxes (fees and fines), and infringe upon the rights
of the people and the sound operations of the free markets. They have grown
beyond the boundaries of their duties and have assumed the powers that were bequeathed
to monarchies, doing everything, unchecked, that a Congress should, thus taking
all power away from the people and keeping it for themselves.
The
people fail to see that the ultimate power should be in their hands, through
our representative form of government. The nation was founded so that the
Congress was the most powerful branch of government. The general belief is that
all branches share equal power; this is not so -- the Executive Branch should
only be a check and a balance to an overreaching Congress, as are our courts to
both. Our nation was founded this way so that the masses were equally
represented and the development of laws and budgets came from a governing body
directly accessible to the common man and which could actually be comprised of
the common man. The rights and consent of the government were paramount.
Yet,
sadly, that is not what the people seem to want anymore.
Reflect upon
what we’ve observed in this election cycle (and every cycle before it). The
voters want to know what the presidential candidates will do for them. They
expect them to fix the economy, regulate industry, exert social mores upon the
masses, assume war powers, make laws, control the Congress, create tax policy,
intervene in foreign affairs, and suppress liberty in the name of security.
They think the President is – and they clamor for – a singular power, a central
office…in essence, a king (or in Clinton’s case, a queen).
From the 24 October 2016 Greater Niagara Newspapers
1 comment:
Sad and scary times ahead I fear.
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