Original Intent
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
   
If the Founding
Fathers were to come back, I doubt if they would recognize the United
States today. Oh, they wouldn't be surprised by its size or its
population or its technological progress. They expected that and
encouraged it.
What would
disturb them is how fond Americans have become of government. They
would be disturbed at how we have allowed politicians and judges
to turn the Constitution into an excuse instead of a restraint.
They would be uneasy about the large standing army we have maintained
since the end of World War II. And they would certainly disapprove
of our foreign policy, which can only be described as imperialistic.
The Founding
Fathers were suspicious of government and wary of it. They recognized
that government is always the greatest threat to liberty. George
Washington likened government to fire – "a dangerous servant
and a fearful master." The whole purpose of the Constitution
they devised was to keep the government divided and weak.
First, they
expected the sovereign states to act as a brake against any attempt
by the federal government to usurp their powers as defined by the
Constitution. Abraham Lincoln nullified that concept with brute
force. Under their original plan, U.S. senators were selected by
the state legislatures and were clearly intended to act as ambassadors
from the states. Later generations foolishly eliminated that safeguard
by amending the Constitution so that senators are elected by the
people.
Clearly, the
Founding Fathers did not approve of the modern concept, imposed
by federal courts, of one man, one vote. They designed the House
to represent the people, but each state, regardless of size, was
given two senators. When federal courts eliminated the states' ability
to follow the example of the Constitution, they shifted political
power from the rural areas to the big cities. It's been more or
less downhill ever since.
The Founding
Fathers rejected the parliamentary system, in which the executive
and the legislative majority are one. They wanted a House and Senate
that were elected independently of the president. They intended
for Congress to act as a check against attempts by the executive
branch to usurp power, and they intended for the president, wielding
his veto, to act as a check on Congress.
The modern
two-party system has nullified this safeguard. Both Democrats and
Republicans act like slaves to the man in the White House if he
shares their party label, thus nullifying the most important of
the checks and balances the Founding Fathers built into the Constitution.
By acting like lap dogs when their man wins the White House, both
Democrats and Republicans have imposed a parliamentary system on
us.
Americans,
in defense of their own liberty, should make sure that whatever
party holds the White House does NOT have a majority in Congress.
It is to our advantage and was so intended by the Founding Fathers
that the president and Congress be at odds on all but the most important
issues.
To ensure
an independent judiciary, they made those appointments for life,
which has turned out to be a mistake, given how reluctant Congress
is to impeach a federal judge. My Confederate ancestors recognized
this problem, and in their constitution a federal judge could be
impeached by the legislature of the state in which he sat. That
would cure a lot of abuses committed by the federal judiciary.
A reading
of the Constitution makes it clear that the federal government was
designed to be an agent of the states and authorized to act only
on behalf of all the states in a few, clearly specified areas. None
of those includes education, welfare, medical care, foreign aid
and domestic pork-barrel projects.
Future
historians, when they come to write the obituary of the United States,
will note that we started out with the best system ever devised
by man and willingly dismantled it for a bowl of federal porridge.
June
3, 2006
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2006 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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