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John Livingston

Look at me — Both Ways!

Our Founding Fathers never anticipated political parties or the influence that special interests and lobbyists would have on the political process. Governance, the bureaucratic State evolving into an administrative deep state answerable only to an elite ruling class were afterthoughts. Our Founding Fathers weren’t naive, and they understood very clearly the fallen nature of man and the need for the side rails of government.

The evils that existed in every man’s heart—including their own, avarice, pride, and covetousness—needed to be controlled so that individuals could protect their own families and property, work to produce familial and community wealth, and compete in open marketplaces where goods and services could be exchanged openly and the needs of both buyer and seller could be facilitated and met.

The Founding scripts of our country—The Constitution and our Great Declaration, were unique in their time and remain transcendent and unparalleled. They recognized our dependence on Devine Providence. They incorporated into the moral predicate of our unique corporate enterprise the lessons of civilization’s great March that started in antiquity in Israel and Athens. They established a political philosophy recognizing that the best most moral governments derived their authority from the consent of the governed—not a king or feudal lord, not a state-sponsored Bishopric, and certainly not from a General.

Most political scientists today believe that the beginning of political parties in our country began with the Presidential Election of 1800 between Federalist John Adams and Republican Thomas Jefferson. These parties actually grew out of well-recognized political “factions” that had their origins much earlier in Great Britain, Ireland, and Scotland. Different than in our country these early factions in Great Britain arose from parliamentary controversies about the relationship of the monarch to his or her subjects. The Whigs opposed an absolute monarchy and the Devine right of Kings. They supported constitutional monarchy. Their adversaries were the Tories. The Whigs between 1700 and 1850 would merge with the Peelites and the Radicals to form the Liberal Party.

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In our country, the Federalists led by John Adams and Alexander Hamilton were for strong central governments. The Republicans that morphed into the Democratic Party of the 1820s were for strong State governments and a weaker central government. Only with the addition of the Bill of Rights to our Constitution mostly written by James Madison—a Jefferson Republican, and Alexander Hamilton a Federalist, were the two political factions in our country able to merge and then emerge from the inadequacies that were inherent in the Articles of Confederation.

Today in our country both in the States—just look to Idaho, and in Washington DC, we are unable to find common political ground in our politics, or in trying to govern ourselves. They are in the end the same issue. In our country the early political parties were formed so that individual citizens with a common moral predicate and political philosophy, could come together for what they perceived to be a “common good” for one reason only—to leverage political power. Today our political parties lack a common or central moral predicate and when they come together with the purpose of exerting their own political power, they implode and diffuse what political capital they may have gained. The humanistic moral philosophy of the political left lends itself more to a “group think” mentality and the support of a coercive intrusive state—think Oceania in 1984.

Remember when the late Adli Stevenson the Sr. opined that “there comes a time when we must all rise above principle”? That is anathema—if you have a medical dictionary maybe even an enanthema, to those who refuse to understand that compromising a political position on issues of a prudential truth is very different than compromising a position of Providential truth—like a pro-life position or one of family sovereignty. Conservatives in our country are “rugged individualists”. Trying to get a group of conservatives to agree to anything—much less 80% of a party platform is like herding cats or doctors at a medical convention. COMPROMISE is a sign of weakness for most conservatives even if the strategic end would justify the political means.

The other problem with modern-day political factions is that they tend to follow cults of personality. The allegiance of a follower is based on emotion and intuition. Liking a candidate is very different than respecting a political position based on a shared principle of governance. There are certainly admirable personality characteristics in people who represent all political philosophies. It is more important to look at what people do and write and how they address specific issues, than it is to vote on their physical appearance or ethnicity, or gender. They say that most of our founding fathers were anything but attractive in their physical appearances. It was what was in their hearts, minds, and souls that made them unique. That is where we should look to when deciding who will lead us.

Whether you are a mayor of a small city taking a large campaign contribution from a developer who does business before city council, or a Governor of a State whose power comes not from your own conscience or political philosophy, but from the monied interests that also do business before the State; or you are a legislator in Washington DC having cocktails at The Army Navy Club with defense contractors, the purpose of such transactions must always be examined. If one is more interested in getting reelected or having access to a beachfront property on the Chesapeake Bay or Snake or Boise River, then let’s kick the monied ruling. legacy, aristocrats out. If they are more interested in consolidating power for themselves and not for the people, they represent then it is time to move on. Political factions must first and always stand on the will of the people and should never be used to enrich in any way politicians or lobbyist interests.

The moral standard that I am going to use to assess a politician asking for my vote for as long as I am able to vote can be found in the last sentence of our Declaration of Independence:

“And for the support of the Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Devine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our Lives, our Fortunes, and Our Sacred Honor.”

What politics is lacking today is the moral predicate to bring factions together. For me, the reliance on Devine Providence is key. We can disagree on many issues like a budget process or a continuing resolution, or where and how a road is to be built, or the $18million/2yr salary of a hospital CEO whose institution receives fungible government transfer payments. I can only hope and pray that the person representing me—at any level of government, would be willing to take and live up to such a pledge. What more important job could there ever be—other than being a mother or father, than the job of ensuring the liberty and sovereignty of one’s constituents?

One final note about that last sentence in our Declaration. Did you see what their publicly stated priorities were? Lives, Fortunes, and Honor. To them ONLY HONOR WAS SACRED. How many of our politicians today could make such a statement without the entire electorate breaking out in mass laughter?

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3 replies on “Look at me — Both Ways!”

Doc you get an A+ on today’s address.
As with all cancerous dictatorships throughout world history it’s up to citizens to unite & remove their political cancers.
Your statement about the futility to try & herd cats fits leadership of America’s so-called patriot groups to a T.
As stated prior;
America’s Founders were well educated on how to defeat dictators & maintain Government that represented The-People..
America’s Founding Fathers appointed Citizens to be Oath Enforcers with the sole lawful authority to manage & promptly oust corrupt or treasonous public servants who’s records &/or actions validate acts of corruption or treason.
After three failed decades of trying to unite leaders of Idaho & other states’ wannabe patriot groups into organizing as a state & national Civic Oath Enforcement Movement to ‘peacefully’ cull out our openly corrupt local & state political parasites I finally gave up after being repeatedly told by leadership that confronting our political perps with evidence to remove them exceeded their comfort zone..
Were leaders of these patriotic movements insiders for the left or just too meek to lead lawful reform ??
Will millions of responsible patriotic Americans fail to unite & be defeated by a few hundred openly treasonous politicians & corporate lobbyists & allow America to become the next Venezuela ?

Dr. John Livingston: “They recognized our dependence on Devine Providence.”

But which Divine? It wasn’t the One found in the Bible.

For evidence, see Chapters 2 & 3 of free online book “Biblical Examination of the Declaration of Independence: Declaration of Liberty vs. Declaration of Independence” at https://www.bibleversusconstitution.org/declaration/declaration-index.html

As for the Constitution, the best the framers could do was to make Christ the document’s timekeeper, if even that was what they had in mind in Article 7.

See Chapter 10 “Article 7: More of the Same” of free online book “Bible Law vs. the United States Constitution: The Christian Perspective” at https://www.bibleversusconstitution.org/BlvcOnline/blvc-index.html

Find out how much you really know about the Constitution as compared to the Bible. Take our 10-question Constitution Survey in the sidebar and receive a free copy of the 85-page “Primer” of “BL vs. USC.”

NOTHING WILL CHANGE IN CITY, COUNTY, STATE, OR FEDERAL CONGRESSES, UNTIL THE MONEY IS TAKEN OUT OF CAMPAIGNING

As long as candidates need someone else’s money to run, THE WEALTHY WILL ALWAYS WIN, because they donate the most to candidates. The candidates who win, have to do what they are told by the wealthy, or they do not get any more money from the wealthy.

A way of campaigning that forbids spending any money, needs to be created. One way would be a state and federal debate system, and the winner of each debate would go on to the next one, until a winner is declared in each state, then they go on to the federal debates. There could be a better way, but the way we have right now is an AUCTION HOUSE for the wealthy to BUY A CANDIDATE.

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