We remain grateful for Independence Day fireworks and parades as long as we do not forget that excessive government is the enemy of liberty.
We remain grateful for Independence Day fireworks and parades as long as we do not forget that excessive government is the enemy of liberty.

Don’t let liberty die because of your ignorance

A week before the Independence Day, everyone dons patriotic symbols. A week later, few do. The event comes and goes: colors red, white, and blue are popular for a day. One might be viewed as “super patriotic” (as though this were bad) were one to display the symbols for too long.

The evening is filled with fireworks (the bigger the better) but few know why. When asked, the most common response is freedom. “Freedom from what or whom?” I ask. If a stare could kill, I’d be dead. But there is no real understanding behind the expression. It is rare when anyone answers correctly, “Freedom from excessive government.”

The cause of the American Revolution was excessive government. Some say, “taxation without representation,” but this is but a part of excessive government. Every U.S. history text has a chapter dealing with the causes. It is filled with the rules and regulations that were most oppressive to the colonists: the Stamp Act, Tea Act, Currency Act, Iron Act, Molasses Act, Sugar Act, even the Hat Act. Such acts were viewed by the colonists as restrictions on their freedom to act independently of governmental permission. When these acts descended like rain, as they did prior to the revolution, the colonists demanded to know why; when not satisfied, they resisted the rulings without success, then, “Where is my rifle?”

For one day of the year, there is peace between liberals and conservatives. Each wears the emblems of the revolution and demonstrate his patriotism by raising bigger flags, exploding bigger fireworks, eating bigger steaks, and guzzling more alcohol. Parades too are non-partisan and show patriotism, but for what? The next day, we ask the federal government to place more restrictions on our neighbors and give us more free stuff at their expense, totally ignoring the Constitution and the reason for the revolution.

Few share with their children the reasons behind these symbols, and still fewer tie the Declaration of Independence to the Constitution, which essentially ended the need for a future revolution by restricting the federal government to a handful of areas in which it can constitutionally restrict our behavior (Article I, Sec. 8), preventing forever, if we adhere to the Constitution as designed, our legislative branch from doing the same thing to us as had parliament to the colonists. If the two are not tied together, then the American Revolution was just a revolution, rightly commemorated by having a longer weekend and an excuse to get drunk.

Lost in the translation and replaced by the blank stare previously mentioned is your right to do most everything you wish without permission from a government, more especially one located hundreds, often thousands, of miles away. Outside the short list in Article I, Section 8 — which, incidentally, has no restrictions on the individual himself — the Constitution left the individual to manage himself. When his behavior offended the right of others to also self-manage, his community, starting at the lowest level (cities, counties, and finally his state government), may regulate his behavior, protecting the right of self-management for others as well. Please review this list with family and friends.

This is called freedom. And this is the end result of a 13-year transformative period from the Declaration of Independence through the Articles of Federation to the Constitution, which included the Bill of Rights. The federal government constitutionally could only increase its power through Article V, which required the permission of the states. Today, it does so at will because legislators openly oppose these documents or do not care.

The collective view of the Founding Fathers was to never elevate to a higher level that which could be resolved at a lesser level. Resolving problems at the lowest level of government, the city for example, allows the individual access to his elected representatives for redress and the offended to those he has most directly offended. A more just outcome is likely.

Independence Day and Constitution Week in September are our best opportunities to share the message of why the revolution and the Constitution interconnect and are among the more important events in U.S., even world, history. These two events are our best opportunities to remember and convey to friends and family what liberty is and how and why it must be preserved.

Do they know that at least 85 percent of all inventions on earth came from within the United States under this Constitution, from the clipper ship to moon landing technology? That liberty incentivizes creativity?

Do they know that it was purchased by blood and if lost will remain lost until purchased by blood again?

Have you told them that if just one generation fails to convey to the next these precious ideas, it will be lost to their posterity? Freedom is not free and never will be.

We are grateful to those who know the real meaning and significance of this event in history and are willing to share it with others. We are forever indebted to those who gave their lives for our freedom in the Revolutionary War and thereafter. We remain grateful for fireworks and parades as long as we do not forget that excessive government is the enemy of liberty, then and now, whether it is taken from us by a parliament, as then, or a Congress, as today.

The viewpoints expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Independent.

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