What does a republic look like? Most ignorantly refer to our system as a democracy although this word is not in any document given by our Founding Fathers.What does a republic look like?

What does a republic look like? Most people ignorantly refer to our political system as a democracy although this word is not in the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, or any document given to us by our Founding Fathers. Our Pledge of Allegiance to the flag identifies our form of government as a republic.

Benjamin Franklin wrote in 1759, “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote.” A republic has seven major components, each specifically designed to keep it from becoming a democracy as democracy eventually destroys liberty.

First, the importance of majority rules is recognized but limited. Is the majority always right? No! Mother made this point when her teenager asked to smoke marijuana on the basis that everyone was smoking it. “If everyone jumped off a bridge, would you?”

Second, minority rights (less than 50% percent) are protected from the majority. In Franklin’s analogy, the lamb had the right to exist even if the majority, the wolves, said differently. A lynch mob is a democracy: Everyone votes, but the one is being lynched. Even if caught in the act of a crime, the defendant is entitled to the protection of law, a judge, a jury, witnesses for his defense, and a lawyer to argue his innocence — all necessary but expensive. Then if found guilty, he is hanged. Because democracy only considers majority rules, it is much less expensive. A rope tossed over a tree limb will do.

Third, a republic is based upon natural inalienable rights first acknowledged in the Declaration of Independence. This document asserted to the world that we acknowledge that humans have rights from a source higher than mere man. A reference to deity is mentioned five times. If there is no God, there can be no inalienable rights coming from him, and we are left with man as God. What man is good enough?

Fourth, a republic emphasizes individual differences rather than absolute equality, as democracy does. We are not equal, even from the womb, and never will be if equality means sameness. One baby with a cleft palate needs three surgeries to look normal. Some come out of the womb with a laptop, others with a basketball, and the really tough deliveries are those bringing their golf clubs. One of my first great insights in life was that everyone was better at everything than I was. The second was that life is not fair and never will be. Free men are not equal, and equal men are not free. Genetics makes one fat, another bald, and gives yet another terminal cancer in his youth.

Even economically, it is not possible to be equal. Should I give each student a million dollars in exchange for everything they now own, shave their heads, and give them identical uniforms to approximate sameness as much as possible with the only requirement being that they return in five years with some ledger of net worth? Would they be the same in what was left of the million? No! Why does government try so hard to do what is impossible? A republic, unlike a democracy, looks upon our differences as assets.

Fifth, limited government is also a major aspect of a republic. Centralized government is good so long as it remembers that when it oversteps its bounds, it becomes the greatest obstacle to liberty as it pulls decision-making power away from the individual. Excessive government, the cause of the American Revolution, is never forgotten. The Constitution as it was created handcuffed the government from dominating our lives by listing the powers of the federal government (Article I, Section 8). The Founding Fathers understood that the more government there is at the top, the less there is at the bottom, and that is the opposite of freedom.

Sixth, a republic has frequent elections with options. Frequent elections happen in some socialist countries, so this alone does not ensure liberty. In fact, it may be somewhat deceiving as it fosters the notion that we choose, and thus deserve, our elected officers. It also assumes that the people are correctly informed, which assumes a free press and equal access to all information. The part of the phrase “with options” is the part that ensures liberty. Elections under socialism provide choices but often no options when all participants are from the same party.

Seventh, there is a healthy fear of the emotion of the masses and of its potential to destabilize natural law upon which real freedom is based, as for example the notion that someone else’s wealth belongs to them. Such destroys freedom as it did in Athens and Rome. We need a caring, sensitive, compassionate government, but emotion must not be allowed to overwhelm reason and time-tested natural-law constants. Aristotle taught that the poor will always envy the rich and the rich will always have contempt for the poor. A republic will not allow the poor to destroy the rich in their quest for the wealth of the rich but does incentivize the poor to increase their wealth, thus becoming the middle class, which in time become the largest body.

As explained, democracy does not protect liberty. In Ben Franklin’s analogy, it would have allowed the wolves to have eaten the lamb simply because the lamb had been outvoted. No wonder our Founding Fathers rejected democracy in favor of a republic.

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