Early American settlers had a unique
opportunity, the opportunity to start over, to create a different form of
government. The kings of Europe were busy fighting one another, so the American
settlers were pretty much left to govern themselves for the first 200
years. They developed an appreciation for living
independently which led them to devise a government that protected those
rights. They recognized that the most
dangerous force in the world was government.
They compared it to fire, necessary but a treacherous hazard. They had no confidence in man’s ability to
resist the lure of power so they designed a constitution that would, as Thomas
Jefferson said, “bind him down from mischief.”
Each branch of government was designed to check
the power of the other, and the theory was that the sovereign states would
jealously guard their powers as expressed in the 10th
Amendment. Integral to the design were
the differences in the two houses of congress.
The House of Representatives was to reflect the passions of the people,
members being elected by popular vote.
The Senate, like the Senate in the Roman Republic, was to be the more
deliberative body, cooling the passions and providing stability to the
government. Members were appointed by
legislative bodies of the various states and were to represent the interests of
the state keeping the power of the federal government in check.
Electing senators by popular vote as a result of
the 17th Amendment created two problems. First, the senate loses its deliberative
quality, the members now having to spend their energies responding to the
passions of the masses, buying votes with our tax dollars. It also changed the allegiance of
senators. They are no longer the voice
of the state. They are the voice of the
federal government. The power
and significance of the Sovereign States is lost.
We didn’t notice the danger at first. Montesquieu was right: “A nation may lose its
liberties in a day and not miss them in a century.” It’s been a century. It’s time for us all to join the bucket
brigade. Or better yet, fight fire with
fire. Lovers of freedom must be
vigilant, read, study, research, and debate analyzing history and current
events according to the principles of liberty.
We need to rekindle the fires that fueled the founding.
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