Saturday, July 9, 2011
TEK'S America: TEK'S America: Democracy In America
TEK'S America: TEK'S America: Democracy In America: "TEK'S America: Democracy In America : 'Freedom and democracy are often used interchangeably, but the two are not synonymous. Democracy is in..."
Thursday, July 7, 2011
TEK'S America: Democracy In America
TEK'S America: Democracy In America: "Freedom and democracy are often used interchangeably, but the two are not synonymous. Democracy is indeed a set of ideas and principles abou..."
Democracy In America
Freedom and democracy are often used interchangeably, but the two are not synonymous. Democracy is indeed a set of ideas and principles about freedom, but it also consists of a set of practices and procedures that have been molded through a long history. In short, democracy is the institutionalization of freedom. For this reason, it is possible to identify the time-tested fundamentals of constitutional government, human rights, and equality before the law that any society must possess to be properly called democratic.
A democracy is government by the people in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised directly by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system. In the phrase of Abraham Lincoln, democracy is a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people." I do agree with this definition.
Democracy is a work in progress, with the emphasis on work. It means having a voice and using it. (I just called my Senator! In a vital democracy, I’m at liberty to do that.) Democracy dares to make room for all kinds of people and ideas. It gives us the privilege of listening and learning from one another, without fear. And it requires us to be 'actors.' It’s a gift, not a birthright
What democracy means to me, is a government obeying our Constitution and staying out of individual citizens' personal lives. This means allowing citizens to make their own decisions for their own personal lives, making mistakes and all. It means not having politicians in office who believe citizens freedom of speech should have any limits. It means that government does not have any authority to take any individual right away or change it in any way. Our individual rights are God-given rights to all and no human can take those away.
America is a Republic because a democracy doesn't work any more than totalitarianism, Marxism, socialism or any other -ism. And America will stay a Republic, 'if the people can keep it that way through the election process.
The Founding Fathers who wrote the Constitution gave us a Republic. They believed democracies were dangerous and unworkable."On that, they are partly right, but they failed to mention that democracies and republics overlap. They are not opposites. And they fail to account for the history of American government since 1788, much less the debates that took place in America prior to 1788, when the U.S. Constitution was substituted for the Articles of Confederation. Democracy means rule of the people. The two most common forms of democracy are direct democracy and representative democracy. In direct democracy everyone takes part in making a decision, as in a town meeting or a referendum. The specific rules may vary: perhaps everyone must agree, perhaps there must be consensus, perhaps a mere majority is required to make a decision. The other, better known form of democracy is a representative democracy. People elect representative to make decisions or laws. Again, specifics vary greatly.
A representative democracy is a kind of republic. What distinguishes a republic is that it has an elected government. Representative democracies are, therefor, a kind of republic. Self-appointed governments such as monarchies, dictatorships, oligarchies, theocracies and juntas are not republics. However, this still allows for a wide spectrum. The classic is the Roman Republic, in which only a tiny percentage of citizens, members of the nobility, were allowed to vote for the Senators, who made the laws and also acted as Rome's supreme court. Most people would say that Rome was a Republic, but not a democracy, since it was very close to being an oligarchy, rule by the few. Although the Roman Republic was not a dictatorship (until Augustus Caesar grabbed power), it did not allow for rule of the people. In both theory and practice the Soviet Union, that late evil empire, was a republic (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) because the lawmakers were elected, if only by the Communist Party members.
Beginning with the Constitution's adoption, America has been a Republic. But the dominant trend over the last two centuries has been to make it into a democracy as well, a representative democracy, also known as a democratic republic. True, the creation of the Constitution itself was partly a reaction against democracy. In states like Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, the situation was getting way too democratic for the monied aristocracy that had, since the American Revolution, refused to share power with ordinary men.
The causes of the American Revolution were many, but for the monied class there were three principal aims. They sought self-government: that is, they sought to rule the colonies themselves, to further their own interests. They sought to protect the institution of slavery, which had been endangered by Lord Mansfield's ruling against it in the Sommersett case of 1772. And land speculators like George Washington sought to seize more Native American Indian land, which the British had outlawed.
But to win the American Revolution this predatory elite needed help. Their own rhetoric about freedom and equality led to widespread demands for the right to vote: universal suffrage. In other words, the people began demanding democracy. Even the slaves (white and black alike) demanded to be freed and allowed to vote.
After the British were defeated a centralized, national government was seen by George Washington and company not as a method of extending freedom and the right to vote, but as a way of keeping control in the hands of rich. They wrote several anti-democratic provisions into the U.S. Constitution. Slavery was institutionalized. The Senate was not to be elected directly by the people; rather Senators were to be appointed by state legislatures. The President was not to be directly elected by the voters, but elected through an electoral college. The Supreme Court was to be appointed. Only the House of Representatives was elected directly.
More important to our democracy-versus-republic debate, the U.S. Constitution left the question of who could vote in elections to each individual state. In most states only white men who owned a certain amount of property could vote. So, on the whole, the first federal government that met in 1789 was a republic with only a fig-leaf of democratic representation. This is what today's commentators mean when they say America is a republic, not a democracy.
Fortunately (for the democrats), the early federal government was not very powerful. In state after state it became easier for white males to qualify to vote. And slowly, decade after decade, our republic became a democratic republic.
At the national level the major steps toward democracy can be marked by amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The Bill of Rights guaranteed limits to the power of the federal government. The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery. The Fourteenth Amendment effectively extended the vote to all adult male citizens, including ex-slaves, by penalizing states that did not allow for universal male suffrage. The Fifteenth Amendment explicitly gave the right to vote to former slaves. After the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments did not extend suffrage to women, a vigorous campaign for the vote was launched by women, who received the vote through the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920.
But the main Amendment that tipped the scales from the national government of the United States being a mere republic to being a true representative democracy was the often-overlooked Seventeenth Amendment, which took effect in 1913. Since 1913 the U.S. Senate has been elected directly by the voters, rather than being appointed by the state legislatures. That makes the national government democratic in form, as well as being a republic.
There will always be anti-democratic forces in any society. The most blatantly undemocratic feature of U.S. government in the 20th century was the unconstitutional but systematic disenfranchisement of African-American and other non-white citizens. This came to an end in the 1950's and 1960's with a series of Supreme Court decisions against segregation laws, the passage of Civil Rights Acts, and the passage of the Twenty-Fourth Amendment outlawing poll taxes. We even lowered the voting age to 18 with the Twenty-Sixth Amendment in 1971.
There are no longer any voter-qualification impediments to democracy in the United States. But many have noted that the will of the people has tended not to prevail, and that a majority of people eligible to vote are so discouraged that they do not vote. The main reason for this is the buying and selling of elections and politicians by the wealthier class of citizens and their special interest groups. A year or more before elections take place, the winner is decided by those who vote with dollars. But this is a defect in democracy, not a reason to abandon it. The answer is to cure the defect, not to attempt to destroy our representative democracy.
Now that brings us to 2011 and what must happen in 2012, Obama must be defeated at all cost. Don't be fooled by his smooth rhetoric, he is out to destroy our Country as we know it. One of his goals is to be part of a New world order and to make all countries equal to ours and if you give him the chance he will do it too. That is why 2012 will be the most important election, that WE THE PEOPLE have ever voted in. It is time we come together as our Founding Fathers did and fight for our Constitution and our freedom from a government that is to large and spending our nation into debt. You must tell Washington that we will no longer tolerate their abuse of power and special interests deals.
That all elected officials will be held accountable to the people from 2012 forward,that we will not just sit by any longer and watch them destroy this Great Country of ours. That we want real immigration reform and our borders protected, that we want real reform in our schools, we want the bad teachers gone and the good ones paid more, as promised. We want all the illegal’s sent back to their own country. They are taking American resources and jobs and it is time to put a stop to it.
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. cost jobs and substandard health care. That Washington need to stop giving billions to
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. Cost jobs and substandard health care.
In 2012 you are the minutemen, this is your fight this is a war to save your Country for your children so that they can grow up and have the same or better opportunities that you had. We as a nation can no long sit back inactive and do nothing to stop the bleeding of this Country.
God Bless America and all of you.
TEK
A democracy is government by the people in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised directly by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system. In the phrase of Abraham Lincoln, democracy is a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people." I do agree with this definition.
Democracy is a work in progress, with the emphasis on work. It means having a voice and using it. (I just called my Senator! In a vital democracy, I’m at liberty to do that.) Democracy dares to make room for all kinds of people and ideas. It gives us the privilege of listening and learning from one another, without fear. And it requires us to be 'actors.' It’s a gift, not a birthright
What democracy means to me, is a government obeying our Constitution and staying out of individual citizens' personal lives. This means allowing citizens to make their own decisions for their own personal lives, making mistakes and all. It means not having politicians in office who believe citizens freedom of speech should have any limits. It means that government does not have any authority to take any individual right away or change it in any way. Our individual rights are God-given rights to all and no human can take those away.
America is a Republic because a democracy doesn't work any more than totalitarianism, Marxism, socialism or any other -ism. And America will stay a Republic, 'if the people can keep it that way through the election process.
The Founding Fathers who wrote the Constitution gave us a Republic. They believed democracies were dangerous and unworkable."On that, they are partly right, but they failed to mention that democracies and republics overlap. They are not opposites. And they fail to account for the history of American government since 1788, much less the debates that took place in America prior to 1788, when the U.S. Constitution was substituted for the Articles of Confederation. Democracy means rule of the people. The two most common forms of democracy are direct democracy and representative democracy. In direct democracy everyone takes part in making a decision, as in a town meeting or a referendum. The specific rules may vary: perhaps everyone must agree, perhaps there must be consensus, perhaps a mere majority is required to make a decision. The other, better known form of democracy is a representative democracy. People elect representative to make decisions or laws. Again, specifics vary greatly.
A representative democracy is a kind of republic. What distinguishes a republic is that it has an elected government. Representative democracies are, therefor, a kind of republic. Self-appointed governments such as monarchies, dictatorships, oligarchies, theocracies and juntas are not republics. However, this still allows for a wide spectrum. The classic is the Roman Republic, in which only a tiny percentage of citizens, members of the nobility, were allowed to vote for the Senators, who made the laws and also acted as Rome's supreme court. Most people would say that Rome was a Republic, but not a democracy, since it was very close to being an oligarchy, rule by the few. Although the Roman Republic was not a dictatorship (until Augustus Caesar grabbed power), it did not allow for rule of the people. In both theory and practice the Soviet Union, that late evil empire, was a republic (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) because the lawmakers were elected, if only by the Communist Party members.
Beginning with the Constitution's adoption, America has been a Republic. But the dominant trend over the last two centuries has been to make it into a democracy as well, a representative democracy, also known as a democratic republic. True, the creation of the Constitution itself was partly a reaction against democracy. In states like Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, the situation was getting way too democratic for the monied aristocracy that had, since the American Revolution, refused to share power with ordinary men.
The causes of the American Revolution were many, but for the monied class there were three principal aims. They sought self-government: that is, they sought to rule the colonies themselves, to further their own interests. They sought to protect the institution of slavery, which had been endangered by Lord Mansfield's ruling against it in the Sommersett case of 1772. And land speculators like George Washington sought to seize more Native American Indian land, which the British had outlawed.
But to win the American Revolution this predatory elite needed help. Their own rhetoric about freedom and equality led to widespread demands for the right to vote: universal suffrage. In other words, the people began demanding democracy. Even the slaves (white and black alike) demanded to be freed and allowed to vote.
After the British were defeated a centralized, national government was seen by George Washington and company not as a method of extending freedom and the right to vote, but as a way of keeping control in the hands of rich. They wrote several anti-democratic provisions into the U.S. Constitution. Slavery was institutionalized. The Senate was not to be elected directly by the people; rather Senators were to be appointed by state legislatures. The President was not to be directly elected by the voters, but elected through an electoral college. The Supreme Court was to be appointed. Only the House of Representatives was elected directly.
More important to our democracy-versus-republic debate, the U.S. Constitution left the question of who could vote in elections to each individual state. In most states only white men who owned a certain amount of property could vote. So, on the whole, the first federal government that met in 1789 was a republic with only a fig-leaf of democratic representation. This is what today's commentators mean when they say America is a republic, not a democracy.
Fortunately (for the democrats), the early federal government was not very powerful. In state after state it became easier for white males to qualify to vote. And slowly, decade after decade, our republic became a democratic republic.
At the national level the major steps toward democracy can be marked by amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The Bill of Rights guaranteed limits to the power of the federal government. The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery. The Fourteenth Amendment effectively extended the vote to all adult male citizens, including ex-slaves, by penalizing states that did not allow for universal male suffrage. The Fifteenth Amendment explicitly gave the right to vote to former slaves. After the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments did not extend suffrage to women, a vigorous campaign for the vote was launched by women, who received the vote through the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920.
But the main Amendment that tipped the scales from the national government of the United States being a mere republic to being a true representative democracy was the often-overlooked Seventeenth Amendment, which took effect in 1913. Since 1913 the U.S. Senate has been elected directly by the voters, rather than being appointed by the state legislatures. That makes the national government democratic in form, as well as being a republic.
There will always be anti-democratic forces in any society. The most blatantly undemocratic feature of U.S. government in the 20th century was the unconstitutional but systematic disenfranchisement of African-American and other non-white citizens. This came to an end in the 1950's and 1960's with a series of Supreme Court decisions against segregation laws, the passage of Civil Rights Acts, and the passage of the Twenty-Fourth Amendment outlawing poll taxes. We even lowered the voting age to 18 with the Twenty-Sixth Amendment in 1971.
There are no longer any voter-qualification impediments to democracy in the United States. But many have noted that the will of the people has tended not to prevail, and that a majority of people eligible to vote are so discouraged that they do not vote. The main reason for this is the buying and selling of elections and politicians by the wealthier class of citizens and their special interest groups. A year or more before elections take place, the winner is decided by those who vote with dollars. But this is a defect in democracy, not a reason to abandon it. The answer is to cure the defect, not to attempt to destroy our representative democracy.
Now that brings us to 2011 and what must happen in 2012, Obama must be defeated at all cost. Don't be fooled by his smooth rhetoric, he is out to destroy our Country as we know it. One of his goals is to be part of a New world order and to make all countries equal to ours and if you give him the chance he will do it too. That is why 2012 will be the most important election, that WE THE PEOPLE have ever voted in. It is time we come together as our Founding Fathers did and fight for our Constitution and our freedom from a government that is to large and spending our nation into debt. You must tell Washington that we will no longer tolerate their abuse of power and special interests deals.
That all elected officials will be held accountable to the people from 2012 forward,that we will not just sit by any longer and watch them destroy this Great Country of ours. That we want real immigration reform and our borders protected, that we want real reform in our schools, we want the bad teachers gone and the good ones paid more, as promised. We want all the illegal’s sent back to their own country. They are taking American resources and jobs and it is time to put a stop to it.
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. cost jobs and substandard health care. That Washington need to stop giving billions to
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. Cost jobs and substandard health care.
In 2012 you are the minutemen, this is your fight this is a war to save your Country for your children so that they can grow up and have the same or better opportunities that you had. We as a nation can no long sit back inactive and do nothing to stop the bleeding of this Country.
God Bless America and all of you.
TEK
Freedom and democracy are often used interchangeably, but the two are not synonymous. Democracy is indeed a set of ideas and principles about freedom, but it also consists of a set of practices and procedures that have been molded through a long history. In short, democracy is the institutionalization of freedom. For this reason, it is possible to identify the time-tested fundamentals of constitutional government, human rights, and equality before the law that any society must possess to be properly called democratic.
A democracy is government by the people in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised directly by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system. In the phrase of Abraham Lincoln, democracy is a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people." I do agree with this definition.
Democracy is a work in progress, with the emphasis on work. It means having a voice and using it. (I just called my Senator! In a vital democracy, I’m at liberty to do that.) Democracy dares to make room for all kinds of people and ideas. It gives us the privilege of listening and learning from one another, without fear. And it requires us to be 'actors.' It’s a gift, not a birthright
What democracy means to me, is a government obeying our Constitution and staying out of individual citizens' personal lives. This means allowing citizens to make their own decisions for their own personal lives, making mistakes and all. It means not having politicians in office who believe citizens freedom of speech should have any limits. It means that government does not have any authority to take any individual right away or change it in any way. Our individual rights are God-given rights to all and no human can take those away.
America is a Republic because a democracy doesn't work any more than totalitarianism, Marxism, socialism or any other -ism. And America will stay a Republic, 'if the people can keep it that way through the election process.
The Founding Fathers who wrote the Constitution gave us a Republic. They believed democracies were dangerous and unworkable."On that, they are partly right, but they failed to mention that democracies and republics overlap. They are not opposites. And they fail to account for the history of American government since 1788, much less the debates that took place in America prior to 1788, when the U.S. Constitution was substituted for the Articles of Confederation. Democracy means rule of the people. The two most common forms of democracy are direct democracy and representative democracy. In direct democracy everyone takes part in making a decision, as in a town meeting or a referendum. The specific rules may vary: perhaps everyone must agree, perhaps there must be consensus, perhaps a mere majority is required to make a decision. The other, better known form of democracy is a representative democracy. People elect representative to make decisions or laws. Again, specifics vary greatly.
A representative democracy is a kind of republic. What distinguishes a republic is that it has an elected government. Representative democracies are, therefor, a kind of republic. Self-appointed governments such as monarchies, dictatorships, oligarchies, theocracies and juntas are not republics. However, this still allows for a wide spectrum. The classic is the Roman Republic, in which only a tiny percentage of citizens, members of the nobility, were allowed to vote for the Senators, who made the laws and also acted as Rome's supreme court. Most people would say that Rome was a Republic, but not a democracy, since it was very close to being an oligarchy, rule by the few. Although the Roman Republic was not a dictatorship (until Augustus Caesar grabbed power), it did not allow for rule of the people. In both theory and practice the Soviet Union, that late evil empire, was a republic (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) because the lawmakers were elected, if only by the Communist Party members.
Beginning with the Constitution's adoption, America has been a Republic. But the dominant trend over the last two centuries has been to make it into a democracy as well, a representative democracy, also known as a democratic republic. True, the creation of the Constitution itself was partly a reaction against democracy. In states like Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, the situation was getting way too democratic for the monied aristocracy that had, since the American Revolution, refused to share power with ordinary men.
The causes of the American Revolution were many, but for the monied class there were three principal aims. They sought self-government: that is, they sought to rule the colonies themselves, to further their own interests. They sought to protect the institution of slavery, which had been endangered by Lord Mansfield's ruling against it in the Sommersett case of 1772. And land speculators like George Washington sought to seize more Native American Indian land, which the British had outlawed.
But to win the American Revolution this predatory elite needed help. Their own rhetoric about freedom and equality led to widespread demands for the right to vote: universal suffrage. In other words, the people began demanding democracy. Even the slaves (white and black alike) demanded to be freed and allowed to vote.
After the British were defeated a centralized, national government was seen by George Washington and company not as a method of extending freedom and the right to vote, but as a way of keeping control in the hands of rich. They wrote several anti-democratic provisions into the U.S. Constitution. Slavery was institutionalized. The Senate was not to be elected directly by the people; rather Senators were to be appointed by state legislatures. The President was not to be directly elected by the voters, but elected through an electoral college. The Supreme Court was to be appointed. Only the House of Representatives was elected directly.
More important to our democracy-versus-republic debate, the U.S. Constitution left the question of who could vote in elections to each individual state. In most states only white men who owned a certain amount of property could vote. So, on the whole, the first federal government that met in 1789 was a republic with only a fig-leaf of democratic representation. This is what today's commentators mean when they say America is a republic, not a democracy.
Fortunately (for the democrats), the early federal government was not very powerful. In state after state it became easier for white males to qualify to vote. And slowly, decade after decade, our republic became a democratic republic.
At the national level the major steps toward democracy can be marked by amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The Bill of Rights guaranteed limits to the power of the federal government. The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery. The Fourteenth Amendment effectively extended the vote to all adult male citizens, including ex-slaves, by penalizing states that did not allow for universal male suffrage. The Fifteenth Amendment explicitly gave the right to vote to former slaves. After the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments did not extend suffrage to women, a vigorous campaign for the vote was launched by women, who received the vote through the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920.
But the main Amendment that tipped the scales from the national government of the United States being a mere republic to being a true representative democracy was the often-overlooked Seventeenth Amendment, which took effect in 1913. Since 1913 the U.S. Senate has been elected directly by the voters, rather than being appointed by the state legislatures. That makes the national government democratic in form, as well as being a republic.
There will always be anti-democratic forces in any society. The most blatantly undemocratic feature of U.S. government in the 20th century was the unconstitutional but systematic disenfranchisement of African-American and other non-white citizens. This came to an end in the 1950's and 1960's with a series of Supreme Court decisions against segregation laws, the passage of Civil Rights Acts, and the passage of the Twenty-Fourth Amendment outlawing poll taxes. We even lowered the voting age to 18 with the Twenty-Sixth Amendment in 1971.
There are no longer any voter-qualification impediments to democracy in the United States. But many have noted that the will of the people has tended not to prevail, and that a majority of people eligible to vote are so discouraged that they do not vote. The main reason for this is the buying and selling of elections and politicians by the wealthier class of citizens and their special interest groups. A year or more before elections take place, the winner is decided by those who vote with dollars. But this is a defect in democracy, not a reason to abandon it. The answer is to cure the defect, not to attempt to destroy our representative democracy.
Now that brings us to 2011 and what must happen in 2012, Obama must be defeated at all cost. Don't be fooled by his smooth rhetoric, he is out to destroy our Country as we know it. One of his goals is to be part of a New world order and to make all countries equal to ours and if you give him the chance he will do it too. That is why 2012 will be the most important election, that WE THE PEOPLE have ever voted in. It is time we come together as our Founding Fathers did and fight for our Constitution and our freedom from a government that is to large and spending our nation into debt. You must tell Washington that we will no longer tolerate their abuse of power and special interests deals.
That all elected officials will be held accountable to the people from 2012 forward,that we will not just sit by any longer and watch them destroy this Great Country of ours. That we want real immigration reform and our borders protected, that we want real reform in our schools, we want the bad teachers gone and the good ones paid more, as promised. We want all the illegal’s sent back to their own country. They are taking American resources and jobs and it is time to put a stop to it.
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. cost jobs and substandard health care. That Washington need to stop giving billions to
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. Cost jobs and substandard health care.
In 2012 you are the minutemen, this is your fight this is a war to save your Country for your children so that they can grow up and have the same or better opportunities that you had. We as a nation can no long sit back inactive and do nothing to stop the bleeding of this Country.
God Bless America and all of you.
Thomas E Kelly
A democracy is government by the people in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised directly by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system. In the phrase of Abraham Lincoln, democracy is a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people." I do agree with this definition.
Democracy is a work in progress, with the emphasis on work. It means having a voice and using it. (I just called my Senator! In a vital democracy, I’m at liberty to do that.) Democracy dares to make room for all kinds of people and ideas. It gives us the privilege of listening and learning from one another, without fear. And it requires us to be 'actors.' It’s a gift, not a birthright
What democracy means to me, is a government obeying our Constitution and staying out of individual citizens' personal lives. This means allowing citizens to make their own decisions for their own personal lives, making mistakes and all. It means not having politicians in office who believe citizens freedom of speech should have any limits. It means that government does not have any authority to take any individual right away or change it in any way. Our individual rights are God-given rights to all and no human can take those away.
America is a Republic because a democracy doesn't work any more than totalitarianism, Marxism, socialism or any other -ism. And America will stay a Republic, 'if the people can keep it that way through the election process.
The Founding Fathers who wrote the Constitution gave us a Republic. They believed democracies were dangerous and unworkable."On that, they are partly right, but they failed to mention that democracies and republics overlap. They are not opposites. And they fail to account for the history of American government since 1788, much less the debates that took place in America prior to 1788, when the U.S. Constitution was substituted for the Articles of Confederation. Democracy means rule of the people. The two most common forms of democracy are direct democracy and representative democracy. In direct democracy everyone takes part in making a decision, as in a town meeting or a referendum. The specific rules may vary: perhaps everyone must agree, perhaps there must be consensus, perhaps a mere majority is required to make a decision. The other, better known form of democracy is a representative democracy. People elect representative to make decisions or laws. Again, specifics vary greatly.
A representative democracy is a kind of republic. What distinguishes a republic is that it has an elected government. Representative democracies are, therefor, a kind of republic. Self-appointed governments such as monarchies, dictatorships, oligarchies, theocracies and juntas are not republics. However, this still allows for a wide spectrum. The classic is the Roman Republic, in which only a tiny percentage of citizens, members of the nobility, were allowed to vote for the Senators, who made the laws and also acted as Rome's supreme court. Most people would say that Rome was a Republic, but not a democracy, since it was very close to being an oligarchy, rule by the few. Although the Roman Republic was not a dictatorship (until Augustus Caesar grabbed power), it did not allow for rule of the people. In both theory and practice the Soviet Union, that late evil empire, was a republic (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) because the lawmakers were elected, if only by the Communist Party members.
Beginning with the Constitution's adoption, America has been a Republic. But the dominant trend over the last two centuries has been to make it into a democracy as well, a representative democracy, also known as a democratic republic. True, the creation of the Constitution itself was partly a reaction against democracy. In states like Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, the situation was getting way too democratic for the monied aristocracy that had, since the American Revolution, refused to share power with ordinary men.
The causes of the American Revolution were many, but for the monied class there were three principal aims. They sought self-government: that is, they sought to rule the colonies themselves, to further their own interests. They sought to protect the institution of slavery, which had been endangered by Lord Mansfield's ruling against it in the Sommersett case of 1772. And land speculators like George Washington sought to seize more Native American Indian land, which the British had outlawed.
But to win the American Revolution this predatory elite needed help. Their own rhetoric about freedom and equality led to widespread demands for the right to vote: universal suffrage. In other words, the people began demanding democracy. Even the slaves (white and black alike) demanded to be freed and allowed to vote.
After the British were defeated a centralized, national government was seen by George Washington and company not as a method of extending freedom and the right to vote, but as a way of keeping control in the hands of rich. They wrote several anti-democratic provisions into the U.S. Constitution. Slavery was institutionalized. The Senate was not to be elected directly by the people; rather Senators were to be appointed by state legislatures. The President was not to be directly elected by the voters, but elected through an electoral college. The Supreme Court was to be appointed. Only the House of Representatives was elected directly.
More important to our democracy-versus-republic debate, the U.S. Constitution left the question of who could vote in elections to each individual state. In most states only white men who owned a certain amount of property could vote. So, on the whole, the first federal government that met in 1789 was a republic with only a fig-leaf of democratic representation. This is what today's commentators mean when they say America is a republic, not a democracy.
Fortunately (for the democrats), the early federal government was not very powerful. In state after state it became easier for white males to qualify to vote. And slowly, decade after decade, our republic became a democratic republic.
At the national level the major steps toward democracy can be marked by amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The Bill of Rights guaranteed limits to the power of the federal government. The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery. The Fourteenth Amendment effectively extended the vote to all adult male citizens, including ex-slaves, by penalizing states that did not allow for universal male suffrage. The Fifteenth Amendment explicitly gave the right to vote to former slaves. After the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments did not extend suffrage to women, a vigorous campaign for the vote was launched by women, who received the vote through the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920.
But the main Amendment that tipped the scales from the national government of the United States being a mere republic to being a true representative democracy was the often-overlooked Seventeenth Amendment, which took effect in 1913. Since 1913 the U.S. Senate has been elected directly by the voters, rather than being appointed by the state legislatures. That makes the national government democratic in form, as well as being a republic.
There will always be anti-democratic forces in any society. The most blatantly undemocratic feature of U.S. government in the 20th century was the unconstitutional but systematic disenfranchisement of African-American and other non-white citizens. This came to an end in the 1950's and 1960's with a series of Supreme Court decisions against segregation laws, the passage of Civil Rights Acts, and the passage of the Twenty-Fourth Amendment outlawing poll taxes. We even lowered the voting age to 18 with the Twenty-Sixth Amendment in 1971.
There are no longer any voter-qualification impediments to democracy in the United States. But many have noted that the will of the people has tended not to prevail, and that a majority of people eligible to vote are so discouraged that they do not vote. The main reason for this is the buying and selling of elections and politicians by the wealthier class of citizens and their special interest groups. A year or more before elections take place, the winner is decided by those who vote with dollars. But this is a defect in democracy, not a reason to abandon it. The answer is to cure the defect, not to attempt to destroy our representative democracy.
Now that brings us to 2011 and what must happen in 2012, Obama must be defeated at all cost. Don't be fooled by his smooth rhetoric, he is out to destroy our Country as we know it. One of his goals is to be part of a New world order and to make all countries equal to ours and if you give him the chance he will do it too. That is why 2012 will be the most important election, that WE THE PEOPLE have ever voted in. It is time we come together as our Founding Fathers did and fight for our Constitution and our freedom from a government that is to large and spending our nation into debt. You must tell Washington that we will no longer tolerate their abuse of power and special interests deals.
That all elected officials will be held accountable to the people from 2012 forward,that we will not just sit by any longer and watch them destroy this Great Country of ours. That we want real immigration reform and our borders protected, that we want real reform in our schools, we want the bad teachers gone and the good ones paid more, as promised. We want all the illegal’s sent back to their own country. They are taking American resources and jobs and it is time to put a stop to it.
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. cost jobs and substandard health care. That Washington need to stop giving billions to
We need to let Washington know that we want a balanced budget and that we don’t want to be forced into Obama care that will only lead to a health care system that will only go broke over time. Cost jobs and substandard health care.
In 2012 you are the minutemen, this is your fight this is a war to save your Country for your children so that they can grow up and have the same or better opportunities that you had. We as a nation can no long sit back inactive and do nothing to stop the bleeding of this Country.
God Bless America and all of you.
Thomas E Kelly
Monday, July 4, 2011
Welcome To TEK’S America
I hope all of you in the USA had a safe 4th of July and for these of you not in the United States, I hope your weekend was a safe on as well. Having said that, I hope this 4th of July has meant more to you than past ones. That you remember what Independence Day is really all about.
As I sat thinking this weekend about the government that we have in office, it occurred to me, that we really don’t have a functional Government at all. No business can survive without good leadership and the same goes for a government. Here we are buying oil from all over the world, when we have Canada next door that wants to build a oil pipeline to Texas that not only would ease our dependence on foreign oil, but would create thousands of jobs here in the US..But King Obama can’t seem to or won’t make a decision to say we want in on it.
The Government can’t seem to fix anything, but you can, stand up and be counted. Forget complaining about underemployment, unemployment, the economy and the federal deficit, and instead focus on what can be done, is this, one key solution to these issues is clear: If the country would rally behind American manufacturers and their products, the payoff would mean more jobs. Start buying American, will you have to do a little work, so what you have a computer. Here are just some of the companies that you can buy from and send a message to bring back everything to America. American Apparel, Bill’s Khakis,Mag Instrument, Vermont Teddy Bear Company,The Vermont Flannel Company,Zippo,Nordic Ware,Room & Board, Roy Toy,Segway, Steinway,Three Dots,these are just a few places that are all American. You might just surprise yourself it you really start looking. But if you start buying American you will create jobs.
Unfortunately, the truth of free trade is this: Other countries impose strict price controls and heavy restrictions on what Americans can send abroad. In order to do business in foreign lands, American companies had to get in bed with foreign counterparts, infusing dollars into foreign economies. If there was no counterpart, they infused money by building new plants and moving business from American soil to foreign soil where labor is dirt cheap. The byproduct is that companies here have closed, jobs have been reduced and the economy is upside down. Plus, there's not much that can be claimed as made in America anymore.
On the other hand, foreign products sent here are received with open arms bearing prices that the remaining American businesses can't afford to beat, another nail in the coffin of America's economy. Some products are substandard. For example, there are the toys made in China and painted with lead paint and sent here for our kids to play with. Or how about the sheetrock we can get at rock bottom prices from China? The price we pay in savings is that it's infused with sulfur products that promote corrosion of the pipes and wiring in your home. Maybe that's their way of helping our building trade with jobs that will have to be redone all too soon?
My real point is a question: Isn't it about time we stop the better living through denial and demand a change? When we were young, we took to the streets to protest what was wrong. Those actions definitely got attention. Maybe it's time we get their attention again so we can actually manage to once again find something to buy that's made in America. It is time we say enough is enough to Obama and people like that get into office and think that they are Gods and have their own private agendas. Somehow they believe that there is no accountability to the people that they work for. 2012 lets show them how wrong they are, I don’t care Republican or Democrat if they are not listening to the will of the people, kick their butts out of office. The Democrats and a few Republicans want to bring the new Fairness Doctrine, with that you could see many top conservative radio hosts canned. Tell them to back off that we had enough of them and leave Fox news and others like them alone.
Until we meet again
TEK
God Bless America and all of you
As I sat thinking this weekend about the government that we have in office, it occurred to me, that we really don’t have a functional Government at all. No business can survive without good leadership and the same goes for a government. Here we are buying oil from all over the world, when we have Canada next door that wants to build a oil pipeline to Texas that not only would ease our dependence on foreign oil, but would create thousands of jobs here in the US..But King Obama can’t seem to or won’t make a decision to say we want in on it.
The Government can’t seem to fix anything, but you can, stand up and be counted. Forget complaining about underemployment, unemployment, the economy and the federal deficit, and instead focus on what can be done, is this, one key solution to these issues is clear: If the country would rally behind American manufacturers and their products, the payoff would mean more jobs. Start buying American, will you have to do a little work, so what you have a computer. Here are just some of the companies that you can buy from and send a message to bring back everything to America. American Apparel, Bill’s Khakis,Mag Instrument, Vermont Teddy Bear Company,The Vermont Flannel Company,Zippo,Nordic Ware,Room & Board, Roy Toy,Segway, Steinway,Three Dots,these are just a few places that are all American. You might just surprise yourself it you really start looking. But if you start buying American you will create jobs.
Unfortunately, the truth of free trade is this: Other countries impose strict price controls and heavy restrictions on what Americans can send abroad. In order to do business in foreign lands, American companies had to get in bed with foreign counterparts, infusing dollars into foreign economies. If there was no counterpart, they infused money by building new plants and moving business from American soil to foreign soil where labor is dirt cheap. The byproduct is that companies here have closed, jobs have been reduced and the economy is upside down. Plus, there's not much that can be claimed as made in America anymore.
On the other hand, foreign products sent here are received with open arms bearing prices that the remaining American businesses can't afford to beat, another nail in the coffin of America's economy. Some products are substandard. For example, there are the toys made in China and painted with lead paint and sent here for our kids to play with. Or how about the sheetrock we can get at rock bottom prices from China? The price we pay in savings is that it's infused with sulfur products that promote corrosion of the pipes and wiring in your home. Maybe that's their way of helping our building trade with jobs that will have to be redone all too soon?
My real point is a question: Isn't it about time we stop the better living through denial and demand a change? When we were young, we took to the streets to protest what was wrong. Those actions definitely got attention. Maybe it's time we get their attention again so we can actually manage to once again find something to buy that's made in America. It is time we say enough is enough to Obama and people like that get into office and think that they are Gods and have their own private agendas. Somehow they believe that there is no accountability to the people that they work for. 2012 lets show them how wrong they are, I don’t care Republican or Democrat if they are not listening to the will of the people, kick their butts out of office. The Democrats and a few Republicans want to bring the new Fairness Doctrine, with that you could see many top conservative radio hosts canned. Tell them to back off that we had enough of them and leave Fox news and others like them alone.
Until we meet again
TEK
God Bless America and all of you
Friday, July 1, 2011
AMERICA - 4th of July
What does the Fourth of July mean to you? Parades…? Fireworks…? A day off from School or Work…? Unfortunately, many of you know very little about the true meaning of the birthday of our country. On July 4th, 1776, John Hancock, who was president of the Continental Congress, and Charles Thomson, who was the Secretary, signed the Declaration of Independence, a document that stated we were no longer willing to be ruled by the British.
"The Price They Paid"
From the National Federation of National Business;
Have you ever wondered what happened to those who signed the Declaration of Independence? Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons in the Revolutionary Army, another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from their wounds or the hardships of the Revolutionary War. What kind of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists. Eleven were merchants, nine were farmers and large plantation owners, men of means, well educated. But they signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
They signed and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags. Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward. Vandals or soldiers, or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walten, Gwinnett, Heyward, Rutledge, and Middleton.
At the Battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson, Jr. noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. The owner quietly urged General George Washington to open fire, which was done. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt. Francis Lewis had his home and his properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months. John Hart was driven from his wife's bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his grist mill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home after the war to find his wife dead, his children vanished. A few weeks later he died from exhaustion and a broken heart. Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates. Such were the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These were not wild eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft spoken men of means and education. They had security, but valued liberty more. Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, the pledged: "For the support of this Declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of the Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor."
They gave us an Independent America... Can We Keep It?
That will remain to be seen, we will lose it you as a people don’t educate yourself and know what you’re voting for. If you keep putting people like Obama a "Socialist” in office we will in time lose everything. Obama isn’t satisfied being President of the United States, He wants to be King Obama – with only one law and that is Obama’s Law. He would be more than happy to have you as his loyal subjects.
Obama has made it very clear that he doesn’t care about the rule of law, or his senate or congress, he uses Obama law. Let’s hope for the sake of the United States and our country that you come out of your brain dead state you been living in and Vote Obama out of office no matter how many adds he runs and how much money he raises. Our founding fathers fought to give you freedom and every man or boy since then that has died on a battlefield, has been for you. If you’re Freedom worth fighting for, are you willing to fight for your children and their children now? Or do you just want to stay in your brain dead state and let everything slip away from you? That is your choice in 2012, let’s pray to God you wake up and do what is good for your country, can’t you hear our forefathers calling you to arms, crying out to you to fight for the Freedom that they gave you.
Until we meet again
Sincerely
TEK
"The Price They Paid"
From the National Federation of National Business;
Have you ever wondered what happened to those who signed the Declaration of Independence? Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons in the Revolutionary Army, another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from their wounds or the hardships of the Revolutionary War. What kind of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists. Eleven were merchants, nine were farmers and large plantation owners, men of means, well educated. But they signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
They signed and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags. Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward. Vandals or soldiers, or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walten, Gwinnett, Heyward, Rutledge, and Middleton.
At the Battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson, Jr. noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. The owner quietly urged General George Washington to open fire, which was done. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt. Francis Lewis had his home and his properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months. John Hart was driven from his wife's bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his grist mill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home after the war to find his wife dead, his children vanished. A few weeks later he died from exhaustion and a broken heart. Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates. Such were the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These were not wild eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft spoken men of means and education. They had security, but valued liberty more. Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, the pledged: "For the support of this Declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of the Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor."
They gave us an Independent America... Can We Keep It?
That will remain to be seen, we will lose it you as a people don’t educate yourself and know what you’re voting for. If you keep putting people like Obama a "Socialist” in office we will in time lose everything. Obama isn’t satisfied being President of the United States, He wants to be King Obama – with only one law and that is Obama’s Law. He would be more than happy to have you as his loyal subjects.
Obama has made it very clear that he doesn’t care about the rule of law, or his senate or congress, he uses Obama law. Let’s hope for the sake of the United States and our country that you come out of your brain dead state you been living in and Vote Obama out of office no matter how many adds he runs and how much money he raises. Our founding fathers fought to give you freedom and every man or boy since then that has died on a battlefield, has been for you. If you’re Freedom worth fighting for, are you willing to fight for your children and their children now? Or do you just want to stay in your brain dead state and let everything slip away from you? That is your choice in 2012, let’s pray to God you wake up and do what is good for your country, can’t you hear our forefathers calling you to arms, crying out to you to fight for the Freedom that they gave you.
Until we meet again
Sincerely
TEK
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Good Morning America
I was sitting here this morning having my coffee and working on my next novel, as I do most Saturday mornings. When I thought about what America was and where it is going. What has happen to us as a people? Have we become so complacent in our lives? It is no wonder we have let people like Barack Obama in office. One only has to watch television to know that Barack Obama has a self-righteous attitude towards everything.
The United States of America is 235 years old as of July 4, 2011 what does it mean to you? Do you rejoice and thank God that this is the country you live in? Or maybe you don’t care anymore. Could it be because our schools don’t teach American history to our children any more, they don’t have a clue what it is about except there are fireworks. It makes me wonder what happened to the back bone of our nation. For those of you that have forgotten or just don’t have a clue to our past; What America stands for I will turn on the lights for you. This is what it means to me.
When I think of the 4th of July I think of how corporations have taken over our country, how we've made such little progress since the Civil Rights Movement, and how our idiot leaders and the corporations are never held responsible for their actions. People come to our county to get away from dictatorship and oppression to have a better life, yet these same people start pushing their beliefs on us through the government usually resulting in loss of our rights in some form or another. I have never understood why people come to a place to change their lives, yet want to change it back to what they just left. Interesting question isn’t. But the 4th of July means more to me then what I just said, it mean
(1) the United States of America will celebrate the 235nd Anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence from Great Britain
(2) When I think about the Fourth of July/Independence Day, I think about the Men and Women who served in the American Revolution and gave their lives so that future Americans who were not yet born could live in a great nation, the United States of America.
(3) I think of the freedom I have living in America and all of those who fought for our freedom before 1776 and those who still fight for it.
(4) I have chosen this answer as the Best Answer because I do agree that the Men and Women who have served in the US Military are fighting for our freedom before, during, and after the year 1776.
So why are you so eager to give up your freedom to a socialist like Barack Obama? A man that hates America and America’s military. A man, that wants to take your rights and your freedom away from you? A man that is hell bent on destroying your country and your way of life for generations to come. Think about that and think about all the people that have given up their lives so that you and your children and their children could be free to choose and say what they think. Do you want to lose that freedom? Having said that I respect your right to think and express whatever you want.
Have a Good weekend
God Bless America and you
TEK
The United States of America is 235 years old as of July 4, 2011 what does it mean to you? Do you rejoice and thank God that this is the country you live in? Or maybe you don’t care anymore. Could it be because our schools don’t teach American history to our children any more, they don’t have a clue what it is about except there are fireworks. It makes me wonder what happened to the back bone of our nation. For those of you that have forgotten or just don’t have a clue to our past; What America stands for I will turn on the lights for you. This is what it means to me.
When I think of the 4th of July I think of how corporations have taken over our country, how we've made such little progress since the Civil Rights Movement, and how our idiot leaders and the corporations are never held responsible for their actions. People come to our county to get away from dictatorship and oppression to have a better life, yet these same people start pushing their beliefs on us through the government usually resulting in loss of our rights in some form or another. I have never understood why people come to a place to change their lives, yet want to change it back to what they just left. Interesting question isn’t. But the 4th of July means more to me then what I just said, it mean
(1) the United States of America will celebrate the 235nd Anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence from Great Britain
(2) When I think about the Fourth of July/Independence Day, I think about the Men and Women who served in the American Revolution and gave their lives so that future Americans who were not yet born could live in a great nation, the United States of America.
(3) I think of the freedom I have living in America and all of those who fought for our freedom before 1776 and those who still fight for it.
(4) I have chosen this answer as the Best Answer because I do agree that the Men and Women who have served in the US Military are fighting for our freedom before, during, and after the year 1776.
So why are you so eager to give up your freedom to a socialist like Barack Obama? A man that hates America and America’s military. A man, that wants to take your rights and your freedom away from you? A man that is hell bent on destroying your country and your way of life for generations to come. Think about that and think about all the people that have given up their lives so that you and your children and their children could be free to choose and say what they think. Do you want to lose that freedom? Having said that I respect your right to think and express whatever you want.
Have a Good weekend
God Bless America and you
TEK
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