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THE WAR ON DRUGS—A FAILURE

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Posted on 21st October 2005 by admin in Articles |John White Archives

By John White

While on cruise recently, my ship docked next to a U.S. Coast Guard cutter in Cozumel, Mexico.  I’m a former naval officer with a warm spot in my heart for all our troops, so as I strolled past the cutter, I waved at the two men guarding the quarterdeck and we began to chat.  They invited me aboard so we didn’t have to shout.

I went up the gangway, saluted the flag and stepped onto the deck.  As we talked, I asked why a U.S. man of war was in Mexico and where it came from.  “We’re on Caribbean drug interdiction,” the man with the M-16 said.  “We’re home ported in Galveston, Texas.  We stopped here to refuel.”
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AMERICA’S FOUNDATION IS FREEDOM, NOT LIBERTY

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Posted on 21st October 2005 by admin in Articles |John White Archives

By John White

People often speak about freedom and liberty as if they were synonymous.  However, they are not.  There is an important distinction between them which all Americans need to understand.

America is founded on the highest and most universal value—freedom—and the source of freedom, God.  That is why the allegorical female figure atop our nation’s Capitol is named “Freedom.”  Likewise, the eagle, appears on the Great Seal of the United States because it is the freest creature, the most able to soar heavenward.  Similarly, our nation’s highest civilian award, like the Medal of Honor for the armed forces, is the Medal of Freedom.
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AMERICA’S INCIDENT IN A PARKING LOT

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Posted on 21st October 2005 by admin in Articles |John White Archives

By John White

In early June 2007, while I was walking with my wife and grown daughter through the parking lot of Stop & Shop in Cheshire, a young man walked out of the store wearing a black t-shirt which said in four-inch-high plain white capital letters, “I DON’T GIVE A F – – K”, with the F-word spelled out in full.

Now, I’m no prude.  I read Catcher in the Rye, Lady Chatterley’s Lover and Ulysses while in college in the 1950s.  And as a former sailor, I’m used to rough language.
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What If Public Schools Were Abolished?

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Posted on 21st October 2005 by admin in Articles

By Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
[This article was originally published here.
See also the Alliance for the Separation of School and State.]

In American culture, public schools are praised in public and criticized in private, which is roughly the opposite of how we tend to treat large-scale enterprises like Wal-Mart. In public, everyone says that Wal-Mart is awful, filled with shoddy foreign products and exploiting workers. But in private, we buy the well-priced, quality goods, and long lines of people hope to be hired.
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MESSAGE TO BIN LADEN: AMERICA ALREADY IS A THEOCRACY

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Posted on 21st October 2005 by admin in Articles |John White Archives

By John White

Shortly after 9/11, I attended a local prayer breakfast at which service club members, clergy and town officials gathered to consider the Pledge of Allegiance’s phrase “one Nation under God.”

As I reflected on that theme, it occurred to me that Osama bin Laden and his cohorts—the Taliban of Afghanistan—might also say their objective is “one Nation under God.”  After all, they speak of the “nation of Islam” and call for an Islamic theocracy.
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R.I.P. THE CONSTITUTION

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Posted on 21st October 2005 by admin in Articles |John White Archives

By John White

The dictator of the barnyard in Animal Farm, George Orwell’s  satire on totalitarianism, is Napoleon the pig.  How appropriate a character to place in that role!

Government is a pig which feeds on your liberty, your property and your privacy.  All government officials are potential tyrants.  The natural course of unchecked power is totalitarianism by those who govern and slavery for those who are governed.  Throughout history, the greatest threat to freedom has come from government because—as George Washington so aptly put it—government is simply organized force.

The Founders of America understood that well.  That is why they wisely limited the powers of the federal government to those enumerated in the Constitution, and reserved all other powers to the states and the people.  That is also why they amended the Constitution with the Bill of Rights, which specifies the inalienable rights of each citizen, no matter what the government or a majority of the population might otherwise want.  In the America of our Flounders, the individual citizen was regarded as sovereign; no monarch, dictator or religious junta rules us.  Through the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, the hard-won liberty and rights of individuals were to be preserved for them and their posterity.  Through the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, government was to remain forever a servant of the people, not become its master.

However, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance against those who would steal our liberty, our property and our privacy, whether by direct force, coercion or stealthy means.  Our liberty, our sovereignty, our rights, our property, our privacy, our justice and our human dignity can only be preserved by an informed, alert electorate who cares and gets involved in the political process.  That is the fundamental obligation of citizens of the American republic.  Thomas Jefferson put it simply:  “We have the greatest opportunity the world has ever seen, as long as we remain honest—which will be as long as we can keep the attention of our people alive. If they once become inattentive to public affairs, you and I, and Congress and Assemblies, judges and governors would all become wolves.”

We the people are the owners of America, so we have the responsibilities which every owner of an enterprise has.  We have to supervise the operation of our country and we have to appoint or elect stewards to represent us in performing the activities necessary to run it.

Sadly, many owners have become derelict in their duty.  Their obligations of ownership are being disregarded.  Those obligations are, in simplest terms, to understand the principles of our government and our society, to inform ourselves about the issues, and to vote for what our conscience tells us is best for our country.

Instead, voter ignorance and apathy have led to a situation in which our government is largely unchecked and abusive, especially at the federal level.  In fact, we no longer have a federal government.  Federalism is nearly dead. Instead, we have a national government—collective statism—with power centralized in Washington, D.C.  That change has been going on, gradually and incrementally, at least since FDR’s administration.  Some place its start as far back as Lincoln’s administration.  In any case, it has resulted in a profound—and thoroughly undesirable—change from what the Constitution intends.

The federal government created by the Framers of the Constitution has narrowly defined functions which are limited to national defense and certain matters among the states.  The national government created by Destroyers of the Constitution has functions which intrude into every aspect of our lives and federalize matters intended to be left to the states and local communities.  Moreover, the Destroyers have created a welfare state which addicts citizens to government handouts and numbs them, intellectually and morally, to the danger of welfarism.  Our Founders wanted freedom from government, not dependence on it.  Last of all, the national government is rushing us into international pacts and global alliances which undermine our national sovereignty, override the Constitution and bring America into a world government being set up through the United Nations.  Under that world government, you can say good-bye to your liberty, your sovereignty, your rights, your property, your justice, your privacy and your freedom of thought.

If government is a pig, in America it has become a wild boar.  The IRS is its tusks.  The regulatory agencies are its hoofs.  With its tusks, it rips away large portions of our wealth and property to feed its insatiable appetite for control via an ever-bloating bureaucracy.  With its hooves, it tramples through our lives, smashing our rights and forcing burdensome and costly regulations on our  occupational behavior and our personal activities.  And to add insult to injury, after confiscating wealth and handcuffing the producers of wealth, it redistributes that wealth, first to itself (via wages, benefits and pensions far better than most congresspeople would ever get in private business) and then to special interest groups who have done nothing to earn it, such as social and corporate welfare, and foreign aid.  Perhaps the worst injury of all is this:  it steals your life—i.e., the time you need to comply, individually and corporately, with ever-increasing regulations, especially those of the IRS.  Tax overpayments can be recovered, but those hours and days of your life required for tax preparation can never be.

The federal government has intruded unconstitutionally into every aspect of our lives—our freedom, our rights, our property, our thoughts, our spiritual life, our human dignity.  If America is a family and the government is the head of the family, we are living in a dysfunctional family with abusive parents.

The solution:  Scale back the federal govenment to its constitutional limits by voting into office those who will do so and by supporting those people and groups who educate the public about this ever-growing menace to our freedom.

Also bear in mind that our bloated federal government would not be possible without funding.  That funding—the blood which keeps the monster alive—comes through taxation, especially the loathsome income tax.  It should be eliminated.  Insofar as there are legitimate government expenses to be met, only a national sales tax, which is voluntary, befits a free people.

The State Tree: The Charter Oak

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Posted on 20th October 2005 by admin in Articles

Deep-rooted in the historic tradition of Connecticut, the Charter Oak is one of the most colorful and significant symbols of the spiritual strength and love of freedom which inspired our Colonial forebears in their militant resistance to tyranny. This venerable giant of the forest, over half a century old when it hid the treasured Charter in 1687, finally fell during a great storm on August 21, 1856.

Two English kings, a royal agent, a colonial hero and a candle-lit room are the figures and backdrop in one of the most thrilling chapters of America’s legend of liberty. The refusal of our early Connecticut leaders to give up the Charter, despite royal order and the threat of arms, marked one of the greatest episodes of determined courage in our history.

On October 9, 1662, The General Court of Connecticut formally received the Charter won from King Charles II by the suave diplomacy of Governor John Winthrop, Jr., who had crossed the ocean for the purpose. Twenty-five years later, with the succession of James II to the throne, Connecticut’s troubles began in earnest.

Sir Edmund Andros, His Majesty’s agent, followed up failure of various strategies by arriving in Hartford with an armed force to seize the Charter. After hours of debate, with the Charter on the table between the opposing parties, the candle-lit room suddenly went dark.

Moments later when the candles were re-lighted, the Charter was gone. Captain Joseph Wadsworth is credited with having removed and secreted the Charter in the majestic oak on the Wyllys estate.

 To read more about our state symbols click here.