21 May 2010

What Were They Thinking?

We all suspect that the Founding Fathers were better-educated and/or wiser than ourselves, when it came to the history of governments, and the theories about how better to govern these Colonies. I want to begin examining the things they knew, leading up to the Declaration (and later, the Constitution).

For if it [the unlawful act of government] reach no farther than some private men's cases, though they have a right to defend themselves ... yet the right to do so will not easily engage them in a contest ... it being as impossible for one or a few oppressed men to disturb the government where the body of the people do not think themselves concerned in it...

But if either these illegal acts have extended to the majority of the people, or if the mischief and oppression has light [struck] only on some few, but in such cases as the precedent and consequences seem to threaten all, and they are persuaded in their consciences that their laws, and with them, their estates, liberties, and lives are in danger, and perhaps their religion, too, how will they be hindered from resisting illegal force used against them, I cannot tell. (John Locke, Second Essay Concerning Civil Government)

What he's saying is that a majority of the people are likely to revolt, just as our forebears did, when they perceive - as a majority - that they are threatened by government's action(s). The Founders certainly believed that the colonists, as a whole, were in jeopardy from British actions.

Now go read the headlines again; look at the Manhattan Declaration; see the list of complaints forwarded by Tea Partiers, and think again. Are we approaching such a time? Have we reached it? At what point is a consensus of "the majority" achieved? And who decides?

Discuss.

3 comments:

DR said...

Great post Rev. Paul and let's not forget, even our founding fathers never got a majority of support during the beginning of the revolution.

Unknown said...

Rev - We are WAY BEYOND the limits of suffering allowable to ANY free man. The problem is that fighting 'the government' is nothing more than corrupt officials... the support structure are our family and friends... So do we turn to the states and hope, like with Arizona, they excercise their sovereignty?

This is all coming to a head - but how are the players defined? What is the boiling point, the tipping point, and to what extent does it all come about?

Jenny said...

Ooh - thank you. I've been meaning to get to reading that one.

It is just fascinating trying to grok their world.

I'm afraid I can't recall where I heard it - I think it was an Ellis book on audio - saying something to the effect that the Founders had once important thing going for them... that they knew the eyes of posterity were on them, so they had better behave accordingly.