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The following is a reprint from the "The Daily Reckoning" newsletter
dated July 4, 2000
Who am I?
Who among us has not asked that question of himself? Now, we have an
answer.
Janet Reno, Attny. General of the United States during an Interview on
CBS "60 Minutes" on June 26, 1999:
"A cultist is one who has a strong belief in the Bible...who frequently
attends Bible studies; who has a high level of financial giving to a
Christian cause; who home schools their children; who has accumulated
survival foods and has strong belief in the Second Amendment; and who
distrusts big government. Any of these may qualify a person as a
cultist
but certainly more than one of these would cause us to look at this
person as a threat and his family as being in a risk situation that
qualifies for government interference."
*** Now I know, I am a cultist. I contributed substantially to my local
Episcopal church and I home-schooled my children. And I have far more
faith in the Acts of the Apostles than in the Income Equalization Act
or
the Humphrey-Hawkins Act. My family must be in a 'risk situation.'
On July 4th, 1776 a group of rich men and philosophers in the American
colonies got very excited. They were so annoyed at Britain's mercantile
restrictions and petty taxes that they decided to take action...The
reasonable thing to do would have been to negotiate, to talk, to
bargain...to seek a concession here and there. The changes the
colonists
wanted were marginal ones. They did not seek a whole New World Order.
They didn't want a real revolution - no new calendar, no Thermidor or
Brumaire; the churches would not be burned; no palaces would be looted
and no monarchs killed. They merely wanted to be able to do business as
they saw fit, without the interference of a meddlesome government. They
probably could have gotten most
of what they wanted by being patient and reasonable. But their blood
was
up. And so they did something extreme. They announced their
independence
from Britain, putting their lives and fortunes at risk, and gave every
American some names and dates that almost none could remember.
The consequences were disastrous for many of these men.
"The men who sowed the path to freedom 224 years ago were a remarkable
group of men. We know them as the signers of the Declaration of
Independence. But to the British they were
marked men and traitors to the Crown.
Here's what happened to the signers of one of the greatest documents in
history.
Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned.
Two of their sons were killed serving in the Revolutionary Army.
Another
had two sons captured.
Nine of the 56 fought and died from wounds or hardships during the
Revolutionary War.
These men put their lives and everything they owned on the line.
All knew that they would be jailed, tortured or killed if captured.
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 broke.
Thomas McKean was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move
his family constantly. He served in Congress without pay and died poor.
Vandals or soldiers looted the properties of Diller, Hall, Clymer,
Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Ruttledge and Middleton.
At the battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson, Jr. learned that the British
General, Cornwallis, had taken over his (Nelson's) home for his
headquarters. Nelson urged Washington to open fire on his home,
destroying his home and property. Nelson died bankrupt.
Francis Lewis had his home and property destroyed. The British jailed
his wife, and she died a few months later.
John Hart was driven from his home, and he and his 13 children fled for
their lives. For over a year, Hart lived in the forest or in caves.
Later Hart returned to what was left of his home: he died from
exhaustion and a broken heart.
Norris and Livingston suffered from similar fates."
These men pledged "for the support of this declaration, with the firm
reliance on the protection of the divine providence, we mutually pledge
to each other, our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor."
Today, we remember these men and the sacrifices they made. But for
what?
What difference did it really make? For all their suffering have our
contentments been altered in any way? Did anyone's life expectancy
increase as a result? Did anyone's income go up? Are we really so much
better off
than the citizens of Britain? Or Australia? Or New Zealand or Canada?
The founding fathers didn't know it at the time, but government was
just
at the threshold of a huge multi-century bull market that would take it
from something that had little impact on peoples' lives, to something
that controlled nearly ever detail - from the price of rice to
the amount of water in your toilet. The sacred honor of today's
politicians seems concentrated on whether it takes two clicks for you
to
reach an Internet connection or just one. And it didn't seem to matter
whether you were independent or not. In the time since the Declaration
of Independence almost all the world's nations have suffered the same
fate.
In America today, nothing is too trivial or too private to escape the
notice of the heirs of Misters Adams and Madison. Every aspect of your
financial life, for example, is open to inspection. Every molecule you
swallow is subject to government approval. Every root cellar and pigsty
you build must have the permission of a swarm of agents. Instead of
working less than 3% of the time to pay taxes, as did the American
Colonists, we now work about 50% of our time to support federal, state,
and local parasites. What's worse, we have to suffer through
quadrennial
political campaigns (which are stupider than game shows and much less
honest) to determine who gets to rob us.
And there is no escape. Imagine getting together a group of hotheads
such as those who met in Philadelphia in that summer 224 years ago. The
Truths that were self-evident two centuries ago - are now threats to
the
republic. People who believe in the rights that were inalienable in the
time of Jefferson - such as the right to liberty and the right to bear
arms to maintain it - are seen as dangerous cultists. Try to assert
your
right to 'dissolve the bonds' that tie you to Janet Reno and the
Clinton
Administration and she will have you shot in the back.
Better yet, forget the whole thing. Grill some hot dogs...drink some
beer...watch the rockets' red glare and the bombs bursting in air and
be
thankful you don't live in Zimbabwe.
Your very thankful eyes and ears here in France...
Bill Bonner
P.S. A nice thing about living in a foreign country is that it changes
your perspective. When I lived in America, I viewed most of the news as
a tragedy - a miscarriage of justice here... skullduggery there...
numbskullery almost everywhere. But here in France, I read the papers
and see things in a different light.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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