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2017-07-04 Home Front: Culture Wars
The Declaration Of Independence Has Been Mocked Out Of Meaning
[Townhall] For most Americans, Independence Day means firecrackers and cookouts. The Declaration of Independence--whose proclamation, on July 4, 1776, we celebrate--doesn't feature. Contemporary Americans are less likely to read it now that it’s easily available on the Internet, than when it relied on horseback riders for its distribution.

It is fair to say that the Declaration of Independence has been mocked out of meaning.

Back in 1776, gallopers carried the Declaration through the country. Printer John Dunlap had worked "through the night" to set the full text on "a handsome folio sheet," recounts historian David Hackett Fischer in Liberty And Freedom. And the president of the Continental Congress, John Hancock, urged that the "people be universally informed." (They were!)

Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration, called it "an expression of the American Mind." An examination of Jefferson's constitutional thought makes plain that he would no longer consider the collective mentality of contemporary Americans and their leaders (Rep. Ron Paul excepted) "American" in any meaningful way. For the Jeffersonian mind was that of an avowed Whig--an American Whig whose roots were in the English, Whig political philosophy of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Come to think of it, Jefferson would not recognize England as the home of the Whigs in whose writings colonial Americans were steeped--John Locke, Algernon Sidney, Paul Rapin, Thomas Gordon and others.

The essence of this "pattern of ideas and attitudes," almost completely lost today, explains David N. Mayer in The Constitutional Thought of Thomas Jefferson, was a view of government as an inherent threat to liberty and the necessity for eternal vigilance.
Posted by Besoeker 2017-07-04 09:34|| || Front Page|| [10 views ]  Top

#1 Some food for thought, or possibly not.
Posted by Besoeker 2017-07-04 09:38||   2017-07-04 09:38|| Front Page Top

#2 It is fair to say that the Declaration of Independence has been mocked out of meaning.

Maybe, but I think there are many patriots within the country who value the principles of the Founders. The founders and signers of the Declaration of Independence showed much courage. There was great risk in doing what they did. "In doing so, they knew the signers were inviting a declaration of war by England. They knew that, they would be deemed traitors, they would be possibly forfeiting all their possessions and maybe their lives to the crown. In signing the document, they were putting bounties on their own heads.

How many would be willing to forfeit everything today if push came to shove. Today, the threats appear to be more from within than from without.
Posted by JohnQC 2017-07-04 10:25||   2017-07-04 10:25|| Front Page Top

#3 Free means free. It doesn't mean free to be only what you want me to be. Period.
Posted by M. Murcek 2017-07-04 11:42||   2017-07-04 11:42|| Front Page Top

#4 Free means free. It doesn't mean free to be only what you want me to be. Period

Depends. The concept of Liberty differed between the Virginian, the New Englander, the Pennsylvanian, and the 'Westerner'.

The miracle was that they eventually agreed to work together.
Posted by Pappy 2017-07-04 11:51||   2017-07-04 11:51|| Front Page Top

#5 ..protecting the natural rights of Englishmen.
Posted by Procopius2k 2017-07-04 13:31||   2017-07-04 13:31|| Front Page Top










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