Archived Opinion

Join the new movement or die

To the Editor:

I read with interest the editor’s op piece (Even today, our republic is on shaky ground, www.smokymountainnews.com/opinion/item/17903). It seems that he has almost admitted what his senses are telling him. Almost.

Over the last two administrations I have noted more of our natural rights have come under attack by enemies of the Constitution and Bill of Rights. All of these natural rights have essentially fallen or have been neutralized. All except for the Second Amendment.

We’ve seen the child-like representatives in D.C. (district of criminals) staging a sit-in on the House floor, hypocritically ordering in Chick-fil-A and attempting to neutralize due process, our natural right of self-defense and perhaps even habeas corpus by their “cry bully” tactics. Their behavior smacks of the mentally disordered. If the country’s representatives behave unsoundly and irrationally over our natural right to protect our loved ones and ourselves and are applauded by the mob, what does that say of those who voted them into those offices?

A student of history can easily show you exactly where the American Experiment went wrong. Look at Lincoln’s first administration. Only a tyrant suspends habeas corpus for citizens (over 10,000) of these United States. The alleged exigencies of a never-declared war weren’t then and are never an excuse to override the contract between the citizens and their representatives. The ends do not justify the means. There was an insurrection in 1863 because of this tyrannical behavior involving thousands of militia (Democrats) in Indiana that only failed because someone talked.

“Historically, a government that can, without due process, throw a citizen into a dungeon or summarily execute him is considered to be a tyranny, not a democracy. By any historical definition, the United States today is a tyranny. (www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-03-27/does-united-states-still-exist).

Thomas Jefferson wrote about American virtues; the virtues of justice, benevolence, industry, moderation, patience, self-reliance, vigilance and spirited participation, wisdom, friendship, piety, charity, toleration and hope.

All are disappearing or gone.

When Rome lost its virtues, Rome fell. As we have lost/discarded our American virtues, so has our star diminished.

Soon now, that “time and place where wise people ... those who value reason, are well read, those who treasure human connections and are not always trying to be witty or bombastic,” their wisdom will be totally devalued. Men and women will deride what was once called wisdom and value the momentary and the mindless. 

Panem et circenses, bread and circuses, was a calculated political strategy used by the Roman emperors and their allies to control and rule the mob. It worked quite well until the oligarchs could no longer pay for the grain grown in Egypt and shipped to Rome. The empire could no longer pay its armies, the government collapsed and the first of several barbarian invasions occurred.

With over $19 trillion of debt, some say that time is rapidly approaching for America.

Since the editor of SMN wasn’t quite ready to make an admission in last week’s op piece of the actual state of things I will.

The republic is dead.

The rule of law is dead.

We are in the interregnum.

A political agenda/ideology won’t save you.

A man on a white horse won’t save you.

Only you can save yourself and establish a second republic, freer and better than the first and with those Jeffersonian virtues.

 The only thing that matters now is what do we intend to do about it?

Benjamin Franklin said “Join or die.”

Carl Iobst

Cullowhee

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