Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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Frankly, I believe applies to the Neo-Cons too.
Compromise vs Moral Relativism
By Thomas Brewton
Magic City Morning Star, Nov 28, 2006
http://magic-city-news.com/article_7122.shtml
<>
Between the Constitution as written and the liberal paradigm,
no compromise is possible. Every concession to liberal
policies entails sacrificing individual political liberty.When people share common principles, compromise is
possible. But when the founding principles of society,
expressed in the Constitution, are attacked by liberal moral
relativists bent upon destroying those principles, acceding to
their demands is, not compromise, but surrender.For that reason, demands by liberal media and by voters that
Congress compromise and "get something done" are really
demands that we continue slowly to dismantle the
Constitution. The analogy is to heat yourself in the winter by
tearing your house down, piece by piece, to burn in the
fireplace.The Constitution created a government of limited power for a
religious and moral people. Political power was to be curbed
by citizens' God-given, inalienable, natural-law individual
rights to life, liberty, and private property. As the English
Glorious Revolution of 1689 established, when a ruler
arbitrarily contravenes those rights, he has broken the social
compact and thereby forfeited his right to rule.The paradigm of American liberal-progressive-socialists, in
diametric contrast, is an authoritarian government that has
both the right and the duty to determine how people should
live their lives and even what thoughts are to be permitted
expression in education and public forums. In the government
envisioned by liberals, the "public good," as defined by
liberals, always trumps individual rights.In this liberal paradigm, political-state planners are the source
of economic and social well-being. The welfare state is
thought to be essential, because private individuals and
private businesses are, according to liberal theory, incapable
of doing the job.Liberals are atheists or agnostics (or people who, in
ignorance, believe themselves to be Christians) who believe
that Judeo-Christian religious beliefs should be eliminated
from government and education. Many liberals insist that the
First Amendment's ban on establishing an official religion
means that the United States should be free from spiritual
religion altogether. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., our first
socialist Supreme Court member, wrote that morality should
play no role in the law. This, despite Tocqueville's observation
in 1832 that Christianity was the most influential single factor
in America's uniquely successful republican democracy.At the same time that individual political liberties are steadily
curtailed, liberalism advocates no-holds-barred personal
hedonism. Liberals want an amoral society that accepts, even
welcomes, foul language, flouting social custom, abortion,
sexual promiscuity, same-sex marriage, and an endless list of
things designed to corrode and erode the social compact
upon which the Constitution was based. Imposing hedonism,
usually by judicial fiat, is a curtailment of individual political
liberty.Compromise with liberals thus necessitates accepting moral
relativism, the idea that there are no timeless, religious or
philosophical principles of morality flowing from the
relationship between humans and God, the Creator of the
universe. One might as well say the 2 + 2 = 4 applies as a
principle only when that answer serves the interests of the
observer.Historically, political societies that abandoned their early core
beliefs and pursued the course of moral relativism thereafter
fell victim to outside aggressors or slowly declined in
economic well-being. Not content with that inevitability,
liberals want to accelerate the process by subordinating the
Constitution to so-called international law and a world
government under the UN.Thomas E. Brewton is a staff writer for the New Media Alliance,
Inc. The New Media Alliance is a non-profit (501c3) national
coalition of writers, journalists and grass-roots media outlets.His weblog is THE VIEW FROM 1776Email comments to [email protected]
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Frankly, I believe applies to the Neo-Cons too.
Compromise vs Moral Relativism
By Thomas Brewton
Magic City Morning Star, Nov 28, 2006
http://magic-city-news.com/article_7122.shtml
<>
Between the Constitution as written and the liberal paradigm,
no compromise is possible. Every concession to liberal
policies entails sacrificing individual political liberty.When people share common principles, compromise is
possible. But when the founding principles of society,
expressed in the Constitution, are attacked by liberal moral
relativists bent upon destroying those principles, acceding to
their demands is, not compromise, but surrender.For that reason, demands by liberal media and by voters that
Congress compromise and "get something done" are really
demands that we continue slowly to dismantle the
Constitution. The analogy is to heat yourself in the winter by
tearing your house down, piece by piece, to burn in the
fireplace.The Constitution created a government of limited power for a
religious and moral people. Political power was to be curbed
by citizens' God-given, inalienable, natural-law individual
rights to life, liberty, and private property. As the English
Glorious Revolution of 1689 established, when a ruler
arbitrarily contravenes those rights, he has broken the social
compact and thereby forfeited his right to rule.The paradigm of American liberal-progressive-socialists, in
diametric contrast, is an authoritarian government that has
both the right and the duty to determine how people should
live their lives and even what thoughts are to be permitted
expression in education and public forums. In the government
envisioned by liberals, the "public good," as defined by
liberals, always trumps individual rights.In this liberal paradigm, political-state planners are the source
of economic and social well-being. The welfare state is
thought to be essential, because private individuals and
private businesses are, according to liberal theory, incapable
of doing the job.Liberals are atheists or agnostics (or people who, in
ignorance, believe themselves to be Christians) who believe
that Judeo-Christian religious beliefs should be eliminated
from government and education. Many liberals insist that the
First Amendment's ban on establishing an official religion
means that the United States should be free from spiritual
religion altogether. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., our first
socialist Supreme Court member, wrote that morality should
play no role in the law. This, despite Tocqueville's observation
in 1832 that Christianity was the most influential single factor
in America's uniquely successful republican democracy.At the same time that individual political liberties are steadily
curtailed, liberalism advocates no-holds-barred personal
hedonism. Liberals want an amoral society that accepts, even
welcomes, foul language, flouting social custom, abortion,
sexual promiscuity, same-sex marriage, and an endless list of
things designed to corrode and erode the social compact
upon which the Constitution was based. Imposing hedonism,
usually by judicial fiat, is a curtailment of individual political
liberty.Compromise with liberals thus necessitates accepting moral
relativism, the idea that there are no timeless, religious or
philosophical principles of morality flowing from the
relationship between humans and God, the Creator of the
universe. One might as well say the 2 + 2 = 4 applies as a
principle only when that answer serves the interests of the
observer.Historically, political societies that abandoned their early core
beliefs and pursued the course of moral relativism thereafter
fell victim to outside aggressors or slowly declined in
economic well-being. Not content with that inevitability,
liberals want to accelerate the process by subordinating the
Constitution to so-called international law and a world
government under the UN.Thomas E. Brewton is a staff writer for the New Media Alliance,
Inc. The New Media Alliance is a non-profit (501c3) national
coalition of writers, journalists and grass-roots media outlets.His weblog is THE VIEW FROM 1776Email comments to [email protected]
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
