My talk before the "TEA PARTY ON THE BAY," April 15, Grasonville, MD,  sponsored by the Queen Anne's County of Americans for Prosperity.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
For  too long, you and I have watched helplessly as a clique of politicians,  intellectuals, activists, and bureaucrats from both parties have tried  to obliterate our Constitution, our capitalist system, and our personal  liberty.
This “bipartisan Ruling Class”—as scholar Angelo  Codevilla describes it—sees itself as a moral, cultural, and  intellectual elite. Oozing arrogance, viewing the rest of us as coarse,  unsophisticated rubes who cling bitterly to guns and bibles, this class  seeks to impose its own supposedly superior values and visions upon the  rest of us, by force of law.
As we know too well, the ultimate  goal of this Ruling Class is power. They exist—not to produce, not to  invent, not to create—but to manipulate and master others. Ronald Reagan  summed up their governing outlook this way: “If it moves, tax it. If it  keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.”
By  contrast, the rest of us Americans seek power over circumstances—not  over each other. We acquire our personal sense of identity and  self-esteem through productive work—not through imposing our values and  visions on our neighbors. We accept a “live and let live” philosophy.
This  is the spirit embodied in our “Declaration of Independence.” That  document was more than a declaration of political independence from our  European rulers; it was a declaration of the moral independence of every  human being. It was a declaration of each individual’s moral right to  his own life, his own liberty, his own pursuit of happiness.
This  is the vision enshrined in our Constitution. That document grants to  public officials only specific, enumerated, and narrowly limited powers.  As James Madison and the Framers made clear, their goal was to bridle  the power of government, in order to protect our moral right to go about  our lives without interference. So the Constitution imposes upon  officials a host of constraints: separations of powers, checks and  balances, the Bill of Rights. By constraining government, we enjoy the  fruits of freedom.
And this explains why, since the early  twentieth-century Progressive Era, Ruling Class power-seekers have  targeted the Constitution for annihilation.
            
These  grandees aim to impose their wisdom and good taste upon us by force of  law—telling us what to eat, what vehicles we should travel in, what  fuels should power them, where our thermostats should be set, how we  should use our land, what our children should be taught, what we may  buy, sell, to whom, and at what prices, what earnings we may keep, what  causes we must support, what medical coverage we must have—and on, and  on.
It goes on without limit, because the Ruling Class accepts no  limits, legal or moral, on its power to “do good” to us. Like  missionaries visiting primitive tribes, they view us as savages, whom  they must cage and civilize.
We see their boundless arrogance in  Nancy Pelosi, who—when asked where in the Constitution was Congress  granted the power to order us to buy health insurance—replied: “Are you  serious?”
We see it in Barney Frank, the only human on the planet who is able to strut while sitting down.
We  see it in Barack Obama, who tells his fellow Ruling Class members that  “We are the ones we have been waiting for,” with his nose held so high  in the air that any passing rainstorm would waterboard him.
Ruling  Class programs have plundered trillions from makers, then handed it to  takers—supposedly to eradicate poverty, to end unemployment, to prevent  disastrous business cycles, to put everyone in his own home. But what do  we see? Record levels of people on food stamps; soaring unemployment; a  recession longer and deeper than any since the 1930s; a debacle in the  housing market. Yet, in response, the Ruling Class demands more power to  enact more of the same.
But their excesses have provoked a great  awakening. Millions like you now champion the cause of free markets and  individual liberty.
Our job began last November 2nd. Now, we have a cultural legacy to reclaim—a legacy often described as American individualism.
From  our nation’s earliest days, when our pioneer ancestors blazed trails  through forbidding frontiers, we Americans have never viewed ourselves  as victims of circumstances. Fiercely self-assertive, proudly  independent, we, more than any other people on earth, view ourselves as  masters of our fates, as captains of our souls.
The spirit of  American individualism inspired the Founders to pledge their lives,  their fortunes, and their sacred honor to the cause of personal liberty.
Now  is our moment. So, in the words of Washington, let us continue in the  months and years ahead to raise a standard to which the wise and honest  can repair.
Thank you.          
 
 
4 comments:
I'm not sure about the capability of repair. For one thing, the American people as a whole have grown used to expecting -- yea, demanding -- entitlements.
That said, I'm not willing to give up!
I only wish when Pelosi said that, the question had thought to reply, "Yes Madam Speaker, I take the Constitution very seriously."
This is an inspiring talk. I am going to send the link to my list. Wish I had been there.
Gene, that's awfully nice of you. Feel free to circulate it. In a way, be glad you were NOT there; it was really cold!
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