Thoughts from Constitution Day

Thoughts from Constitution Day

Yesterday, September 17th, was Constitution Day.  It was celebrated mostly by ignoring it.  As evidence, did you notice the surprise when a federal judge in Pennsylvania based a ruling on it?  The ruling called to mind such things as the right to associate together (peaceably), no arbitrary taking of livelihood and property, or the freedom to practice one’s religion.  Or even that unknown clause demanding the federal government guarantee a republican form of government to the states.  Even a judge found it hard to reconcile that with a governor being able to declare an emergency, granting himself dictatorial powers and then extending it as long as he likes, with no accountability. 

Many were appalled at the judge’s audacity to involve the constitution.  The vociferous opinions were almost unanimous – scientists are to rule!  Politicians should do as scientists say!  The overthrow of the centuries of understanding that the truths enshrined in the constitution were more valuable than life itself was drowned in the consensus that they weren’t worth risking getting sick.

I was taught at Penn that politics was the “master science.”  I also studied the beginning and advancement of the “Progressive” attempt to develop a scientifically-based “organizational society” – one variation called it the “therapeutic state.”  Well, the nanny state has arrived in all its squalor.

R. I. P. Constitution

Suicide Prevention Day Mockery

Today was National Suicide Prevention Day. 

I read a statistic today (attributed to a story in Scientific American), “for every 1 percent jump in unemployment, there is a 0.8 to 1 percent jump in suicides.”  I don’t remember any stats about the increase, but various news articles have also pointed out the direct correlation between the lock down and child abuse.

How long will it be before we have estimates of the increased number of suicides caused by the government lock-down?  Or the increase in abuse? 

Economists call it “unintended consequences.”  The military calls it “collateral damage.”  Whatever the name, people die because a politician wants to play God.

Dry Run – Sorta

Dry Run – Sorta

The last several months have given the residents of America an opportunity to see what life under socialism would be like.  I urge people to think about what they’ve experienced.

  •  War on the Poor – [with Middle class now being included with the poor] The poor became the pawns in the game of life.  They were stripped of their livelihood without compunction, then pacified with a few ‘borrowed’ dollars that will be repaid with money taken from them at a future date.
  •  Subsidies to the rich – Billions of tax dollars were transferred from the poor/middle class and given to the rich in subsidies and bail-outs of big businesses, with airlines being a prime example.
  •  Class warfare – Few were stigmatized as heartily as those who wanted to work in a closed-down business.  “Black markets” were forming over even insignificant business transactions.  Those politically favored were permitted to harass and destroy the lives of those out of favor with the political elite.
  •  Centralized dictatorial powers – Petty tyranny, often in a velvet glove at this point, was the name of the game.  Executive orders dictated where a resident could go, with how many, and what could be done.  Businesses that were in favor reaped a bonanza, while those out of favor were shuttered, sometime destroyed.  Retribution by the powerful against those in disagreement was common and blatant.  Courts were shown to be another arm of the elite.  Any semblance of the “republic” guaranteed by the Constitution was flouted.
  •  Churches persecuted – In some cases, churches were shut down, in others the church-goers were harassed.  The government dictated what religious practices were allowed, denying, in some places, a practice as basic to religion as singing.  The number of people who could attend services was prescribed.
  •  Life was drab – Period.  Sports, concerts, and parties were all taboo.

Fortunately, few governors felt comfortable fully enforcing all the rules.  Perhaps it was the fact the President didn’t support a total fascist takeover by the left-leaning governors.  Or perhaps it was the rising tide of opposition by the oppressed.  Whatever, if America continues its downward spiral, fueled by the unthinking masses blindly following the trends of the day, one shudders to think what will happen at the next major exercise of statist power.

Lament 1

Lament 1

Modern man laughs at the sheep-like, order-following Medieval man.  He ridicules that man and his superstitious life.  But we ought to look around.  Other than the fact the State has overtaken the Church as the wielder of “Truth,” little has changed.

Actually, it’s worse.  When the church issued the edicts, there was always an outside source of truth that could be appealed to – the Bible – that the church acknowledged as authoritative.  Today, all truth is considered subsumed by the State.  Even though it is seated on a pedestal by modern man, science’s authoritative voice is the practitioner with the highest standing in the State’s bureaucracy.  Justice, too, no longer has a meaning beyond what the State says.  Reality, and therefore truth, is simply the narrative the State weaves.

For the person who sees the nakedness of the Emperor, there is no anchorage remaining for dissent.  Pity modern man!