How was your Independence Day Celebration?
You probably never gave a thought to Hillary’s crimes, the $19 trillion dollar national debt, local unemployment, the unbridled money printing schemes of the Federal Reserve, the bad science and policy oozing from every corner of the federal bureaucracy or whether your conversations were being recorded – Good for you!
Our day was full of fun and festivities. It included family, friends and friends of friends. Our celebration, like America’s in general, was sidetracked by other details – the parade, decorations, food and drink, who picked up the sparklers, where’s the best fireworks show?
For Diane and I, our attention was also proudly divided between a love of America’s exceptional triumph in Liberty and a joyful celebration our first grandchild’s one-year birthday.
Others of you may have had equally worthy distractions and I caught myself wondering about the future and how I might infuse a realistic dose of Freedom’s requirements into our modern hectic lives.
John Adams wished for the same as he wrote to his wife, Abigail:
“I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.”
In this correspondence Adams is referring, interestingly enough, to July 2nd, not July 4th.
Why July 2nd? Adams knew that the real meat of the event happened with Richard Henry Lee’s resolution on July 2nd:
“Resolved, That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.”
Even this Resolution was brought to the floor thirty days earlier, on June 7, 1776, for discussion and debate. I will argue that June 7th, July 2nd or July 4th are dates when Liberty rose to take the standard but Liberty had been cultivated in hearts and minds for centuries.
Bushels of fruit do not magically spring into the marketplace. Land must be acquired, cleared, prepared, planted, irrigated, nourished and protected. Then the crop has to be harvested, sorted, packaged, and freighted to distribution centers. Now, you might already be dreaming of fresh produce for your upcoming family picnic. However, your market must still put it on display, price it and sell it. Then, and only then, can you tootle over to the market, purchase, prepare, share and enjoy this bounty.
The same is true for our American concepts of Liberty, self-governance, individualism and the consent of the governed. These ideas need a lot of thought, preparation, watering and cultivation to bear fruit.
Unfortunately, we, in modern America, are a little too accustomed to shopping at Costco. Americans expect Liberty to be stocked in a never ending supply of jumbo-sized, shrink-wrapped packages. “But you must remember, my fellow-citizens, that eternal vigilance by the people is the price of liberty, and that you must pay the price if you wish to secure the blessing. It behooves you, therefore, to be watchful in your States as well as in the Federal Government.”[1]
Liberty takes effort – a lot of effort. Let us never forget that our Freedom belongs to us.
What are we willing to do today to support our Tree of Liberty? – Clear, till, plant, weed, water, protect or distribute?
“Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men,
undergo the fatigue of supporting it.”
–Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777
[1] Andrew Jackson, Farewell Address, March 4, 1837

Last week, Diane and I joined with hundreds of others to hear
Take ObamaCare for example. We don’t need to put the House, Senate and Presidency into the hands of Republicans to repeal it because we can void it at our state’s legislature.
Oregon’s Senate District #28. If you haven’t heard the news, it’s true – I did.
These are not new thoughts. They should be well known to all American’s and anyone who has ever dreamed of coming to America.
For example, with the minimum-wage, Democrats claim that higher prices and low wages are the two things crushing those earning minimum wage salaries. Do they think raising the minimum wage will lower prices? If prices do rise (to cover the increases in wages) will the poor be exempt from the new higher cost of a burger and fries? Does this solve the cost-of-living conundrum? How many low-wage earners will lose their jobs as businesses strive to control costs?
The idea of government in America had a glorious beginning. America’s foundational concept was that men, by right, ought to be free. Self-governance was the goal. Centralized forms of government should be pre-determined and limited. The original 13 colonies developed a compact to serve certain, specified national interests.
Across our nation we can witness, daily, these same destructive tendencies that fomented the minority sponsored Bolshevik revolution. In America, we can see the echo of these progressive redefinitions, where ideas shed their traditional meaning to correspond to the latest populist ideology.
These examples all boil down to the same issues which haunted the authors of the
recounts his first-hand experiences of life under the iron fist of a 20th Century government. His story records the thoroughly modernized tactics of a small, centralized group of authoritarians whose goal was total control of its own citizens. As Solzhenitsyn describes the lay of the land, we see it isn’t only about calling for tanks, guns and ground troops but it also included the bureaucratic masses. As his story progresses, the bureaucratic regulators turn out to be some of the most unprincipled and perfidious weapons.
Unfortunately for Americans, it is another toothless gesture. During Walden’s 18 years as a House member he has done little to rein-in this voracious federal machine. Instead, Walden, along with his RINO cohorts and Democrat allies, has needlessly ladled a steady stream of trillion dollar, taxpayer funded budgets into the mouths of D.C.’s lobbyists and bureaucrats.
Language is an important tool of political control. In our modern Twitter-pated world where sound bites rule, words or labels do not have to be accurate. They are easily thrown about and can be applied to anything. The Twitter-narrative does not have to be accurate to be seen by millions.
They recognize that today’s political class are no longer serving the Constitution – they no longer serve for limited periods; they have no fiscal integrity; they are waging war against the Bill of Rights; and they are no longer serving the general welfare. Today, the political elites work for Wall Street-financed crony-capitalists, self-interested public-sector unions, government-financed community service and public health agencies. Each of these entities employs scores pf lobbyists to ensure their access to America’s largess, the seed-corn of our future. The Machiavellian progressives are tearing at our Republic’s foundations.
Throughout human-history vast accumulations of power have created more problems than they’ve solved. The federal government does not have undifferentiated ‘governmental power.’ Instead, the constitution vests three different branches with three unique types of power – power for legislating, executing and adjudicating the fairness of any actions.