The United States of America is not a Democracy. Ask any school-aged child, and most of his or her parents, however, and they will ape the word "democracy" as though it is the most obvious and pure thing in the world. This is where it is so dangerous that we do not know our history, nor understand our government. The United States of America is MOST CERTAINLY NOT a democracy, and if it ever becomes one, as it has been trending towards for seven decades, it will correspondingly cease to be free. Instead, the United States is a Republic. This is a vastly different thing from a democracy, and the distinction is extremely important.
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6 responses to ““A Republic, if you can keep it””
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I am really glad you posted this up on your blog Chris! I after reading this, I understand why we don’t just have a website that each individual person can vote for what he thinks is right in the House of Representatives! It makes a lot more sense know!
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Please keep this information coming!
I still don’t understand why people who know we are a Republic call us a Democracy. I asked Orrin why does he think even on the test he gave the other day that the people who run that organization said we have a representative democracy. It says he’s shopping so I’m sure he hasn’t had time to answer but why do you suppose that people in the know don’t just call it what it is or at least say a Democratic Republic or is that even accurate??
Thanks for all you do!
MiguelLikeLike
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Chris:
“They are only concerned with their own well-being, and at the same time they remain alien to the cause of that well-being. They imagine their role is limited to demanding these benefits peremptorily, as if they were natural rights.”
Unfortunately this is so true of so many today.
If we could only get back to the days when people felt blessed and priveleged instead of the expectation attitude.
I am so glad the teachings of the TEAM and our leaders are so opposite of that.
Thank you for posting this and may God Bless you, Terri and the kids during this holiday season.
PhyllisLikeLike
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Chris,
I want to comment on this, and keep getting personal, so I won’t. Instead, I want to share with you and your readers the latest “Washington Update” email from Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council.
Have a blessed Christmas with your beautiful family!What Caesar Did
We are in transition in Washington these days. The sitting President isn’t sitting much. George W. Bush is determined to “finish sprinting.” We wish him well and we thank him and his family for what he has accomplished and what he has been willing to endure to keep our nation safe and free.
These days most people are focused, understandably, on the words and deeds of the incoming President. As the new administration of Barack Obama takes shape, we will certainly have much to say.
Political power has always attracted attention. The people’s eyes naturally go to the wielder of the sword and the scepter. It was so in Biblical times. The Gospel of Luke tells us that “a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed.” The Roman Empire was vast in those days. It stretched from Britain in the north, to Spain and Portugal in the west, deep into Africa and Egypt in the south, and as far east as modern-day Syria. Caesar Augustus ruled all of this territory and the teeming millions who inhabited it.
Rome needed increased revenues, and Caesar knew how to get it. He first ordered that a census be conducted. He wanted a head count in order to apportion the amounts of money each provincial governor-like Cyrenius, governor of Syria-would be required to raise.
We can envision Caesar’s imperial decree being inscribed by hand on vellum, a material made from the scraped-clean hide of an unborn calf. From the Emperor’s residence in the House of Hortensius on Rome’s Palatine Hill, runners would have carried the document to waiting horsemen, the imperial couriers. From Rome, these horsemen would likely have proceeded in relay, changing horse and rider as each messenger reached the border of one of Roman Italy’s 11 administrative regions. Passing through Latium and Campania to Samnium, to Apulia along the Appian Way, the riders would make for Brundisium, a port city on the east coast of Italy.
There, Caesar’s decree probably would have been received aboard a Roman warship. It might have been a quinquereme, propelled by galley slaves who rowed in banks of five. On board this red cedar-built craft, Caesar’s order would cross the Mediterranean Sea to the Roman province of Palestine. Palestine was a distant outpost of the Empire, far from the most important of Rome’s imperial holdings.
All this ordering and obeying, this saluting and receiving of salutes, this “hail caesaring” was necessary to bring millions of people together in their ancestral villages. And so Joseph, who was of the House and Lineage of David, also complied with Caesar’s decree.
Thus were Joseph and Mary brought into Bethlehem. Caesar thought he knew what he was doing. He had never heard of Bethlehem. He had never heard of the Hebrew Prophet Micah. Micah had written: For out of you Bethlehem-Ephrata…shall come one who is to be ruler in Israel; whose origin is of old…his greatness shall reach the ends of the earth; he shall be peace. (Micah: 5:2, 3, 5)
God knew what He was doing in Palestine. Today, we know that the birth of Jesus in that little town of Bethlehem was, is, and ever shall be more important than all the Caesars, all the kings, all the presidents who ever ruled. In Bethlehem’s dark streets there appeared an everlasting light. It shines for us still.LikeLike
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Chris,
I loved your article. It certainly made me think.
In this thinking process there was also two questions, or perhaps observations that popped into my mind.
The first concerns the definitions in the constitution. This is an assumption, but when the constitution talks about people (as in a government by the people for the people), I assume the “people” means citizens of the United States of America. If we take a wider perspective, perhaps to our Western Civilization, or to stretch this a bit, all the people in the world. I wondered after reading your blog whether this definition wouldn’t be a limiter for the future. As America is definitely a player on the world stage would this perhaps restrict America from keeping a leadership position?
The second thing that struck me was “tolerance”. I currently live in Italy and i’d like to relate a short story which isn’t uncommon. I was recently waiting in a queue for a level crossing (where the train crosses the road). I was probably 20th in line. Then there was a car that came alongside from the back and went all the way to the front. They pulled in waiting to be the first to go when the crossing lifted. The reaction of my Italian companion, when I pointed out this behavior, was said with a shrug “they are probably in a hurry”. When relating this story to my US clients, they believe the person who cut in would, in the US, in all probability have been shot. So my curiosity, with so much in the constitution in favour of individual rights, why the differences in tolerance for others behavior?
Richard Clarke
Executive Coach
Florence, ItalyLikeLike
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Richard:
Great observations and questions! Culture, societal mores, a focus on individual competition and meritocratic-leanings, etc. would be my best guess as the answer to your last question. This is certainly a good topic for further debate! (and consider reading Malcolm Gladwell’s latest book, Outliers, for some interesting discussion on this point!
My question to you is, how do you get to live in one of my favorite cities in the whole world?!
CBLikeLike

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