Showing posts with label Freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freedom. Show all posts

08 February 2010

National Sovereignty Symposium

Last month, I had the great privilege of being the opening speaker at the National Sovereignty Symposium. It was a terrific event that I was honored to be a part of.

Since that time, I've received numerous requests for a copy of my remarks and thought it might be good to post them here on my blog so you can all read them.

Enjoy-

Shane

Opening Remarks: National Sovereignty Symposium

It is with great honor, and humility, that I open the first National Sovereignty Symposium. While I do not pretend to exhibit the level of constitutional scholarship that my learned friend Judge Andrew Napolitano will demonstrate later today, I will say this:

The Constitution was drafted by uncommon men, in an uncommon time, for the Common Man, for All Time.

In an era when obedience to the “Divine Right of Kings” was required without question, the Constitution, like our brave ancestors at Bunker Hill, was a shot heard round the world. Drafted under fire, the Constitution knocked the crown off the king’s head for good, and placed, for the first time in History, the power in the people’s hands.

It is a document that both limits the powers of the Federal Government and protects the liberties of We, the People. Freedom of Worship. Freedom of Speech. Freedom of Assembly. The Right to Keep and Bear Arms. The Right to be Free from Unreasonable Searches and Seizures. The Right to Life, Liberty, and Property.

These Individual Rights, inspired by Almighty God – and no folks, I’m not talking about our current President. These Individual Rights, inspired by Almighty God and recorded by the Founding Fathers, were designed to serve as a rampart against the unrelenting siege of the Federal Government upon the vulnerable livelihoods of We, the People.

But the siege has breached the outer wall. And Rome will fall, if We fail, to act – now.

We begin by gathering here today; not to declare independence from the Union We cherish, but to reassert Our God-given Rights under the Constitution and the Tenth Amendment, which provides:

“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

Because the Constitution provides the Federal Government with only limited powers, the first question that must be asked of any Congressman, Senator, or President – who can be just as oppressive as any King – who imposes legislation upon We, the People, without Our Consent, is the following:

Where in the Constitution does the Federal Government derive the power to pass such a bill?

I have been told by many lawyers that this is the first question asked, on the first day of law school, of first year law students in constitutional law class. Yet when recently asked this question, in relation to the Universal Healthcare Bill being rammed through Congress, and rammed down our throats, the Senior Senator from the Great State of Nebraska, who is a lawyer, said, “I don’t know enough about the Constitution to answer that question.”

Perhaps the Senator skipped the first day of law school.

But in all seriousness, folks, such a sophomoric response would be expected from a sophomore in high school, and even acceptable by a sophomore in college, but wholly unacceptable by a sitting Senator in the United States Congress. Yet his response is the norm emanating from Washington, D.C., a city built upon swamp-land by slaves, which now seeks to shackle the American Spirit by obliterating our economy into swamp-land and by enslaving us all in the process, under the arrogance of a self-proclaimed omnipotence historically reserved for Kings, and currently reserved for third-world, “democratic” despots.

Ladies and Gentlemen, Rome will fall, if We fail to act now.

Therefore, I ask you to join me, to stand with me atop the inner wall, and to fight off the Federal Government’s siege upon our God-given Rights as Americans. Thank you.

28 May 2008

Memorial Day

As we all celebrated another Memorial Day I found myself conflicted - not in my beliefs and principles, but in an understanding of what motivates us today as Americans.  


Partisan issues have always stirred debate and fueled countless hours of conversations over the dinner table, but unlike the generations before us, I don't think it has ever reached the level of vitriol and downright hatred that we see today. 


At what point did we forget our origins of freedom and liberty, the pillars upon which our great republic was founded? This was what inspired our Founding Fathers to not only search for a better form of governance but to create the single greatest document the world has ever, or will ever, know.  


At what point did Americans find hardship worthy of defeat?  When did we find that because things have not gone perfectly in a war that the act of surrender suddenly seemed reasonable? My friends, I'm sorry, but there is no dignity in cowardice. 


While our allegiance to liberty and freedom has sustained us as a nation over the generations, it's now not uncommon to hear elected leaders ready and eager to abandon those values simply for the sake of appeasing those who know nothing about the costs of those very words. 


As we remember and honor those courageous souls who so willingly sacrificed their lives for the cause of freedom and "slipped the surly bonds of Earth to touch the face of God," I believe that we, as Americans, still understand the level of commitment needed to win the war on Terror.


As a free and blessed people, we can not shrink from our inherent duty to protect and liberate those who find themselves oppressed, persecuted, enslaved, and bullied. The thirst for freedom recognizes no boundaries and the cries for help will never be ignored by the United States of America.