Posted by
Adam Cassandra on Thursday, May 15, 2008 11:28:57 PM
Americans have seemingly lost their
sense of duty and responsibility as citizens of the United States. People cry out for the government to do this
or that for them without batting an eye, yet fail to take simple steps to take
care of themselves. The Republicans
invade our lives for security, while the Democrats do so for conveniences. Every year we get more socialist programs,
and less freedom.
The duties of the people to be
educated, moral, and to understand and control their government imbue a personal
responsibility in governing their personal lives, and the state. Modern notions of rights dictate that the
government should actually provide the methods and means of happiness instead
of simply protecting the people to pursue happiness. Some of the “rights” of today completely
conflict with the morality of national character George Washington hoped to
instill into citizens such as many “gay rights” and “abortion rights.” But as Abraham Lincoln said, one “cannot
logically say that anybody has a right to do wrong.”
Washington believed that adherence to
religious principles and the belief in God’s Natural Law provided strong
foundations for moral character. “Of all
the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion and
morality are indispensable supports,” Washington
writes in his Farewell Address. “In vain would that man claim the tribute of
Patriotism, who should labour [sic]
to subvert these great Pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the
duties of Men and citizens.” Clearly Washington would not see
those citizens and politicians involved in the secular-progressive movement as
American patriots.
Just as Aristotle wrote, a good man
and good citizen requires moral character.
The early American experience was indebted to religion for its existence
and subsistence. Early settlers fled England
for religious freedom. The Colonial
education system was based around Biblical instruction and the New England Primer, a book also laced
with religious and moral lessons. Early
American colleges and universities also had religious missions in administering
education.
While the Constitution did provide
a separation of church and state in the First Amendment, the understanding and
application of that separation was far different than in today’s America. Where Washington
believed in the instruction of religious and moral principles by schools and politicians, the modern government
would find such instruction unconstitutional.
Freedom of religion has come to be
understood as freedom from
religion. For any government agent to
stress the importance of the duty of religious morality would be to show an
intolerance and insensitivity to non-religious Americans. Such a system where the American people would
punish teachers who strive to teach religious morality is uncharacteristic of Washington’s virtuous
citizenry.
Washington viewed education as a necessity
for the responsible citizen. Article
three of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 embodies Washington’s views on education as a means
toward proper government reading, “Religion, morality, and knowledge, being
necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the
means of education shall forever be encouraged.”
Not only should the people have
instruction in morality, but receive instruction in the principles and methods
of a just republican government in order to be good citizens. The Declaration
of Independence established that the American system of government and
justice would be based on Natural Law principles with the power to govern
relying solely on a free people. As
Thomas Jefferson would write in a letter to Henry Lee, the writings of Aristotle,
Cicero, Locke, and Sidney influenced public sentiment at the time when writing
the document. Studying these writers,
and other works on republican government, would be essential for the good
citizen to fully understand the American model.
As a republican government, the people
are in charge in facilitating their governance.
Without personal sacrifice and duty of the citizenry, they would leave
themselves to be ruled by oligarchs. They
would be ruled instead of ruling themselves and their government. Such has become the case today.
People ask for their government’s permission
instead of telling their government what to do.
The people invite the government to run and regulate their lives instead
of running their government, and taking personal responsibility for
themselves. Politicians subscribe to
socialist ideologies and reject traditional American values. Hedonism and irresponsibility have replaced
virtue and duty as “values” of the American people. The Natural Law principles which gave birth
to America
have given way to secularism and relativism in a perversion of “freedom and
equality.”
Instead of a people defined by a
particular culture and values, our national identity now only revolves around a
set of political principles, and misunderstood ones at that. Another powerful modern nation that relied
solely on political principles in the unity of the people was the Soviet Union. As
American ideology becomes more in tune with its former Soviet enemy’s, the good
citizen and the good man can never be one in the same. America
must then contend with the moral decay which caused the collapse of the great
and powerful Roman Empire which began the traditions of Western Civilization that
America
inherited.
Washington’s embodiment of the dutiful
citizen and his lessons for virtue and the obligation of all citizens to
protect and defend the American way of life has fallen on deaf ears in the
present age. The American government has
not had to change to keep up with modern times and temperaments, it has changed
due to lack of understanding the foundational principles of America by the people themselves. A just republican government cannot survive
without a just people presiding over its governance.