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Tom McClintock
Mr.
McClintock is an expert on matters of the State budget and fiscal
discipline. He is a Senator in the California State Legislature
and ran for Governor in the 2003 recall election. His valuable
website is found at www.tommclintock.com [McClintock
index]
the
Shadow Governor
Why
the Pledge of Allegiance Matters
Simple words that are at the heart of our country...
[Tom McClintock] 3/26/04
There
is a great principle at the heart of the movement to strike the
words “under God” from the Pledge of Allegiance – and
from our national customs, our currency, and our public ceremonies.
It has very little to do with atheism. It has a great deal
to do with authoritarianism.
The philosophy of the American founding is unique among the
nations of the world because of a bedrock principle that was
given expression with words in the Declaration of Independence
that are old and familiar, and yet not often pondered these days.
In the American
view, there is a certain group of rights that are accorded
absolutely
and equally to every individual and that
cannot be alienated. The existence of these rights is beyond
debate – “self-evident” in the words of the
Founders. And their source is supreme - “the Creator.” “We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created
equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
rights…”
What are
these rights? They are rights that exist as a condition of
human life itself.
If an individual were alone in the world,
the rights he has are those rights the Founders traced to “the
laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.” In their words, “…that
among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” The
right to the fruit of our own labor, the right to express our
own sentiments, the right to defend ourselves, the right to live
our lives according to our own best lights – in a word,
freedom.
But how do
we secure these rights in a world where others seek to violate
them?
We form a government servient to these God-given
rights – or more precisely, a government under God. “That
to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men…” In
the American view, the only legitimate exercise of force by one
individual over another, or by a government over its people,
is in the defense of these natural rights.
This concept
is the foundation of American liberty. And because it defines
limits
to the powers of government, it is supremely
offensive to the radicals of the left. They abhor the words “under
God” because these words stand in the way of an all-powerful
state.
The French and American revolutions were waged on precisely
the same declared rights of liberty and equality. One was a ghastly
failure that ended in the reign of terror; the other, a magnificent
success. Why?
In the philosophy of the French Revolution, the rights of man
were defined by a governmental committee and extended at the
sufferance of that government. In the American view, these rights
come from God, their existence is preeminent and their preservation
is the principal object of government.
If the source
of our fundamental rights is not God, then the source becomes
man – or
more precisely, a government of men. And rights that can be
extended by government may also be
withdrawn by government.
Words matter. Ideas matter. And symbols matter. The case now
before the Supreme Court over the Pledge of Allegiance must not
be devalued as a mere defense of harmless deistic references
and quaint old customs. The principle at stake is central to
the very foundation of the American nation and the very survival
of its freedoms. CRO
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