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Thomas Jefferson was renowned for stressing that authority ultimately rested with the people and not the government. Self-government often seems more like a theoretical concept today, or even a partisan issue. Ultimately, so much of what we see in politics today is a belief that Americans are no longer capable of governing themselves. They need more rules, and regulations to cope, and “free stuff” to occupy their time or even thrive in a modern world. The American Founders wouldn’t have ever thought that way. Self-government was embodied and actualized in the people at that time. There is a great example from our history that demonstrates that meaning. Os Guinness mentions the story in his masterful book, “A Free People’s Suicide: Sustainable Freedom and the American Future.” Seventy years after the American Revolution a Dartmouth student set out to record the testimony of soldiers who fought in the conflict. One of those men, Captain Levi Preston, then in his 90s, fought in the very first engagement at the Battle of Lexington in Concord in 1775. The student asked Preston if he was inspired by the works of John Locke, or oppressed over the Stamp Act or Tea tax? Preston said he hadn’t heard of Locke and didn’t drink tea and hadn’t seen any stamps [seals] back then. It’s unclear if Preston had more than a rudimentary understanding of the Stamp Act. The student went through a few more litany of questions and became perplexed why Preston took up arms again the British Crown. Preston simply replied, “Young man, what we meant in going for those Redcoats was this: we always had been free, and we meant to be free always. They didn’t mean we should.”
Soros Evangelical Russell Moore, president of something called the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, hasn’t done much for religious liberty, but he’s recently done quite a bit to push the Flu Manchu panic, not obviously a religious issue although it is certainly a fashionable Ruling Class cause. He’s all in for masking and myriad experimental vaccines, and adds this touch to get white conservative Christians on his side: He calls the jab and wearing a mask a “pro-life issue” [ The Washington Post, February 24, 2021]. That, combined with his mulish insistence on Open Borders, has to have his fellow Evangelicals (of whom I’m one) wondering whether the man has all his marbles.
Deseret News The former president recently spoke on a panel titled “Immigrants and the American Future” Share this story LM Otero, Associated Press . Sign up to receive the newsletter in your inbox each Monday night. Former president George W. Bush believes the immigration system is broken. More importantly, he thinks America’s leaders, including pastors, have given up on trying to fix it. “There’s been a lack of leadership on this issue because it’s become too politicized. Once an issue becomes politically hot, it’s very difficult to paint a positive picture that rises above the noise,” he said during a recent webinar titled “Immigrants and the American Future.”
Board says company broke its own rules The hypocrisy of Facebook’s so-called internal "supreme court" decision to uphold former President Donald Trump’s ban from the platform is astounding. However, this decision will ultimately help President Trump because it makes him a martyr for standing in defense of constitutional American freedoms. Every American should take note of this decision. If the Facebook oligarchs can silence someone who served as president of the United States and received nearly 75 million votes, then they can silence anyone. But to understand the depth of the hypocrisy and anti-Americanism of the Facebook elites, it is more revealing to look at who they are not removing from the platform.
Former President George W. Bush (lower right) discusses his newest book, which features his illustrations of 43 immigrants and their stories, during an online panel discussion on May 6, 2021. | Screenshot: George W. Bush Presidential Center Former President George W. Bush said immigration should be âdear to all religious peopleâ and immigrants should be viewed with a âloving eyeâ during a conversation Thursday with Southern Baptist ethicist Russell Moore and American Enterprise Institute's Yuval Levin. âIt depends on where you start your philosophy from,â the 74-year-old Bush, who served as the 43rd president of the United States from 2001 to 2009, said. âI start mine from âall lives are precious, and weâre all Godâs children.â ⦠If thatâs how you view immigration, then you donât view them with a hostile eye. You view them with a loving eye. And a loving eye doesn't mean tearing down a border wall. [It] means treating people with respect.â
Former President George W. Bush (lower right) discusses his newest book, which features his illustrations of 43 immigrants and their stories, during an online panel discussion on May 6, 2021. | Screenshot: George W. Bush Presidential Center Former President George W. Bush said immigration should be âdear to all religious peopleâ and immigrants should be viewed with a âloving eyeâ during a conversation Thursday with Southern Baptist ethicist Russell Moore and American Enterprise Institute's Yuval Levin. âIt depends on where you start your philosophy from,â the 74-year-old Bush, who served as the 43rd president of the United States from 2001 to 2009, said. âI start mine from âall lives are precious, and weâre all Godâs children.â ⦠If thatâs how you view immigration, then you donât view them with a hostile eye. You view them with a loving eye. And a loving eye doesn't mean tearing down a border wall. [It] means treating people with respect.â