During college one of my professors in Political Philosophy said that the only real revolutions in modern western civilization were the French and the Russian. He was right, but I didn’t quite get it at the time. I do now.
While the American revolution was ostensibly a revolution,
in reality it was more of a divorce where the kids kept the same parents, they
just lived with their Mom. Their Dad was
still their Dad, but they didn’t have much to do with him. In contrast, the
French and Russian revolutions were basically the children taking their parents
out back and shooting them…
The American revolution was a revolution, but it wasn’t
revolutionary. But what was revolutionary was the United States
Constitution.
For the first time in history, a government was formed by a
written constitution that described rights that were inherent from God (as
articulated in the Declaration of Independence and the constitution of most of
the original 13 states) upon which the government could not impede. What’s more, the entire thing was created for
the specific purpose of limiting the power of government. This was made clear
by the Bill of Rights, which—beginning with Massachusetts—became the quid pro
quo for getting the Constitution ratified. And in case anyone missed the point,
the last of the ten amendments that make up the Bill of Rights states “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.”
The American experiment worked… for almost 200 years. Of course it didn’t work perfectly for
everyone all the time, nor for some people any of the time, but for the
overwhelming majority of people who have lived in the United States over the
course of its existence, life has been better here than almost any other place
on Earth.
But that experiment is in the process of collapsing.
Why? Simple. Because the nation that was birthed with a constitution
specifically geared towards limiting government power has metastasized into a
nation where the government controls virtually everything.
Today it’s almost impossible for a person to get out of bed
and go through a normal day without out violating one or more laws. Just the federal government alone, which was
the government the Constitution sought to control the most, today has so many
laws that it
itself can’t tell you how many there are. Justice Gorsuch estimates as
many as 300,000. To his credit, President
Trump sees the problem.
But that is just one part of the problem. Another, even more dire, is playing itself
out on our X accounts and on TV right in front of us – except obviously, the
MSM… I’m of course talking about the
criminal enterprise that is known as what seems like the entire Somali
population in America. It appears that Somalians in America have stolen
almost as much money from American taxpayers as the entire GDP of Somalia
itself.
This of course comes mere months after we saw DOGE discover
the USAID / NGO grift machine documenting tens of billions of taxpayer dollars
going to fund countless leftist programs.
Not surprisingly, both involve Democrats… but that’s an issue for
another day.
As enraging as all of this is, these treacheries are just a
drop in the bucket of where America has gone off her Constitutional rails. One
need to look no farther than the federal budget to understand it. Today,
70% of federal spending goes to things that did not exist when the Constitution
was written.
And we’re not talking about air traffic control towers or
NASA. No, these are programs where
government basically takes taxpayer’s money and gives it to someone else. And
what would those things be? Social Security, Health, Medicare, Education &
Income security. (While SS is not redistribution, it is money the government demands
and then controls the distribution of.) That’s fully 70% of federal funding,
clocking in at a cool $4.4 trillion. A century before, domestic spending – at
that time usually on roads and farm subsidies – made up less than 13% of
the federal budget. Another way of
looking at this is that in 1821
federal spending made up 2.5% of America’s total GDP while today it’s in excess of 23%.
The fraud in Minnesota and via USAID are merely the most
blatant examples of a system that has gone rouge. Half
of American households pay essentially no income taxes while 100
million Americans receive some sort of government assistance. And the icing on the cake is that we’re not
even spending our own money, we’re borrowing to do so, and today the national
debt stands at 100% of GDP and unfunded
mandates at twice that.
Between the stultifying regulations, the income
redistribution and the rampant, government sanctioned fraud
dressed up like social programs, Americans have betrayed their birthright.
America became the most powerful and consequential nation in
human history specifically because of her explicitly limited government. For a
period of almost 200 years she stood as a beacon of freedom and hope and
opportunity.
To the outside world that illusion of greatness may remain,
but the reality is, much like the French Ancien régime before the
revolution, there is a cancer at its core. And that cancer is government. Not government per se, but rather an out-of-control
government that regulates too much, spends too much and controls too much. Our government has become a leviathan in
every manner possible and its tentacles and largesse have undercut the
foundation upon which the nation was founded.
With the Democrat party’s Stalinist leanings and Stasi like
practices getting too difficult for free men to tolerate, the election of
Donald Trump was a requisite for averting a real revolution. But it’s not
sufficient. The America that changed the
world for the better, that unleashed a level of human achievement unlike any
other cannot survive as a borg, which is exactly what it has become.
If Donald Trump and the mostly useless GOP Congress really
want to actually make America great again, starting in 2026 they will turn
their metaphorical guns and scalpels on the government itself and begin to bring
back the primary idea that made America great in the first place: Limited government. Without that, everything
else is little more than rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic, and the
outcome will be the same.

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