Friday, May 22, 2009

Article I found to be worth sharing

A Time For Choosing Again?
By THOMAS KRANNAWITTER | Posted Thursday, May 21, 2009 4:20 PM PT

Ronald Reagan's 1964 speech, "A Time for Choosing," arguably, was the pivotal moment when Reagan became the Reagan America knows. He gave "the speech," as he often referred to it, not long after switching from FDR's Democratic Party to the Republican Party of Lincoln. The theme of Reagan's speech was that Americans had to choose between up versus down, freedom versus servitude, self-government versus bureaucratic fiat.

"The Founding Fathers knew a government can't control the economy without controlling people," Reagan explained, "and they knew when a government sets out to do that, it must use force and coercion to achieve its purpose." So, he concluded, "we have come to a time for choosing."
Reagan became Reagan by studying the political science of the American founding, without which he could not have ushered into American politics a new kind of conservatism, Reagan conservatism. Reagan sought to reign in government by recovering the authority of the Founders' Constitution and the principles that informed it. He believed nothing less would save freedom in America.

Reagan's challenge was to remind Americans of the importance and goodness of constitutional government in a time of constitutional darkness, a time when virtually all the leading intellectual and political lights in America had come to ignore or twist beyond recognition the meaning of the Constitution.

In this way, Reagan's statesmanship paralleled that of Lincoln, who tried to preserve the principled ground of constitutional self-government — the idea that each human being is endowed by the Creator with equal, unalienable, natural rights — at a time when that idea was denied and ridiculed by most prominent minds in America.

Today, the lights of the Constitution have again grown dim, as the Obama Administration and Congressional Democrats unfold what is amounting to be the most massive government budgetary and regulatory expansions in American history.

Everyone seems fixated on the costs associated with Obama's corporate bailouts, universal healthcare, environmental regulations, and other items on his liberal to-do list. But few people, in or out of government office, ask whether these policies are constitutional. The reason, sadly, is that few people care.

Our challenge today of recovering the authority of the Constitution is greater than Reagan's and perhaps even greater than Lincoln's was. Since Roosevelt launched the New Deal in the 1930s, several generations of Americans have grown up knowing nothing but big, paternalistic government.

The feisty independence and healthy suspicion of government power that characterized the founding generation of Americans — think of the people who defiantly flew the flag with the coiled-up snake announcing, "Don't Tread on Me" — is now mainly the stuff of boring history textbooks.

• Thomas Krannawitter is associate professor of political science at Hillsdale College in Michigan

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