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"A Republic, If You Can Keep It"
The New American ^ | 11.06.00 | John F. McManus

Posted on 02/16/2005 8:16:10 PM PST by Coleus

 

"A Republic, If You Can Keep It"
by John F. McManus
November 6, 2000
 
Knowing that a democracy is a government of men in which the tyranny of the majority rules, America's Founding Fathers wisely created a republic - a government ruled by law.

On Constitution Day, September 17, 2000, President Bill Clinton spoke at the ground-breaking ceremony for a National Constitution Center at Independence Mall in Philadelphia. On that occasion the president remarked that the men who signed the Constitution "understood the enormity of what they were attempting to do: to create a representative democracy." He heaped praise on "Washington, Franklin, Madison" for having created our form of government.

President Clinton turned the work of the Founding Fathers on its head. Washington, Franklin, Madison, and the other men who gave us independence and our form of government never set out to create a "representative democracy." Those men recognized in democracy a danger to freedom just as deadly as that represented by the worst despotism. Mr. Clinton is not the first politician to claim the Founding Fathers established a democracy. But the fact that this error is widespread does not make it any more accurate.

Intent of the Founders

The deliberations of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 were held in strict secrecy. Consequently, anxious citizens gathered outside Independence Hall when the proceedings ended in order to learn what had been produced behind closed doors. The answer was provided immediately. A Mrs. Powel of Philadelphia asked Benjamin Franklin, "Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?" With no hesitation whatsoever, Franklin responded, "A republic, if you can keep it." This exchange was recorded by Constitution signer James McHenry in a diary entry that was later reproduced in the 1906 American Historical Review. Yet in more recent years, Franklin has occassionally been misquoted as having said, "A democracy, if you can keep it." The NRA’s Charleton Heston quoted Franklin this way, for example, in a CBS 60 Minutes interview with Mike Wallace that was aired on December 20, 1998.

This misquote is a serious one, since the difference between a democracy and a republic is not merely a question of semantics but is fundamental. The word "republic" comes from the Latin res publica — which means simply "the public thing(s)," or more simply "the law(s)." "Democracy," on the other hand, is derived from the Greek words demos and kratein, which translates to "the people to rule." Democracy, therefore, has always been synonymous with majority rule.

The Founding Fathers supported the view that (in the words of the Declaration of Independence) "Men … are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights." They recognized that such rights should not be violated by an unrestrained majority any more than they should be violated by an unrestrained king or monarch. In fact, they recognized that majority rule would quickly degenerate into mobocracy and then into tyranny. They had studied the history of both the Greek democracies and the Roman republic. They had a clear understanding of the relative freedom and stability that had characterized the latter, and of the strife and turmoil — quickly followed by despotism — that had characterized the former. In drafting the Constitution, they created a government of law and not of men, a republic and not a democracy.

But don’t take our word for it! Consider the words of the Founding Fathers themselves, who — one after another — condemned democracy.

• Virginia’s Edmund Randolph participated in the 1787 convention. Demonstrating a clear grasp of democracy’s inherent dangers, he reminded his colleagues during the early weeks of the Constitutional Convention that the purpose for which they had gathered was "to provide a cure for the evils under which the United States labored; that in tracing these evils to their origin every man had found it in the turbulence and trials of democracy...."

• Samuel Adams, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, championed the new Constitution in his state precisely because it would not create a democracy. "Democracy never lasts long," he noted. "It soon wastes, exhausts and murders itself." He insisted, "There was never a democracy that ‘did not commit suicide.’"

• New York’s Alexander Hamilton, in a June 21, 1788 speech urging ratification of the Constitution in his state, thundered: "It has been observed that a pure democracy if it were practicable would be the most perfect government. Experience has proved that no position is more false than this. The ancient democracies in which the people themselves deliberated never possessed one good feature of government. Their very character was tyranny; their figure deformity." Earlier, at the Constitutional Convention, Hamilton stated: "We are a Republican Government. Real liberty is never found in despotism or in the extremes of Democracy."

• James Madison, who is rightly known as the "Father of the Constitution," wrote in The Federalist, No. 10: "... democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security, or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they are violent in their deaths." The Federalist Papers, recall, were written during the time of the ratification debate to encourage the citizens of New York to support the new Constitution.

• George Washington, who had presided over the Constitutional Convention and later accepted the honor of being chosen as the first President of the United States under its new Constitution, indicated during his inaugural address on April 30, 1789, that he would dedicate himself to "the preservation … of the republican model of government."

• Fisher Ames served in the U.S. Congress during the eight years of George Washington’s presidency. A prominent member of the Massachusetts convention that ratified the Constitution for that state, he termed democracy "a government by the passions of the multitude, or, no less correctly, according to the vices and ambitions of their leaders." On another occasion, he labeled democracy’s majority rule one of "the intermediate stages towards … tyranny." He later opined: "Democracy, in its best state, is but the politics of Bedlam; while kept chained, its thoughts are frantic, but when it breaks loose, it kills the keeper, fires the building, and perishes." And in an essay entitled The Mire of Democracy, he wrote that the framers of the Constitution "intended our government should be a republic, which differs more widely from a democracy than a democracy from a despotism."

In light of the Founders’ view on the subject of republics and democracies, it is not surprising that the Constitution does not contain the word "democracy," but does mandate: "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government."

20th Century Changes

These principles were once widely understood. In the 19th century, many of the great leaders, both in America and abroad, stood in agreement with the Founding Fathers. John Marshall, chief justice of the Supreme Court from 1801 to 1835 echoed the sentiments of Fisher Ames. "Between a balanced republic and a democracy, the difference is like that between order and chaos," he wrote. American poet James Russell Lowell warned that "democracy gives every man the right to be his own oppressor." Lowell was joined in his disdain for democracy by Ralph Waldo Emerson, who remarked that "democracy becomes a government of bullies tempered by editors." Across the Atlantic, British statesman Thomas Babington Macauly agreed with the Americans. "I have long been convinced," he said, "that institutions purely democratic must, sooner or later, destroy liberty or civilization, or both." Britons Benjamin Disraeli and Herbert Spencer would certainly agree with their countryman, Lord Acton, who wrote: "The one prevailing evil of democracy is the tyranny of the majority, or rather that party, not always the majority, that succeeds, by force or fraud, in carrying elections."

By the 20th century, however, the falsehoods that democracy was the epitome of good government and that the Founding Fathers had established just such a government for the United States became increasingly widespread. This misinformation was fueled by President Woodrow Wilson’s famous 1916 appeal that our nation enter World War I "to make the world safe for democracy" — and by President Franklin Roosevelt’s 1940 exhortation that America "must be the great arsenal of democracy" by rushing to England’s aid during WWII.

One indicator of the radical transformation that took place is the contrast between the War Department’s 1928 "Training Manual No. 2000-25," which was intended for use in citizenship training, and what followed. The 1928 U.S. government document correctly defined democracy as:

A government of the masses. Authority derived through mass meeting or any other form of "direct expression." Results in mobocracy. Attitude toward property is communistic — negating property rights. Attitude of the law is that the will of the majority shall regulate, whether it be based upon deliberation or governed by passion, prejudice, and impulse, without restraint or regard to consequences. Results in demagogism, license, agitation, discontent, anarchy.

This manual also accurately stated that the framers of the Constitution "made a very marked distinction between a republic and a democracy … and said repeatedly and emphatically that they had formed a republic."

But by 1932, pressure against its use caused it to be withdrawn. In 1936, Senator Homer Truett Bone (D-WA) took to the floor of the Senate to call for the document’s complete repudiation. By then, even finding a copy of the manual had become almost impossible. Decades later, in an article appearing in the October 1973 issue of Military Review, Lieutenant Colonel Paul B. Parham explained that the Army ceased using the manual because of letters of protest "from private citizens." Interestingly, Parham also noted that the word democracy "appears on one hand to be of key importance to, and holds some peculiar significance for, the Communists."

By 1952 the U.S. Army was singing the praises of democracy, instead of warning against it, in Field Manual 21-13, entitled The Soldier’s Guide. This new manual incorrectly stated: "Because the United States is a democracy, the majority of the people decide how our Government will be organized and run...." (Emphasis in original.)

Yet important voices continued to warn against the siren song for democracy. In 1931, England’s Duke of Northumberland issued a booklet entitled The History of World Revolution in which he stated: "The adoption of Democracy as a form of Government by all European nations is fatal to good Government, to liberty, to law and order, to respect for authority, and to religion, and must eventually produce a state of chaos from which a new world tyranny will arise."

In 1939, historians Charles and Mary Beard added their strong voices in favor of historical accuracy in their America in Midpassage: "At no time, at no place, in solemn convention assembled, through no chosen agents, had the American people officially proclaimed the United States to be a democracy. The Constitution did not contain the word or any word lending countenance to it, except possibly the mention of ‘We, the People,’ in the preamble.... When the Constitution was framed no respectable person called himself or herself a democrat."

During the 1950s, Clarence Manion, the dean of Notre Dame Law School, echoed and amplified what the Beards had so correctly stated. He summarized: "The honest and serious student of American history will recall that our Founding Fathers managed to write both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution without using the term ‘democracy’ even once. No part of any of the existing state Constitutions contains any reference to the word. [The men] who were most influential in the institution and formulation of our government refer to ‘democracy’ only to distinguish it sharply from the republican form of our American Constitutional system."

On September 17 (Constitution Day), 1961, John Birch Society founder Robert Welch delivered an important speech, entitled "Republics and Democracies," in which he proclaimed: "This is a Republic, not a Democracy. Let’s keep it that way!" The speech, which was later published and widely distributed in pamphlet form, amounted to a jolting wake-up call for many Americans. In his remarks, Welch not only presented the evidence to show that the Founding Fathers had established a republic and had condemned democracy, but he warned that the definitions had been distorted, and that powerful forces were at work to convert the American republic into a democracy, in order to bring about dictatorship.

Means to an End

Welch understood that democracy is not an end in itself but a means to an end. Eighteenth century historian Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord Woodhouselee, it is thought, argued that, "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship." And as British writer G.K. Chesterton put it in the 20th century: "You can never have a revolution in order to establish a democracy. You must have a democracy in order to have a revolution."

Communist revolutionary Karl Marx understood this principle all too well. Which is why, in The Communist Manifesto, this enemy of freedom stated that "the first step in the revolution by the working class is to raise the proletariat to the position of ruling class, to win the battle of democracy." For what purpose? To "abolish private property"; to "wrest, by degrees, capital from the bourgeoisie"; to "centralize all instruments of production in the hands of the State"; etc.

Another champion of democracy was Communist Mao Tse-tung, who proclaimed in 1939 (a decade before consolidating control on the Chinese mainland): "Taken as a whole, the Chinese revolutionary movement led by the Communist Party embraces the two stages, i.e., the democratic and the socialist revolutions, which are essentially different revolutionary processes, and the second process can be carried through only after the first has been completed. The democratic revolution is the necessary preparation for the socialist revolution, and the socialist revolution is the inevitable sequel to the democratic revolution. The ultimate aim for which all communists strive is to bring about a socialist and communist society."

Still another champion of democracy is Mikhail Gorbachev, who stated in his 1987 book Perestroika that, "according to Lenin, socialism and democracy are indivisible.... The essence of perestroika lies in the fact that it unites socialism with democracy [emphasis in the original] and revives the Leninist concept.... We want more socialism and, therefore, more democracy."

This socialist revolution has been underway in America for generations. In January 1964, President Lyndon Johnson boasted in a White House address: "We are going to try to take all of the money that we think is unnecessarily being spent and take it from the ‘haves’ and give it to the ‘have nots’ that need it so much." What he advocated, of course, was a Marxist, not an American, precept. (The way Marx put it was: "From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs.") But other presidents before and after have advanced the same goal. Of course, most who support this goal do not comprehend the totalitarian consequences of constantly transferring more power to Washington. But this lack of understanding is what makes revolution by the ballot box possible.

The push for democracy has only been possible because the Constitution is being ignored, violated, and circumvented. The Constitution defines and limits the powers of the federal government. Those powers, all of which are enumerated, do not include agricultural subsidy programs, housing programs, education assistance programs, food stamps, etc. Under the Constitution, Congress is not authorized to pass any law it chooses; it is only authorized to pass laws that are constitutional. Anybody who doubts the intent of the Founders to restrict federal powers, and thereby protect the rights of the individual, should review the language in the Bill of Rights, including the opening phrase of the First Amendment ("Congress shall make no law...").

As Welch explained in his 1961 speech:

... man has certain unalienable rights which do not derive from government at all.... And those … rights cannot be abrogated by the vote of a majority any more than they can by the decree of a conqueror. The idea that the vote of a people, no matter how nearly unanimous, makes or creates or determines what is right or just becomes as absurd and unacceptable as the idea that right and justice are simply whatever a king says they are. Just as the early Greeks learned to try to have their rulers and themselves abide by the laws they had themselves established, so man has now been painfully learning that there are more permanent and lasting laws which cannot be changed by either sovereign kings or sovereign people, but which must be observed by both. And that government is merely a convenience, superimposed on Divine Commandments and on the natural laws that flow only from the Creator of man and man’s universe.

Such is the noble purpose of the constitutional republic we inherited from our Founding Fathers.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Government
KEYWORDS: alexanderhamilton; democracy; edmundrandolph; federalistpapers; foundingfathers; georgewashington; jamesmadison; jbs; johnbirchsociety; johnfmcmanus; newamerican; republic; republicformofgovt; samueladams
Are we a republic or a democracy?

A Republic, If You Can Keep It

1 posted on 02/16/2005 8:16:12 PM PST by Coleus
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To: Coleus

I just read an oldie but goodie called "Uncommon Sense" he discussed the same issues. Thanks for posting this jewell. BTTT


2 posted on 02/16/2005 8:24:22 PM PST by lainde ( ...we are not European, we are American, and we have different principles!")
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: Coleus

Iraq seems to be proceeding along Republic lines. It's amazing to me that "majority rules" has not been a big issue as a result of the results.

Elections to provide representative government must continue to occur on some scheduled basis. I have read that some countries have elections that elect a leader for life.

There must be built-in accountability. That means regular voting.


5 posted on 02/16/2005 8:36:34 PM PST by jolie560
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To: Coleus

Excellent :-)

IF you can KEEP it...

*hears dim strains of John Williams' Imperial March faintly echoing in the distance...:-(*


6 posted on 02/16/2005 8:46:24 PM PST by FYREDEUS
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To: Coleus
Click Here

7 posted on 02/16/2005 8:48:11 PM PST by Fiddlstix (This Tagline for sale. (Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Coleus
On that occasion the president remarked that the men who signed the Constitution "understood the enormity of what they were attempting to do: to create a representative democracy."

enormity, n. "a monstrous evil or outrage"

8 posted on 02/16/2005 9:31:17 PM PST by SedVictaCatoni (<><)
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To: Coleus

I like this article, printing it for my better half.
I too have noticed all this "democracy" talk lately. It seems that once again the dummocrats have been successful in controling the language. Every time there are a people in the world having an election, the media stands up and says "Ain't Democracy Grand"


9 posted on 02/16/2005 9:35:43 PM PST by freethinkingman
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To: freethinkingman
It seems that once again the dummocrats have been successful in controling the language.

It's not just the Dems. Bush is a Republican president, but continues to call our government a Democracy - not a Republic. You'd think a Republican president would know better.

The new governments in both Iraq and Afghanistan are both called Democracies by Bush's administration, but you'll never hear a democratic politician use the word Republic for our government.

10 posted on 02/16/2005 10:10:10 PM PST by Noachian (We're all one judge away from tyranny.)
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To: Jay777

Thanks for the link!


11 posted on 02/17/2005 12:27:48 AM PST by lainde ( ...we are not European, we are American, and we have different principles!")
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To: freethinkingman

"Ain't Democracy Grand"

How little they know.


12 posted on 02/17/2005 9:41:36 PM PST by Coleus (http://www.reversingroe.com/ Hear Norma McCorvey in this film)
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To: SedVictaCatoni
Usage Note: Enormity is frequently used to refer simply to the property of being great in size or extent, but many would prefer that enormousness (or a synonym such as immensity) be used for this general sense and that enormity be limited to situations that demand a negative moral judgment, as in Not until the war ended and journalists were able to enter Cambodia did the world really become aware of the enormity of Pol Pot's oppression. Fifty-nine percent of the Usage Panel rejects the use of enormity as a synonym for immensity in the sentence At that point the engineers sat down to design an entirely new viaduct, apparently undaunted by the enormity of their task. This distinction between enormity and enormousness has not always existed historically, but nowadays many observe it. Writers who ignore the distinction, as in the enormity of the President's election victory or the enormity of her inheritance, may find that their words have cast unintended aspersions or evoked unexpected laughter.

From Dictionary.com

13 posted on 05/13/2005 10:38:03 PM PDT by GVnana
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To: Coleus

Thank you, I will bookmark for further reading :)


14 posted on 05/14/2005 12:54:07 AM PDT by 1FASTGLOCK45 (FreeRepublic: More fun than watching Dem'Rats drown like Turkeys in the rain! ! !)
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To: Coleus

Truth is not 'self' evident...never has been..

God said the human heart (the self) is deceitfully wicked...who can know it...

Apart from God we can not keep a Republic

The mess the USA will be made by such men who hate God
and the founders won't be worth living in or fighting for.

imo


15 posted on 05/14/2005 10:21:24 AM PDT by joesnuffy (The generation that survived the depression and won WW2 proved poverty does not cause crime)
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To: GVgirl; SedVictaCatoni
This distinction between enormity and enormousness has not always existed historically, but nowadays many observe it.

Wussie.

Checking Oxford, it seems that the words "enorm" and "enormity" entered English (from the French énorme and émormitié) in the late 15th Century. The meaning being, as might be expected: "out of the normal, abnormal".

They were joined by "enormous" (from the Latin enormis) c.1531.

The first noted use of "enormity" with the specific meaning of "menstrous wickeness" is dated at 1538.

The first noted use of "enormous" with the specific meaning of "extraordinary in size or quality" is dated at 1544.

It seems to me the distinction was developing from the start. It ill-behoves us to go against the tradition of half a millenia.

16 posted on 05/14/2005 6:50:15 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity - MLK)
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To: Oztrich Boy

That of courde should be "monstrous wickeness", the other is a matter of theology I don't want to disturb.


17 posted on 05/14/2005 6:55:28 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity - MLK)
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To: Coleus
McManus is right on just about everything he writes. This article should be committed to memory by every American. The French Revolution is what democracy evolves to.

My concern is the comment on the front page of Free Republic, "once the people come to know they can vote themselves money from the public largess, this constitutional republic is finished." This was the tool for the democratic party for 50 years, and now, the republicans seem to be following suit. The communists did the central planning at the Kremlin. I fear we are moving toward central planning of a similar order. Notwithstanding the constitutional impediments to this, we seem to be racing headlong toward absolute centrally ordained order. The Bill of Rights (which should be entitled the Bill of Federal Government Restrictions) are coming to mean whatever any liberal or appellate or supreme court justice wants it to mean. Now after 11 years of republican rule (House) and nearly that long for the senate and 5 for the Executive, I see little conservative dominence of ideals institutionalized. We move ever left it seems. Perhaps the pace has slowed a little, but we have moved left ideologically, as a nation, over the past 11 years. The people, 52%, remain true to conservativism but even the republican politicians cannot effectuate conservative ideals inculcated into the law and code. New prescription entitlement and 600 billion and counting, an immigration policy which is, if nothing else, irresponsible,and at worst could result in the death of millions of American, Republican timidity in the face of Democrat cocksure hubris, (the senate needs to operate with commety while the democrates call the republican leadership evil, incompetent,without judgement, and all manner of vileness), an account deficit the largest in history, a budget deficit larger than any in history, and a trade deficit larger than under any democrat. As bad as this sounds, if these thing had occurred under a Gore or Kerry administration, we would be howling to beat the band. I believe President Bush to be a decent and good man, but I see minimalist conservatism which he has effectuated in real time.

18 posted on 05/14/2005 7:18:53 PM PDT by Texas Songwriter
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To: Oztrich Boy

LOL! You're gonna make waves!


19 posted on 05/14/2005 9:06:47 PM PDT by GVnana
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