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How Long Does the USA have?
Recieved via Email | Alexander Tyler - 1787 Scotland; Prof. Joseph Olson - Hemline Univ. School of Law, St. Paul, MN

Posted on 01/19/2008 5:58:50 PM PST by ImpBill

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To: ImpBill
I've been saying that we're done for the last 10 years or so.

The only thing I regret is that I didn't recognize it sooner.

I feel sorry for my kids and grandkids.

I trained and am training both in the exercise of freedom and liberty, they simply have no place to practice it.

21 posted on 01/19/2008 6:14:55 PM PST by elkfersupper
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To: ImpBill
May I add as well that when a major political party ran for President a candidate who years earlier had openly sided against America during a time of war, it became clear that a terrible poison has been introduced into our body politic.
22 posted on 01/19/2008 6:15:02 PM PST by BenLurkin
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To: GovernmentIsTheProblem

Ok, urban myth accepted. Any thoughts about the context of the message?


23 posted on 01/19/2008 6:15:13 PM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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To: ImpBill
HOW LONG DOES THE USA HAVE?

There is a simple political answer to this.

If we elect a dem or a pro-amnesty RINO, we will see many 10's of millions of new dem voters over a short period of time. So many, that the time to the end will be greatly reduced.

24 posted on 01/19/2008 6:15:26 PM PST by umgud
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To: ImpBill

Who Voted in Early America?

Voting Before the Revolution

For the most part, American colonists adopted the voter qualifications that they had known in England. Typically, a voter had to be a free, adult, male resident of his county, a member of the predominant religious group, and a “freeholder.” A freeholder owned land worth a certain amount of money. Colonists believed only freeholders should vote because only they had a permanent stake in the stability of society. Freeholders also paid the bulk of the taxes. Other persons, as the famous English lawyer William Blackstone put it, “are in so mean a situation as to be esteemed to have no will of their own.”

Becoming a freeholder was not difficult for a man in colonial America since land was plentiful and cheap. Thus up to 75 percent of the adult males in most colonies qualified as voters. But this voting group fell far short of a majority of the people then living in the English colonies. After eliminating everyone under the age of 21, all slaves and women, most Jews and Catholics, plus those men too poor to be freeholders, the colonial electorate consisted of perhaps only 10 percent to 20 percent of the total population.

The act of voting in colonial times was quite different from today. In many places, election days were social occasions accompanied by much eating and drinking. When it came time to vote, those qualified would simply gather together and signify their choices by voice or by standing up. As time went on, this form of public voting was gradually abandoned in favor of secret paper ballots. For a while, however, some colonies required published lists showing how each voter cast his ballot.

Voting fraud and abuses were common in the colonies. Sometimes large landowners would grant temporary freeholds to landless men who then handed the deeds back after voting. Individuals were paid to vote a certain way or paid not to vote at all. Corrupt voting officials would allow unqualified persons to vote while denying legitimate voters the right to cast their ballots. Intimidation and threats, even violence, were used to persuade people how to vote. Ballots were faked, purposely miscounted, “lost,” and destroyed.

After declaring independence on July 4, 1776, each former English colony wrote a state constitution. About half the states attempted to reform their voting procedures. The trend in these states was to do away with the freehold requirement in favor of granting all taxpaying, free, adult males the right to vote. Since few men escaped paying taxes of some sort, suffrage (the right to vote) expanded in these states. Vermont’s constitution went even further in 1777 when it became the first state to grant universal manhood suffrage (i.e., all adult males could vote). Some states also abolished religious tests for voting. It was in New Jersey that an apparently accidental phrase in the new state constitution permitted women to vote in substantial numbers for the first time in American history.

“Of Government in Petticoats!!!”

The provision on suffrage in the New Jersey state constitution of 1776 granted the right to vote to “all inhabitants” who were of legal age (21), owned property worth 50 English pounds (not necessarily a freehold), and resided in a county for at least one year. No one is sure what was meant by “all inhabitants” since the New Jersey constitutional convention was held in secret. But it appears that no agitation for woman suffrage occurred at the convention.

After the state constitution was ratified by the voters (presumably only men voted), little comment on the possibility of women voting took place in the state for 20 years. Even so, one state election law passed in 1790 included the words “he or she.” It is unclear how many, or if any, women actually voted during this time.

In 1797, a bitter contest for a seat in the New Jersey state legislature erupted between John Condict, a Jeffersonian Republican from Newark, and William Crane, a Federalist from Elizabeth. Condict won the election, but only by a narrow margin after Federalists from Elizabeth turned out a large number of women to vote for Crane. This was probably the first election in U.S. history in which a substantial group of women went to the polls.

Newspaper coverage of women voting was widespread in the state and included the publication of a new song titled, “The Freedom of Election.” The sarcastic last verse illustrates pretty much what the attitude of most New Jersey men must have been:

Then freedom hail! thy powers prevail
o’er prejudice and error;
No longer shall man tyrannize,
and rule the world in terror:
Now one and all, proclaim the fall
of Tyrants! - Open wide your throats,
And welcome in the peaceful scene,
of government in petticoats!!!

New Jersey newspapers debated whether the state constitution really intended for women to vote. Some argued that the words “all inhabitants” surely did not include children, slaves, and foreigners. If this were the case, they continued, women should not be allowed to vote either because they never had before. Others maintained that perhaps widows and single women who owned property worth 50 pounds should be able to vote. Married women were automatically excluded from voting since at this time all property in a marriage legally belonged to the husband.

One New Jersey opponent of woman suffrage wrote in 1799, “It is evident, that women, generally, are neither, by nature, nor habit, nor education, nor by their necessary condition in society, fitted to perform this duty [of voting] with credit to themselves, or advantage to the public.”

In 1806, Newark and Elizabeth again faced off at the polls, this time over the site of a new county courthouse. During three days of voting, partisans from both towns used every legal and illegal device to gather the most votes. Men and boys, white and black, citizens and aliens, residents and non-residents, voted (often many times). Women and girls, married and single, with and without property, joined the election frenzy. Finally, males dressed up as females and voted one more time.

Newark, with 1,600 qualified voters, counted over 5,000 votes; Elizabeth, with 1,000 legal voters, counted more than 2,200 votes. Although Newark claimed victory, the voting was so blatantly fraudulent that the state legislature canceled the election.

The following year, the state legislature passed a new election law to clear up the confusion over who was qualified to vote in New Jersey. The law declared that since it was “highly necessary to the safety, quiet, good order, and dignity of the state,” no persons were to be allowed to vote except free white men who either owned property worth 50 pounds or were taxpayers. Such voters would also have to be citizens and residents of the county where they voted. The campaign for this new election law was led by John Condict, the legislator who was nearly defeated in 1797 when many women voted for his opponent. Thus, in 1807, with little debate in the all-male state legislature, and no public protest from the state’s female population, the experiment with woman suffrage in New Jersey came to an end.

Expanding the Right to Vote

Although for a time some states like New Jersey wanted to limit suffrage, the trend throughout U.S. history has been to expand the right to vote. At first, the main debate was over property tests. But by the Civil War, most states had replaced the freehold and other property requirements with universal white manhood suffrage or something close to it.

With the end of slavery, reformers turned to securing the right to vote for black freedmen. While this was accomplished constitutionally with the ratification of the 15th Amendment in 1870, another century passed before discrimination against black voters was finally suppressed. Women did not win the right to vote until the adoption of the 19th Amendment in 1920, over 100 years after women lost the vote in New Jersey.

In 1964, the 24th Amendment prohibited denying anyone the right to vote in federal elections for failing to pay a voting or any other tax. Finally, in 1971, the 26th Amendment reduced the legal voting age to 18 in all elections.


25 posted on 01/19/2008 6:16:04 PM PST by Rome2000 (Peace is not an option)
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To: ImpBill
May I add as well that when a major political party ran for President a candidate who years earlier had openly sided against America during a time of war, it became clear that a terrible poison has been introduced into our body politic.
26 posted on 01/19/2008 6:16:51 PM PST by BenLurkin
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To: ProfessorGage
Thanks Prof.

I appreciate your additional input. So far many responses have been to debunk the sources, and then not comment on the context of the narrative.

27 posted on 01/19/2008 6:17:08 PM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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To: umgud

Wish I could disagree, but I have had these thoughts for quite some long time now.


28 posted on 01/19/2008 6:18:49 PM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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To: umgud
Now that any moron over the age of 18 can vote and with motor voter even illegal aliens are casting ballots it is pretty much over.

When the imbeciles are in the majority (they gave algore the popular vote in 2000, and he is a nutjob), we will fall.

29 posted on 01/19/2008 6:20:22 PM PST by Rome2000 (Peace is not an option)
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To: WorkingClassFilth

Agreed. I have long felt that, unfortunately, America reached her apex a number of decades ago now. And it appears our decline may be gaining momentum rapidly.


30 posted on 01/19/2008 6:20:43 PM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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To: GovernmentIsTheProblem
Urban myth.

As are the stats.

Should be true, even if it isn't. I say run it on the nightly news.

31 posted on 01/19/2008 6:21:18 PM PST by RobinOfKingston (Man, that's stupid ... even by congressional standards.)
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To: ImpBill
How Long Does the USA have?

As soon as the corrupt politicians get their way, we will become CANAMEX, and 'it's over!'

32 posted on 01/19/2008 6:22:39 PM PST by NRA2BFree ("The time is near at hand which must determine whether Americans are to be free men or slaves!")
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To: RobinOfKingston

Re: Your tagline: *ouch*


33 posted on 01/19/2008 6:23:23 PM PST by null and void (We're tired of being sucked up to once every 4 years and stabbed in the back the rest of the time.)
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To: ImpBill
If Congress grants amnesty and citizenship to twenty million criminal invaders called illegal and they vote, then we can say goodbye to the USA in fewer than five years.

I have seen a great many of these illegals and there are many entrepreneurs among them. I think many of them have come here for opportunity not handouts. I see many older illegals out on the street selling fruit or flowers. Many street corners has an illegal and an American, the illegal is selling fruit and the American is asking for a handout.

If anything our government is corrupting the illegals into the welfare system.

34 posted on 01/19/2008 6:23:28 PM PST by oldbrowser (100% margin of error.)
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To: ImpBill

Faith demands adherence to truth - not circumstance. This election is a litmus test. We stand, or fall, by the answer we render.


35 posted on 01/19/2008 6:24:28 PM PST by WorkingClassFilth ('Yellow is mellow, but brown goes down.' -- The Clinton campaign slogan for 2008)
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To: Rome2000

Thank you so much for adding to the discussion of the context of the thread! A very interesting read of history.


36 posted on 01/19/2008 6:24:59 PM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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To: ImpBill

you are familiar with Madison’s exposition in Federalist Paper # 10, right?


37 posted on 01/19/2008 6:25:27 PM PST by gusopol3
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To: ImpBill
Gore's territory mostly encompassed those citizens living in government-owned tenements and living off various forms of government welfare...' Olson believes the United States is now somewhere between the 'complacency and apathy' phase of Professor Tyler's definition of democracy, with some forty percent of the nation's population already having reached the 'governmental dependency' phase.

Er, this ignores the contribution of the big corporate headquarters and universities in the cities. These are the wealthy, liberal powerbrokers...

38 posted on 01/19/2008 6:25:49 PM PST by RochesterFan
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To: ImpBill

Fraud or not, there is a lot of truth to what was originally posted. We are somewhere between 6 and 7 on that list. The culture is crumbling around us. It is just a matter of time before we get a couple more liberal activist judges on the SCOTUS that will wipe out what is left of the U.S. Constition and Bill of Rights. The mob will applaud as it happens. I am actually an optimistic person by nature, but I am also very concerned about the direction we are heading.


39 posted on 01/19/2008 6:26:37 PM PST by txjeep
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To: BenLurkin

Ah yes, very, very recent history. All adding up to the same conclusion as written in the now Snopes.com debunked facts concerning the authors mentioned in the email.


40 posted on 01/19/2008 6:26:50 PM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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