IN DEFENSE OF
A
PRINCIPLED APPROACH TO
LAW
by
Joel M.
Skousen
PREFACE
At first
glance one might well ask, Why would anyone object to a principled
approach to
law? Why the need for a
defense? The answer lies
in two facts: 1) a
logically consistent, non-conflicting set of principles governing
law and government does not now exist, notwithstanding the
great leap forward by the founding fathers of the US Constitution
in establishing that liberty rests by right in the
people--not by
special grant of government authority. Our present legal
system, is a
combination of common law legal precedents and free-market
traditions intermixed in the 20th century with a variety of modern
social and political ideologies, which are often contradictory and
conflicting. 2) Each of
these two major ideologies, liberty and Socialism, have large
constituencies vying either to be free from government intrusion or
to harness governments power for personal and group
gain. A consistent set of
principles, providing powerful restraints upon the improper powers
of government or the ability of politicians to buy votes with
benefits, would be very unpopular with many groups who now enjoy
majority status in legislative bodies.
Frankly, I
dont expect Socialists (including those Republicans who arent
willing to admit that what they often propose is merely a
watered-down version of Socialism) to like the restrictions of
these principles. Once in
power, benefit-corrupted people and politicians never voluntarily
relinquish their majoritarian powers over the redistribution of
other peoples money. They
arent my target audience.
My interest is in building a unified concensus for just law and
government among conservatives,
libertarians and
honest, non-coercive liberals who are currently
factionalized into hundreds of small and medium-sized
organizations--none of which have any real power to stop the forces
arrayed against us.
Christian conservatives are at odds with regular conservatives over
not putting God to the forefront of every proposal.
Social conservatives are at odds with
libertarians over how much personal liberty to allow when it leads
to personal corruption that has public or indirect private effects
on society.
Conservatives of liberty cant possibly win the current battle nor
even govern properly unless key issues that divide us are worked
out while we can still assemble and debate in relative
peace. If we wait till the
next crisis of war or depression (when our liberties are in a free
fall) we will still be arguing while the left comes forth with
their well-worn, ready-made, benefit-corrupting
solutions. The left
already controls the legal and governmental agenda we currently
operate under, so even now our conservative sons and daughters, who
are dutifully trying to work within the system, are enticed into
tinkering and modifying Socialist systems. Who is going to
teach them how to
implement solutions that foster liberty? We need to step back
and regroup as a movement and chart a new course for liberty
based upon consistent principles that are capable of unifying all
good people.
In terms
of unity, we are at a
real disadvantage up
against the left. It only
takes one thing in common for liberals to
unite. It only takes
one difference of opinion for conservatives to
divide. To reverse
that propensity among conservatives and forge a larger unified
whole, we must step back from the illusions of nice-sounding
generalities about God, Country, and family values and tackle the
tough issues I will raise here. It will take hard work,
argumentation,
and conversion to hammer out our differences. I dont
pretend it will be easy or
pleasant. Changes--even
minor ones on core issues--are always difficult to
achieve. All too often few
conservatives or honest liberals demonstrate the patience,
tolerance, or ability to do the tough thinking it takes to argue
differences of opinion.
Most would rather rely on the well-worn stock phrases previously
mentioned--most of which dont hold up in the detailed world of law
where the real power of government is manifest. There is
a way to accomplish much of
what social conservatives want to do, but it must be done on a
basis of consistent principles that do not violate fundamental
rights. Thats what this
proposal is all about.
I invite
you to join with me in going through some basic arguments on the
major issues relating to these proposed principles. If you
disagree, address the
arguments--dont just restate generalized dogma--which doesnt
ever lead to a resolution.
Many Christian conservatives dont like argumentation, which they
find synonymous with contention. But there are ways to
argue without
being contentious. One of
the best ways to avoid contention is for both sides to stick to
sound thinking, and to be humble enough to accept correction
when thinking patterns are illogical or incomplete.
Let me
give a quick example to illustrate. I often come up
against the authority
argument--a flaw in
thinking where one relies exclusively on someones reputation or
authority to support an issue rather than address the specific
argument in dispute.
Conservatives will often fall back on what they consider the
ultimate authority--what the founding fathers said--as
their
first line of defense against any principle that may differ from
the original Constitution.
The trouble is, there really never existed a unified voice of the
founding fathers. Even
Alexander Hamilton, who drafted a majority of the Federalist Papers
defending ratification, only did so because he saw the Constitution
as a stepping stone to greater federal authority later
on. What we call original
intent is really a combination of the best ideas from both
federalists and anti-federalists, who had wide and heated
differences of opinion during the Convention of 1787 and
afterward. Taken as a
whole, what the founders accomplished was a miracle
considering the extreme
factions they had to deal with. But that miracle of sage
compromises
did not mean the Constitution was perfect or that it even came
close to creating a solid barrier against government encroachments
on liberty, especially at the state and local level.
The
founders who prevailed at the convention got done what they could
during a time of grave weakness and instability in government--and
it was a wonderful beginning. However, there were
many gaping holes
in the document that would be used in the ensuing years by statists
to continually expand the power of government. These are
the issues that must be
addressed today--not because we do not honor the Constitution, but
because we must shore up and give increased support to the basic
outline of liberty they provided. I have spoken of the
disunity among
many of the founding fathers, especially on principles and issues
that were left unresolved--which were many. That disunity
was so great that it
caused many of the victorious Federalists to view each other as
enemies during the next twenty years. Some died harboring
bitter feelings
one against another due to their failure to work out crucial
differences early on. Lets
not make the same mistake.
Now is the time for greater unity. Unfortunately, unity
today will be
much more difficult to achieve than in the days of the
founders. Law has developed
a complexity that will never go away--no matter how much we may
wish it so. Additional
principles are necessary to bring order and resolution to todays
diverse and wide-ranging conflicts.
The
ultimate misuse of the authority argument is when some decry even
the attempt to
improve upon what the founders did, as if that would impugn our
reverence for their work.
This kind of thinking simply doesnt help resolve
anything. It is irrelevant
to the core issues and counterproductive as well. As
revolutionary as the Constitution
was at limiting government power, it was a pragmatic document
filled with many compromises. We have 200+ years of
history behind
us to judge the merits of everything the founders did, from the
language they used, to the basic concepts. The core is
solid and there is nothing
that I am going to propose that will undermine that. But,
if the founders were present
today they would be the first to issue a call for tighter language
to clarify their intent.
The cold fact remains, someone has to finish the job the founders
started in the quest to preserve liberty. Why not our
generation who stands at
the brink--watching our own pragmatic leaders compromise and
destroy what remains of our freedoms?
Many
dismiss these efforts as impractical since existing legal tradition
has so much momentum. That
is an issue of strategy,
which cannot be
appropriately addressed until we first decide upon the principles
of truth we need to defend.
Frankly, our chances of taking a benefit-corrupted majority of
people back to the restrictions of the Constitution of 1789 are
almost nil, and if we did, the lawyers would have us back to our
present dilemma within a few years because most of the loopholes
they used to subvert limited government would still be
there. If we are going
to take the trouble to fight at all, lets do it for the sake of
building up a remnant of solid thinkers who can truly defend
liberty without contradictions and
over-generalizations. Lets
put our efforts on the solid ground of principles so that, whether
we win or lose politically, we will have laid a foundation so
powerful and inspiring that it will be impossible to
suppress.
INTRODUCTION
The proper
purpose of law and
government is to
protect fundamental rights, maintain mans agency to choose (when
not violating others rights) and to resolve conflicts between
individuals and groups in a fair and just manner.
Unfortunately, the enforcement powers
of government have most often been used to restrict fundamental
rights and provide special privileges and benefits to groups less
than the whole. Legalized
government tyranny has taken many forms, including dictators,
oligarchies and even democratic majorities (who use the power to
vote and tax to extract benefits from the most productive classes
of society). Such deviant
forms of government have been far more common than the ideal forms
precisely because the underlying premises used to establish
governmental authority over others have been based upon arbitrary,
conflicting or insufficiently precise assumptions (might makes
right, Divine right of kings or even common law).
The
United States
Constitution came the closest to establishing a limited
government based upon individual rights, but failed to define
those rights, leaving the courts and legislatures free to
introduce new privileges and false rights that have given rise to
our present benefit-corrupted citizenry, who prosper on government
intervention and redistribution of wealth. These and
other loopholes in the
broad and trusting language of the founders have allowed the
enemies of liberty to bring us to the point where almost every true
fundamental right is severely curtailed, and the restoration of
original intent is nigh unto impossible--whether by the ballot box
or an appeal to our representatives.
The
purpose of the proposed Principles
of Just Law and
Government is to set the groundwork for a new and more
formidable wall of protection for fundamental rights. It
incorporates all the best
principles of the US Constitution and declares additional
principles as necessary to fill the gaps in law and philosophy
which the original founders wrestled with but were not able to
resolve under the exigencies of their own crisis period. These
proposed principles provide the hope that we might once and for all
resolve the core issues of law and government and provide a stable
and comprehensive basis for unity--at least among those who view
themselves as conservatives of liberty.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOUND
PRINCIPLES
This
process is begun by first developing a workable definition
of fundamental
rights that allows all men to easily distinguish between true
rights (which allow the maximum of liberty while separating each
persons just claims) and false rights (which require that others
be partially enslaved to serve anothers needs). Second,
we establish criteria for the development of
principles, based on these fundamental rights. Those
criteria must be internally
consistent, non-conflicting, and comprehensive in
scope, so as to provide guidance to lawmakers for difficult
questions of law. If laws
are to be adjudicable in a fair and just manner they must be based
upon a consistent set of principles that judges can use as a basis
for interpretation. In the
adjudication process, judges can refer back to basic principles so
that conflicts can be resolved on non-arbitrary grounds.
It is not
sufficient to simply make a list of nice sounding virtues and
platitudes and call them principles. In general, a
proper set of principles
must be capable of providing a logical basis for both the structure
of government and each element of a constitution, statute or
law. Principles
are not the law
themselves, but are more general pronouncements of reasoned truths
that provide this logically consistent basis for law and
simultaneously restrict or limit the writer of the law to the
appropriate concepts.
A good set of principles also helps people see dangers in bad laws
that, at first glance, might seem reasonable or even
beneficial.
For
example, many people support seat belt laws because
seat
belts save lives. Its
true, they do--but that isnt the only point to
consider. Underlying every
specific law is a legal principle or generalization of the
law, either
right or wrong. In this
case the underlying and generalized legal principle is not only
wrong but extremely dangerous: that
a majority has the power to
dictate what is good for others, even when failure to comply does
not affect the rights of the majority. This
improper legal principle opens up
a major pathway of intrusion that is used to justify other good
for you proposals like fluoridation of water supplies and
motorcycle helmet laws.
Why not Titanium chaps to protect motorcyclists? Or three glasses
of milk a day? These kinds
of laws result in what I call an unlimited extension of
lawmaking
power which should never be allowed in good constitutional
law. Once we allow the
majority to start dictating what they think is good for
others, we create a legal
form of intrusiveness into the realm of self-responsibility that is
only limited by the willingness of the majority in power to
restrain itself, which is never a safe way to limit
government and protect rights.
CORE FOUNDING PRINCIPLES
Some
principles are more basic than others because they establish the
non-conflicting playing field, which allows men to form a
government without violating others rights from the
outset. They also provide
the basis for bringing all good persons to a potential meeting of
the minds. The fact that
all men wont ultimately agree doesnt make the quest for proper
principles less valid, as long as the principles do, in fact,
provide a basis for the greatest peaceful interaction between
people in the context of government and law. Some people
will resist being bound by
principles for a variety of reasons. Some may not like
doing what is
right. Some may simply be
incapable or unwilling to think things through--indeed, developing
principles is a rigorous mental process. [Once the
difficult process of
determination and testing of principles is complete, a basic,
shorter version of condensed
principles is appropriate to help facilitate acceptance and
understanding.] Finally,
some may object simply because they want to preserve their
privilege to fund their own pet projects with other peoples taxes,
or even violate others rights in more obvious ways. If,
however, the principles
preserve everyones fundamental rights, are logically
consistent and non-conflicting no one has a good reason
not to agree. Thats the
key point, and that is my goal--to develop something that is
logical, right, and practical that solves the historical conflicts
in law and government between competing groups of good people once
and for all.
This
non-conflicting, comprehensive criteria is what distinguishes good
principles from bad ones, or even incomplete ones. Good
principles simply dont allow
anyone to justify creating laws that permit the taking of life,
liberty and property or the forcing of others to serve their
needs. That isnt to say
principles, all by themselves, stop men from using force to enforce
evil, but it does remove any presumption of legitimacy as
well as the excuses people use to justify the modern forms of
tyranny--like democratic or Fabian Socialism, which allows private
ownership but controls property by regulation, and
control). Ultimately one
must forge a cooperative form of government with enforcement powers
in order to stop violations of rights.
Here are
what I consider the core
non-conflicting principles, which will be explained in greater
detail later:
1. Each
individual, capable of being self-responsible, can rightfully claim
as fundamental rights
any action or state of being that all others can simultaneously
claim without forcing others to serve their
needs.
2.
Individual sovereignty
is the underlying authority behind every legitimate form of
cooperative government.
3.
Families have a
special, temporary form of sovereignty over the
health,
welfare and education of their children until those children are
capable of being responsible for themselves.
4. The only proper way to
establish a government among free and sovereign individuals, with
police powers of enforcement, is by initial mutual
agreement of all
parties, and the subsequent agreement, on the same terms, of all
those joining the compact at a later date.
5. Nothing done under
government authority has any validity if it violates or
limits a fundamental
right, unless such limitations have been specifically agreed
upon by all citizens participating in the governmental
process.
Before
proceeding into a discussion of the other principles derived from
the foregoing, let me address three of the most common objections
raised by others relative to individual rights, authority, and
efficacy of our existing Constitution. I do so because
these objections are
so persistent in some conservatives minds that they tend to cloud
their ability to be objective as they read the principles, or even
to see that what I have proposed here does not threaten what
they value most dearly.
Lastly your ability to understand the careful wording of the
principles will be enhanced after working through these three basic
controversies.
ANSWERING THE
OBJECTIONS:
GOD, SOCIAL RIGHTS,
AND THE CONSTITUTION
1. GOD: THE PROBLEM WITH RECURRING TO GOD
AS THE BASIC AUTHORITY
Those of
us who believe in God and acknowledge his ultimate sovereignty in
the universe may be tempted to make Gods sovereignty the basis of
authority for earthly government. There are several major
problems with
this strategy. First,
it violates Gods purpose
in creating this earth as a proving ground for man. Second, despite interpretative
claims to the contrary, we do not have any definitive revelation
from God, common to all believers in God, that establishes either
fundamental rights or an outline of secular government. Even the
concept of fundamental rights is missing from the
Bible. Many have tried to
extract such things by strenuous interpretation of scripture, but
its not clear enough to allow Christians to agree among
themselves, let alone gain the agreement of non-believers or other
religions. Third, God
has never supported the concept of enforcing purely religious
punishments upon non-believers by secular government.
Since God
is sovereign, he has the power to intervene at will in earths
affairs. His historic
reluctance to do so must, therefore, be taken as evidence that God
is holding back to enhance the testing purposes of this earth,
demonstrating as well that He has a greater interest in preserving
mans agency to believe or disbelieve, than he has in proving his
existence (at least for the present). If God has declined
to enforce a
recognition of his own sovereignty on earth (or at least postpone
such enforcement till the judgment day), how can we claim to be
authorized to enforce that recognition upon other non-believers by
making it the basis of authority in a civil government meant to
protect the rights of both believers and non-believers?
God Himself has not only refrained
from establishing an earthly secular government, by revelation, but
he has given every indication that He wants to remain in the
background as much as possible so as to maintain a level playing
field. Even the powers of
Satan are both permitted and limited by God so that good and evil
can compete for adherents.
Many
Christians mistakenly look to the Old Testament as an
example that God
established an earthly government. He did
establish an earthly kingdom,
it is true, but it was clearly a covenant religious society,
not a secular government intended to be implanted upon the
rest of the world against their will. While both secular
and religious laws
and punishments were found in the Mosaic Law, such strict laws and
punishments were only binding upon those agreeing to be part of the
Lords covenant people.
Only those violations of life, liberty and property were prosecuted
outside the boundaries of the covenant society. From this
we can see that even God
had some type of line of demarcation between the proper bounds of
secular and religious government. Secular government can
only prosecute
violations of basic fundamental rights related to protecting life,
liberty and property. When
groups wish to live by more restrictive standards that dont
violate a fundamental right when the standard is transgressed, they
can only enforce those higher punishments upon those who have
covenanted to abide by such punishments from the
beginning. This standard
allows non-believers to be free to live their own values as long as
all refrain from violations of actual fundamental
rights. The doctrine of
fundamental rights provides a clear and easy-to-administer dividing
line, in most cases. Ill
address the exceptions shortly.
The fact
that Jefferson and
others referred to God-given
rights does not make it a suitable basis for law in a
pluralistic society. Its
a statement of faith and an appropriate expression of religious
opinion, but improper as a source of authority on rights except for
a unified religious government--which didnt fully exist even
during the founding era of America. Part of the problem is
that we think
we must have some ultimate authority to proclaim rights, which
isnt really true. As long
as our definition is inherently non-conflicting each of us can
simply claim proper rights and defend them without recurring to any
other authority--except that which we may form by mutual consent to
protect our rights. This is
one of the basic tenets of cooperative government, that we create
our own authority to defend rights. Such authority is
legitimate as long
as the governmental compact is approved by all participants
voluntarily and that it does not violate the rights of others who
dont wish to join.
In
summary, I do believe that God has an interest in promoting
liberty, but He wants us to do it in a way that doesnt force
others to accept His existence as a pre-condition of participation,
and that is why I am opposed to using God as the stated basis for
rights--even if it is true.
To believe in Gods sovereignty, or even to openly declare that one
believes rights come from God, does not violate Gods testing
purposes, but making the acceptance of that belief a
basis for participation in a pluralistic earthly government
does violate Gods purposes, in my opinion.
Lastly, it
is not necessary to enforce the recognition of God upon
non-believers or even upon the legal system for religion to
flourish or for the law to protect the freedom of
belief. All of Gods
religious purposes are preserved merely by making sure government
can play no favorites, either by enforcing restrictions on
religious beliefs or by taking peoples tax money to promote
others beliefs. What is
necessary is to establish a level playing field where all belief
systems are free to compete with adherents--with none having the
power to harness the authority of government in their behalf.
Currently,
the playing field of competition for moral values is not
level. In fact, it
never has been. In the
early history of America, Christians used the power of government
to establish official churches, finance ministerial salaries and
promote various Christian causes using taxpayer money.
Christians controlled public education
for a time in many states, as well. Some European nations
still have
state-sponsored religions which is a violation of the property
rights of those who must pay for the establishment and teaching of
values they oppose.
Non-Christians rightly felt imposed upon because their tax moneys
were being used to support the promulgation of values that were not
within the purview of governments taxing authority.
Today, we
have a new state religion in America--that of atheism and
evolution. While claiming
to be scientific and neutral (in its denial of God), it is anything
but neutral--it is still a value-oriented system of belief that
goes beyond the defense of fundamental rights, and therefore is an
inappropriate function of government taxing authority.
While Christians are eager to retake
control of the public school system, they fail to realize that it
is always inappropriate for any majority to control education
for all. All forms of
education have values (even science) and those values should
always be competing--never monopolized by majorities lest
the minoritys property rights be violated. The only way
to accomplish this is
complete separation of
schools and state. All
education must be private, or, if run by government, 100% funded by
user fees so that it competes on a level playing field with
private education.
As we
shall see in the following principles, a system of laws based upon
fundamental rights does not require that God be banished
from all public expressions as is becoming the rule in our
ACLU-distorted legal system (which only defends a portion of
individual rights). In a
system that establishes the full range of fundamental rights, both
believers and non-believers have all the freedom they need to
declare their beliefs to willing listeners. In the public
arena only the direct
expenditure of taxes would be restricted from being used to promote
non-coercive values or religion. Leaders can rightfully
express their
personal and religious feelings as part of their leadership
responsibility. Religious
groups can use public property on the same basis as any other group
of private citizens--paying only appropriate user fees to cover any
administrative costs of government in managing public properties
and keeping order.
2. SOCIETAL RIGHTS: THE SOCIAL
CONSERVATIVES ATTACK ON INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS
As the
left has succeeded in carving out a lop-sided and incomplete
concept of rights, defending only the right of personal corruption,
but denying other key rights (like the right the rest of us have to
make discriminating choices against that corruption), certain
social conservatives have reacted by attacking the whole concept
of individual rights and replacing it with a sloppy and poorly
thought out doctrine of societal
rights--the supposed
communal right to have a moral society. Their basic
premise is that since
government cannot long exist without a moral people, society as a
whole has the right to enforce a community standard of moral
conduct upon all citizens, even if those standards violate
individual liberty. The
implicit assumption here is that religious-based societal standards
are superior to individual rights since society has the right to
defend itself against internal corruption. Proponents
claim that the societal
rights system of law holds out the promise of being able to defend
moral agency, the family and religious values. I will
demonstrate that it does no
such thing. Not only do
these imprecise and generalized societal rights not
provide the legal basis for defense of family values, but that they
provide the very color of law that is currently being used to
destroy religious values today.
The
essential flaw in this whole premise is centered around the
question of who is going to decide what religious or moral
standards become community standards? Proponents
respond that the majority has the right to
decide--confidently assuming that we, the religious community, are
the majority. This is very
short-sighted at best and lethal to religious liberty at
worst. Without the limiting
role of a doctrine of individual rights, this majoritarian power
that social conservatives grant to themselves has the unlimited
power to destroy liberty.
If
any majority has the power to impose
community standards upon others, then surely the day will come when
Christians will lose the majority and be forced to become subject
to the values of a new majority, hostile to
religion. The only
safe way to run a government is to make sure that no majority
has the power to enforce moral values on others--except in the
area of violations of fundamental rights. [Note: fundamental
rights, as defined
in this proposal, differ from some libertarian versions of
individual rights in that they include a form of family
sovereignty that remedies one of the major deficiencies of an
individual rights doctrine].
Societal
rights only live in the world of idealized and generalized
concepts--they simply dont work (in terms of consistency and
fairness) when you get down to specific legal
challenges. They are
awkward to adjudicate in court because there is no single entity
present in court either as victim or proponent. What is
present is someone claiming
the authority to represent all of society, even though they are, in
fact, only representing a portion of society that happens to
control the majority of votes in some governing body.
Minorities and dissenters from the
majority position are never represented--unless they can take
power--which is why this system always leads to class
conflict. Sadly, no one
has any rights unless they capture the majority in a
winner-take-all democracy.
A lot of
conservatives insist they arent using force when acting by
majority rule, but it is force just the same when the power of
government is used by majorities to take away life, liberty, or
property as part of the disciplinary system. The existing
majoritarian control
system builds class conflict and is the source of eternal wrangling
among factions and political parties. To repeat, societal
rights are a form
of unlimited democracy, which is what makes them so
dangerous. The same
doctrine of law that allows Christians to implant their moral
restrictions upon atheists can be used by atheists to implant
their religion upon Christians--depending on who controls the
majority.
The entire basis of the
American system is that this nation should NOT be a democracy--or
even a representative democracy. The best of our founders
were adamant
that they did not want the majority, no matter how well
intentioned, to have power over individual rights. They
came upon the radical and correct
idea of forming a constitutionally limited, representative
democracy within a federation of sovereign states (called a
republic)--and the
limits they would impose concentrated on not allowing government to
violate fundamental rights, no matter how big the majority that
controlled government.
[If only they had been able
to define rights, and apply them to the sovereign states, the
constitution would have more fully accomplished the job they
originally intended it to do]. Even though the
majority of founders
were anti-democracy, they failed to foresee the variety of novel
ways in which majoritarian forms of democratic rule would later
evolve to improperly regulate and control the lives of
others.
In
contrast to a majoritarian system, a carefully defined system of
fundamental rights, does not allow any person to use government to
promote its personal values or attack other values--unless there
are specific violations of someones rights. Every faction
is free to compete
peacefully in the private sector or try to gain the bully
pulpit of public leadership
to make their case, but neither can use direct government funding
to do so. In fact, the
entire public school controversy over restrictions on religious
values would quickly evaporate if we did only one thing--take away
the public school monopoly on tax funding and put all schools on
the same user fee basis as private schools. Within a very
short time, everyone
with differing values would start forming schools that served their
personal values, and no ones rights would be violated.
Lets take
one specific example in
law to demonstrate the difficulties the courts would have in
dealing with a doctrine of societal rights. I will use the
issue of private use of
discrete pornography. We
could just as well choose prohibition of alcohol, or mandatory seat
belt laws. The issues are
similar. Fundamental rights
proponents argue that as long as there is no specific violation of
rights or imminent
threat to life, liberty and property (as in drunk driving)
people must be allowed to take risks or otherwise corrupt
themselves. Social
conservatives, in contrast, argue that because there are indirect,
long-term effects of personal corruption on families and even
society, government should have the power to prohibit personal
corruption. They cite
increased rape from pornography, increased spousal abuse from
alcohol abuse, and increased burdens to public health care systems
and welfare from auto accidents where seat belts are not used.
Let me
dispose of the public health care burden argument
first. To do so, we need
to recur to a specific concept in jurisprudence to see the inherent
flaw. Lack of seat belt
usage really is a victimless act, even though it certainly is risky
and unwise. But many things
in life involve risk and controversial judgment. Allowing
government to mandate safety
restrictions for persons knowledgeable of those risks and willing
to take them is a very dangerous form of lawmaking
power. Using the excuse
that the public is a somehow a victim simply because
government has decided to treat indigent accident victims
without charge is totally
fallacious. In the
first place, government health care is an unconstitutional and
Socialist government program which improperly takes money from all
to deliver benefits to a few. But even if we set aside
the
redistribution violation of property rights, public-funded health
care is a non-binding unilateral contract and unenforceable
as a means of control and regulation. This is the key
issue in
jurisprudence.
Unilateral
agreements are not
generally valid in law. It
would be as if your neighbor agreed to voluntarily pay for your
health insurance--without your specific consent. The
neighbor is certainly free to
provide this gift in a unilateral manner, but he has no right
whatever to bind your actions because of his gift or dictate
to you what you can or cannot do on the grounds that it will
increase his self-imposed insurance premiums or his
liability. Governments
self-imposed offer to treat indigent people of accidents cannot be
used to bind all automobile users unless the government has a
specific agreement with each driver. Neither is it
sufficient to say that
everyone is bound because the health care system provisions were
determined by majoritarian government. As in the case of
two wolves and a
sheep voting on dinner, majoritarian rule without the initial
consent of all the government is always a violation of the basic
law of individual liberty. That is what this
document of
principles is all about--to establish a basis for law and
government that allows for the greatest amount of liberty while
still protecting all valid rights from infringement.
Fundamental rights proponents would agree that there are indirect
effects of personal
corruption, but that it sets a dangerous precedent in law to
proscribe personal liberty on the imprecise grounds of indirect
effects. The more sure
ground of law lies in prosecuting people when they actually cross
the line to direct effects and commit a crime. Simply put,
not all pornographers
become rapists, so prosecute the rapist. Not all alcohol
users become drunk
drivers, so prosecute drunk driving. Not all alcohol users
abuse their
family, so prosecute abuse when it occurs. In any system
of liberty, some abuse
will go undetected for a while, so a strong deterrence
is necessary to
control indirect effects before they become direct
violations of rights.
Social conservatives
complain that our current system protecting the individual right of
private corruption hasnt acted as a sufficient deterrence to
crime. This is true, but
the reason is because of a permissive judicial system,
controlled by sociologists who resist strong
punishment. Even though
strong punishments are possible under existing law, they are rarely
used and criminals know this. Worse, our welfare-state
type prison
system has its own brand of evil and corruption that embitters
prisoners and provides no restitution for victims. None of
this can be blamed on the
failure of an individual rights doctrine to provide
deterrence. Clearly there
needs to be established increased deterrence by dramatically
increasing the severity and swiftness of punishment once people
cross the line and commit a crime. A point
system that effectively
keeps track of chronic predation, leading to an eventual death
penalty, on points alone, would also increase deterrence
across the full range of criminal behavior.
To use
indirect effects to justify restrictions on personal
liberty, as the social conservatives suggest, creates this
dangerous unlimited
extension of lawmaking power that all good constitutions are
designed to prohibit.
Majority rule is always an unlimited power to rule, unless it is
restricted by a constitution that specifically limits majoritarian
powers in a way that cant be changed at will. Such
restraints should not be
arbitrary if they are to avoid conflict--and we cannot avoid being
arbitrary if we allow the use of subjective value
judgments, not
related to actual violations of rights, to take life, liberty
or property. Our current
constitution itself is not a fool-proof barrier to unlimited
majority rule since any and every portion can be amended by that
majority. The fact that
amendments require a super majority wisely increases the level of
protection, but hasnt prevented the majority from making some
serious errors in the past.
If the majority becomes corrupted (as it always does) it must be
restrained by law from acting to destroy others
rights. Not allowing any
constitutional amendment to violate a fundamental right is that
essential limitation.
You will
notice in the principles presented below, I have made the case for
separate family rights
as well as individual rights. This would give families a
basis to
prosecute any intrusion of family sovereignty by pornography and
seduction from outside the family unit, without
permission. The basis for
prosecution of crimes is thus kept on a sound basis of parental
rights to be free from being acted upon, harmfully, within
their own property.
There
remains another issue, however, which cannot be solved so easily
--the issue of offensive public behavior or offensive
private behavior that spills over (through sound or sight) to
other peoples property. This behavior is
offensive to people
of high moral values but difficult to prove as harmful without
using subjective criteria.
Examples of these problems are, public nudity, sexually suggestive
billboards, outdoor theater screens with R-rated movies, and loud
music, etc.
A
fundamental rights doctrine permits people to act in
self-corrupting ways, as long it stays private and when no
one elses rights are violated. But now we must deal with
the
leakage effects of corrupt behavior when they can be seen or
heard by others, who dont wish to be influenced, and where its
hard to prove damage or harm. A lot of bad conduct in
public is
fairly easy to handle.
Noise can be limited by a scientific standard of
loudness. Smoke or other
toxic airborne waste is also subject to fairly objective scientific
standards. Other things
like morally offensive conduct in language, nudity, or suggestive
behavior is difficult to define without being arbitrary, let alone
distinguish harm. We can
use fundamental rights doctrine as the basis for proscribing public
behaviors that can be shown to be harmful. But, if we
attempt to lower the
barrier of what defines a violation of rights from provable
harm to merely being offended by someones conduct, we
get into an even bigger problem. To claim a right not
to be
offended may give someone a right to control almost
everything any other person does--which would be a violation of our
basic non-conflicting definition of a fundamental
right. To include an
excessively broad definition of offensive views as a violation of
rights would create a nightmare of legal conflict as people would
then begin to claim the right to control whatever they can see even
beyond the borders of their own property. How does a court
adjudicate a right to
a view that can be claimed by more than one person? It
cant be done. One person may love the color pink
for a house, and others may feel offended.
Fundamental rights are based upon non-conflicting criteria that
work best at resolving conflict when each person can define his own
boundaries, interests and property. Conflicts are resolved
by the courts
by being able to separate yours and my rights and
property. However, in this
public dilemma we are dealing with people interacting together,
without specific legal boundaries and contractual
obligations, without any clear distinction of yours and
mine, and in the absence of easily definable harm to anyones
rights. For the gray areas
of law relative to offensive public conduct, we must look to
another solutions--and they are less than perfect under many
circumstances
There are
two possible solutions. The
first is to use the current community standard of
conduct
imposed on all by a majority of voters--but only where the
offense or corruption is public--not private. It has
worked pretty well for two
centuries, except as it has intruded into the realm of personal
privacy. The ever-present
danger is that this
doctrine allows an evil majority to take control and strip away all
current community standards against public corruption, and
replacing them with another. In other words, community
standards by
majority rule are completely mutable and do not offer permanent
safety.
The second
alternative would be the use of a variety of citizen
compacts to gain the
voluntary agreement of citizens, either as a whole or as members of
local jurisdictions. The
first is in place now, and as it deteriorates, people can begin to
fall back on the second method--not unlike choosing to live in
certain neighborhoods that have covenants and restrictions, agreed
upon by each person as they join the neighborhood. These
restrictions are purposefully
made difficult to change because of the fact that everyone has to
sign on as they move into the city or neighborhood where these are
in effect. It has been
suggested that a slightly lesser standard than absolute unanimity
be used to make changes--to avoid allowing any one person to act as
a lone holdout.
This
second alternative can also be used on a larger scale, even in
forming a new government, or a new state. It uses
voluntary principles of
inducements (trading public limits on behavior for citizenship or
other privileges) to establish a national or state standard across
a broad sovereign territory. Those that choose to
establish even
higher standards would be free to do so, as long as it was done by
mutual consent within a contiguous land area. Each time a
new state or city is
created it would have the right to accept the basic national
standard or create a new set of covenants that could be more or
less restrictive than the basic national standard. The
higher or lower community
standards would be binding only upon those who choose to live in
that jurisdiction. People
can then choose the degree of community standard restriction they
want in public affairs by the community they select.
Private liberties would still be
protected everywhere, as long as they stayed private. Over
time, the covenant community system leads
to a more peaceful set of diverse but internally homogeneous
communities. In contrast,
as we are seeing in the present, the majoritarian system leads to
increasing class struggle within each city as competing ideologies
seek to control the majoritarian levers of power.
3. WHY ISNT THE CONSTITUTION SUFFICIENT
TO PROTECT OUR RIGHTS?
The
Constitution was a wonderful, great leap forward in limiting
government power. It
provided a mechanism that slowed down the inexorable march of
majoritarian power and corruption for at least 100
years. As a matter of
historical fact, however, the Constitution was under assault to
expand the powers of government from the moment it became the law
of the land. In its present
interpreted and amended form the Constitution is much changed from
the original, some things for the better and many changes for the
worse.
As to the
question of how we can use the present Constitution to restore the
full range of liberties, we come face to face with several complex
problems. The first is the
question of which version of the Constitution best
represents the founders intent or preserves liberty? Do
we go back to the original version
with no Bill of Rights, or do we accept the second version with the
first 12 Amendments--a partial Bill of Civil Rights? But
keep in mind that the second
version with the Bill of Rights possessed the fatal flaw of
exempting the states from adhering to those
rights. For the next 100
years the states were the prime violators of rights, engendering a
huge public demand for expanded federal powers to control state
predation. Or do we accept
the 1868 version, with the Fourteenth Amendment, including the
incorporation doctrine--the strained interpretation by the courts
that brought the states under the requirements of the Bill of
Rights? While this did
curtail much state mischief, it also allowed the courts to add new
rights paving the way for government programs mandating the right
to an abortion or public access, without discrimination, to
private business property.
How about the version of law after 1913 giving us the onerous
income tax? You see the
problem. There is no
single time or version when the Constitution served as a fully
effective shield. The
earlier versions had more loopholes, and the later versions allowed
for more false rights and government power.
What is
most critical to our constitutional dilemma is the fact that the
founders failed to come up with an adjudicable definition of
fundamental rights. No
document can protect for long what it fails to define.
There were no listings of definitions
of anything in the document. As to rights, the founders
were
fearful of listing any rights lest they leave something out (as
directly expressed in the 9th Amendment), which is a consequence of
not having a working definition. They relied, instead, on
the limited delegation of power
concept imposed upon federal government to act as the primary wall
of protection. However, as
the anti-federalists predicted, and as history has confirmed, this
turned out to be entirely inadequate in light of interpretations by
an activist Congress and Supreme Court.
The first
10 amendments of the Constitution, termed a Bill of
Rights, were added as
the first acts of the new Congress, but many of these were not true
fundamental rights, but merely a listing of the common law
civil rights that
Madison and others (particularly George Mason) had extracted from
British law. While not
complete, they did offer specific protections against common
historical abuses at the time, but were far from
comprehensive. Even worse,
without a restraining definition, the courts continue to add other
rights by interpretation that, in fact, turn out to be violations
of real fundamental rights.
Consider
the tenth amendment
which was specifically written to shore up the founders intent to
restrict the expansion of federal powers: 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. It
hasnt held up for two reasons. First,
it has generally been
outright disregarded by Congress and an activist Supreme
Court. Sadly, the founders
system of checks and balances did not anticipate the numerous
factions and conspiracies that government power would both
facilitate and harbor.
These powerful groups have effectively controlled all three
branches of government for many years, thus eliminating the
substance of the separation of powers. Second,
the 10th Amendment failed
to delineate between the residual powers reserved to the
States...or to the
people. Naturally,
the states would have grabbed most of those undefined residual
powers and left nothing for the individual had it not been for the
Supreme Court. Regardless,
the line of demarcation between states rights and individual rights
cannot be determined without a working definition of fundamental
rights, which the founders did not attempt. The courts
have carved out some
clarification of rights for the individual--but without any guiding
principles, what we have ended up with is a partial list of civil
rights mixed with left-leaning political interpretations and
restrictions.
There were
other major holes in the wall of constitutional
protection. Besides the
major flaws already mentioned other deficiencies are:
A federal
revenue
system--originally dependent wholly on tariffs and
duties, and now upon income taxes, that violates a host of
economic and privacy rights. Tariffs violate economic
rights by
distorting prices unfairly between external and internal
commerce.
The granting of a virtual
monopoly to the federal
postal system making it immune from competition.
Failing to properly
define and limit fiat
money (except for the states) and prohibit fraudulent banking
practices by government--a serious omission leading to the first
major constitutional crisis after ratification.
Allowing for unlimited
amendments to the
constitutions, such that there are no ultimate protections against
a corrupted majority attacking essential liberties by
amendment.
Failing to provide for any
requirements of
citizenship except for immigrants. Without a basic
knowledge of the
principles of liberty coupled with a sworn commitment to uphold the
Constitution, politicians and public education has bred an
increasingly ignorant and benefit-corrupted electorate that
continues to vote for representatives who do not understand or who
are hostile to many aspects of liberty.
A judicial
system, which has taken
advantage of the general language of the Constitution to erode
property rights, economic rights, the rights to association and
disassociation, to take risks, to be responsible for ones own
safety, and the rights of families over the matters of health,
welfare and education of their children.
One of the
greatest problems we face in taking a strictly constitutional
approach to reform is that the Constitution fails to limit, at the
state and local level, the governments power to mandate the
taking of everyones private property to fund welfare
schemes and public education.
Public education has turned out to be
the Trojan Horse that has slowly corrupted, culturally and
politically, the majority of citizens. Armed with
doctrines of social
democracy, modern citizens regularly use the power of the vote to
improperly harness the property of others for their own pet
purposes. Conservatives
who think they can take back government fail to realize that
there is a huge
constituency for this
kind of bad law, doling out special privileges in education,
racial preferences, and environmental takings--things which can no
longer be overturned by the electoral process since they
have the majority. There is
no substitute for constitutional restriction against majoritarian
tyranny--and those restrictions can only be born out of universal
principles--not social values that should remain in the realm of
free debate.
DISCUSSION OF THE
PRINCIPLES
Explanatory
note: The principles are presented in
italics and my commentary in regular type in brackets.
Principle
#1: SOVEREIGNTY OF
INDIVIDUALS.
A. Governments can only derive their just
powers from the sovereign powers of their individual
members. [There are two basic forms of authority to
initiate government: 1) force (man or God) or 2) voluntary mutual
cooperation. Since God has
not intervened to mandate a secular government and we reject the
imposition of force by man as a proper basis of initial authority,
we are left with mutual cooperation as the basis for
government. Inherent in the
concept of voluntary cooperation is the fact that all the forming
parties come to the table on an equal basis--each person sovereign
in his claims of liberty insofar as those claims do not force
others to serve his needs].
B. All persons are rightfully sovereign
over those affairs, which do not infringe upon the rights of
others. [This is the basic criteria for a
non-conflicting cooperation. Notice that I do not use the
words
harm other people, or conflict with other people.
There are examples where peoples
exercise of their freedom can do economic harm to or conflict
with people without violating any rights. For example,
painting your house a
wild color can potentially lower the value of your neighbors
house, but since your neighbor has no right to any predetermined
value on his home, no rights have been violated. Economic
values are determined in the
eye of the beholder and by negotiation with potential buyers, so
the seller does not have a right to enforce a fixed value on
others. If we were to use
the words harm or conflict in limiting sovereignty, there would
exist many unsolvable legal challenges to sovereignty. By
tying sovereignty to a distinct
definition of rights (Principle #3), more protection is afforded
against arbitrary claims of offense].
C. All persons reaching an age and
ability to take care of themselves and be responsible for their
actions can claim status as sovereign individuals. [This
provides the basic criteria for determining who can exercise
sovereignty. Its wording
is general, which is sufficient to guide lawmaking, but not so
specific as to cause problems. For example, if I had
chosen an age
and ability to be completely self-sufficient one might be able to
attack anyones claim to be a sovereign individual. Who
can be totally self-sufficient
indefinitely?
Responsibility for actions is an essential part,
however. Sovereign entities
must never be able to use sovereignty to evade compensating others
for damages that occur as a result of their use of
liberty. This criteria
will also serve as a basic guide to lawmakers who may wish to
define a specific minimum age or responsibility level when children
can claim independent status from their families and join the ranks
of sovereign individuals].
Principle
#2: SOVEREIGNTY OF THE
FAMILY.
A. Families, composed of a man and a
woman and their natural or legally adopted children, act as a
special sovereign unit over the health, welfare and education of
their children until such children reach the age or capability of
exercising individual sovereignty and
self-responsibility. [It is precisely due to the existence
of children, who cannot yet exercise individual sovereignty, that
we must carve out a special form of sovereignty for the
family. If we do not give
families sovereign status, there is no basis in individual rights
theory to stop the state from asserting a preeminent caretaker
status in the guise of protecting children--as it does in our
current legal system. Even
though the definition of the family is becoming fuzzy with
artificial insemination of children, I feel we must rely on the
basic biological fact that no child can be engendered without the
male and female components, which are traceable in origin to the
parents for purposes of sharing responsibility. This
definition is not intended to
say that families only exist when both parents are present, but
that only a man and a woman having a child trigger the creation of
a family unit. All other
artificial forms of the family are creations of the state, and
liable to the state. The
family unit, including the subsequent responsibilities of parents,
still exists and is binding upon both even if parents separate or
never live together in the first place. Marriage that
doesnt involve children
does not need this separate form of sovereignty since both
parties to a marriage are protected by the individual right
of contract. Unfaithfulness to the marriage
covenant under this doctrine would be prosecuted as a breach of
contract].
B. Families, therefore, possess the
ultimate authority over the health, welfare and education of their
children unless the actions of the parents constitute an actual or
imminent threat to the life of the child. [This principle confronts the
major
question of who has the ultimate authority over children, the
parents or the state--and if parents, what are the limits of that
sovereignty? I believe it
is always dangerous to give the state the ultimate authority over
children, short of a life-threatening situation--especially in
areas of normal health and
education. Despite the
growing problem of abuse or the potential problem of neglect, if we
are going to allow leeway in the law, we need to defer to the
family. Recent patterns of
state intervention in families are showing an increasing hostility
toward parental freedom to choose in areas of physical discipline,
rejection of establishment medical procedures (including
psycho-therapeutic drugs), and religious indoctrination.
The
state even claims, under the guise
of the state interest
doctrine, that it can control the education of children, which is
extremely dangerous to parental rights. As one
tough-minded home schooling
parent told a judge, I dont care if the state claims an
interest in my childrens education, I have the ultimate interest
and authority! The
growing hostility of the courts to this simple doctrine is
disturbing and needs reinforcement in a founding principle of
law. I am proposing
raising the barrier of state intervention into the family to actual
or imminent threat to the life of the child. It is a high
barrier, and it will
permit some mild abuse. If
there is any doubt or suspicion, judges almost always defer to
state authorities. Parents
are often forced to meet arbitrary requirements as a condition of
regaining custody--often including consent to questionable
psychological counseling and drug therapy for their
children. The courts should
never be involved prescribing treatment--only prosecuting actual
violations for serious abuse or life-threatening
neglect. Because there is a
growing hostility of establishment authorities to family rights and
strict religious upbringing, the burden of proof for abuse or
neglect should always remain upon the state. There is an
addition safety valve
against abuse as well.
Children have the clear right to leave an abusive home at any time,
and seek voluntary foster care, before the level of abuse
approaches life-threatening consequences. This is an
important option in
problems of sexual abuse].
C. Once new life is
conceived, in a consensual relationship, a family unit is formed,
and both parents must accept responsibility for the care and
upbringing of the child until it reaches the age and ability of
exercising individual sovereignty. [This principle establishes
a new and formidable barrier against abortion and
neglect. It bases the
requirement for parental responsibility on the principles of
liability for
consequences of
consensual acts.
Individual right-to-life arguments are valid even for a fetus, in
my opinion, but they get mired down in the question of whether or
not the fetus is an individual capable of claiming
rights. In the liability
argument all that has to be shown is that the consensual act
engendered a new living entity and that the persons responsible
must bear the consequences of their actions. Just as a
person who impacts another
persons property with his car is not free to walk away from the
responsibility, so a man and a woman, engaging in a consensual act
that creates new life, are not free to walk away from that
responsibility or otherwise destroy that life, unless the life of
the mother is truly endangered. This argument avoids the
issue of
when the life is viable.
Initiating a new life marks the beginning of the resultant
liability.
Under this
doctrine, rape does not trigger any liability on the part of the
victim--only upon the perpetrator. In the case of the
mother and child
where neither party is at fault, we do have a conflict of
rights. The solution to
abort a child would not necessarily have the sanction of law,
however. The case should be
judged on a different standard of law--one that addresses the
relative burden of harm
to each party when there is a conflict of rights and no one is at
fault. Note that the impact
of the fetus upon the innocent mother is only temporary and not
generally harmful, whereas the impact of an abortion on the
innocent fetus is permanent and fatal].
Principle
#3: RECOGNITION OF FUNDAMENTAL
RIGHTS.
A. Fundamental rights are those
rights that all persons can
claim simultaneously without forcing others to serve
them. [The definition does not require a
fixed listing of rights, but rather provides a two-prong test which
can be applied to any action that someone claims as a
right. The first criteria
is simultaneity of
action. Even though this
rarely happens in life, it establishes a theoretical and mental
framework to more easily determine if conflict will result from
competing claims. The
second criteria fulfills the core element of non-conflicting
rights--no one being able to claim a right that requires some
form of involuntary servitude, whether personal, financial or
use of someones assets. I
have purposely chosen involuntary servitude as the standard rather
than harm or conflict.
It is more precise and easy to determine, as mentioned earlier, and
does not create false rights based upon the sometimes ethereal
concept of harm. Physical
harm is not too difficult to define but aesthetic, spiritual or
psychological harm are hard to prove and requires considerable
judgment.
The most
common false rights claimed by democratic socialists are the rights
to a job, an education
or health care.
But each of these clearly violates the
definition. All people
cannot simultaneously claim any of these without forcing others to
provide the facilities, the salaries and the working
materials.
In contrast,
the most commonly derived true rights from this definition are
life, liberty and
property. Each of
these traditional rights qualifies under the definition, as long as
certain non-conflicting conditions are added. The
universal qualifier
is: as long as the
rights of others are
not violated. The
right to life therefore is not absolute. If a person is
engaged in attacking
another without justifiable self-defense, the aggressors life
would be rightfully in jeopardy. The right to life does
not mean that
society is obliged to keep you alive--that would violate the second
criteria. It only assures
that no one can rightfully take it from you, as long as you are not
acting so as to violate any other persons rights.
Personal
liberty of action is a
universal right until one begins to infringe on anothers
right. All persons can
claim property and hold physical assets as long as these things
were acquired by voluntary contractual relationships or the
application of unique labor and improvements to unowned land (not
first claimed by others).
As far as
categorizing rights, a
good logician could probably extract all necessary rights from
one--the right to Life, but the mental gymnastics would be somewhat
tedious and difficult for the common person to follow. We
must also avoid the temptation to
add so many categories that it becomes complicated. I will
list two more categories to the
basic three already mentioned, which I consider essential to thwart
common violations by government--excessive intrusion into family
affairs and the denial of private arms for
self-defense.
Having a
right to family
sovereignty over the affairs of children is essential to avoid
trying to carve out a complete doctrine of individual rights for
children, having no ability to be independent nor responsible for
self. The right of
self-defense is
essential to the existence of all other rights. No claim
to a right is meaningful
without enforcement power--first and foremost by the person
possessing the right. No
person should have to rely totally upon others, including
government, for defense of his rights. A suggested
definition of this right
should include the right to possess private arms in the defense of
self, family and others; and the right to use the appropriate force
necessary to eliminate the threat.
Corollaries
to the right to life
would be the right to be free from physical attack by others (when
not engaged in criminal behavior) or even freedom from harmful
pollutants emanating from anothers property (if shown to be
harmful).
Corollary
rights under personal liberty would be the right of contract with
willing parties, the right to take risks, and the freedom to engage
in any economic endeavor as long as others rights are not
violated.
Corollary
rights of private property are interesting because certain rights
that are normally considered absolute (like freedom of speech) are
actually not absolute except when linked to private or contractual
property rights. Property
rights would also include the right to freedom of association or
disassociation on your own property, freedom of expression, privacy
(including freedom from search and surveillance when not violating
any persons rights), and freedom from physical or regulatory
takings of property by government. Notice that there is no
unrestricted freedom of expression on other peoples property or
even on public property.
Personal actions on public property are governed by fundamental
rights or, in cases of indeterminate rights, by rules and norms of
the local citizen compact or community standards as determined by
mutual consent of the governed.
B. Fundamental rights are superior to all
other earthly law and should never be made subject to majority
rule. No law or claim of
state sovereignty to enforce a law is valid if the law constitutes
a violation of any fundamental right. [If a right is truly fundamental,
then
no other person or government can rightfully violate it, even by
law. A constitution alone
would be insufficient to protect those rights if that constitution
is capable of being amended by majority rule. Rights must
never be subjected to a
vote. They must be
declared and agreed upon by mutual consent].
C. Fundamental rights
are best secured by a citizen compact where all parties
agree to recognize and defend those rights. [Since it is
improper to subject fundamental rights to a vote, the only way to
secure those rights is by forming a unanimous covenant of
all participants, akin to the Mayflower Compact. In this case, I use the term
citizen compact since
it would be the basic signature document that all citizens would
have to agree to upon when forming a government. In terms
of practical implementation,
it doesnt mean that a government cant be formed until every
possible person agrees, but rather, that we form a government with
the largest possible circle of agreement we can achieve at a given
time and place, and treat other non-participants as free
foreigners, inviting them to join when they want the benefits of
the protections that the new government offers. Any new
society that truly protects
the broadest range of fundamental rights will eventually win out
over competing societies that violate rights. This will be
described more fully in
Principle #10.
A variety of
citizen compacts, all emanating from one basic national pact can
also resolve the major differences in religious
background in a pluralist
society. Most
conservatives recognize that this nation was founded as a Christian
nation. This is true, for
the most part, even though there were many non-religious people who
were part of the American Revolution. Today, imposing the
concept of a
Christian nation upon non-believers would be highly resisted and
improper. Religion has lost
significantly more ground in recent years, and every group who
perceives itself as the silent majority is struggling to control
the majoritarian system that gives almost total power to whoever
controls the electoral process. If a national government
is formed
with a basic compact that only sets out basic, bare-minimum
community standards for public behavior, and each religious
section of society is allowed to establish more restrictive
religious covenants, by mutual agreement in contiguous
territory, then a variety of differences in society can be
accommodated without each one trying to oppress the other.]
Principle
#4: GOVERNMENT AS AN EXTENSION OF
INDIVIDUAL SOVEREIGNTY.
A. The formation of a
government with enforcement powers is an extension of two specific
fundamental rights--the right to contract with willing parties and
the right to act in self-defense of fundamental rights.
[This concept is derived from the assumption that the only
legitimate form of government (in the absence of a clear, divine
mandate to all people on earth) is a cooperative government formed
by free men possessing equal fundamental rights. A
cooperative form of government
cannot possess any right that its individual members do not
possess].
B. In forming and authorizing a
government to enhance the right of self-defense, the individual
does not cede nor limit any fundamental rights except as
specifically agreed upon. [This statement counters one
of the prevailing doctrines of those opposed to the right to bear
arms--that there is a presumed social compact
entered into by
each person who is born a citizen. Proponents say the implied
contract dictates
that, each citizen relinquishes his right of self-defense to
government, for the sake of order. This sounds nice, but
it is bad
doctrine. Presumed social
compacts are whatever the government says they are. Only
specific agreements entered
into by all citizens can rightfully limit the exercise of
fundamental rights.
Otherwise, who is to decide what rights are presumed to be
limited in a social compact?]
C. Thus, a government that is granted
enforcement powers and is governed by majority rule should only be
formed by initial
unanimous consent of those to be governed by such.
[This point was previously explained.]
D. A proper government is controlled by a
constitution that limits
majoritarian powers and establishes a sovereign nation composed of
sovereign states that
jointly and severally protects our rights through a republican form of
government.
[A Republican form of
government is a government ruled by elected representatives of
the people, within a federation of several sovereign states, whose
majoritarian powers are strictly limited by a constitution to the
defense of fundamental rights. This principle expresses
the American
concept that lawmaking power should be limited by a constitution
and that power should be diffused among sovereign territories
(states) under a federal government that, in turn, takes its place
as a sovereign nation among the nations of the world. This
system provides a federation
of cooperating sovereign entities. Each sovereign
state has the right to
establish a unique citizen compact for its members, with community
standards of public conduct that may differ from state to
state. Even though the
principles herein espoused eliminate most of the conflicts within
law, there is still a role for the concept of competing
governments, that
attract adherents according to the specific judgments and standards
developed under the overall umbrella of fundamental rights,
guaranteed nationally. When
there are multiple competing sovereign states, like multiple
private schools, citizens can choose the state and local community
that best represents their taste in community standards and
efficiency in governmental administration.]
Principle
#5: LIMITATIONS ON GOVERNMENT
POWERS.
A. A governments
only proper role of enforcement power is to defend the fundamental rights of the
persons joining together to form, authorize and support such
government. [This statement forces all law to seek its
basis in fundamental rights and effectively prohibits government
from drifting off into areas of regulating and protecting people
from themselves and from other harmful decisions that dont involve
violations of fundamental rights. It also declares that
non-participants
dont qualify to have their rights protected, except by their own
fundamental right of self-defense. This is one of the
inducements to join
in a cooperative government and help pay for its legitimate
expenses.]
B. All levels of government must be
strictly limited in
their respective legislative and enforcement powers to those powers
specifically granted to them by the citizens of each jurisdiction
which do not violate the fundamental rights of
individuals. [In other words, there must exist no
unlimited powers of lawmaking in any portion of the
Republic. All levels of
government must trace their just powers to a grant by all of the
citizens of each jurisdiction, and that grant of power is always
limited by the doctrine of fundamental rights.]
C. Governments may
also act as a cooperative
enterprise in behalf of any portion of its citizens, as long as
such services are provided exclusively on a user-fee or
voluntary donation basis. [Under this doctrine,
governments may provide cooperative schools, hospitals, or engage
in business ventures as long as no public funds are used to fund
them in any way.
Government, when not acting in its enforcement role, is no
different than any other business co-op--as long as it is funded
with user fees and private donations. In this manner
government isnt
unfairly competing with the private sector.]
Principle
#6: GOVERNMENT SEPARATION OF
POWERS.
A. Within the proper
limitations of government powers, an effective government will be
structured so that representation will reflect both territoriality
and population. [This point reflects the wisdom of the
founders in the great
compromise dividing representation between territoriality for
the Senate and population for the House of
Representatives.]
B. In addition, to
avoid concentrations of power, at each level of government, there
should be a separation of executive powers, legislative powers, judicial powers, and those
oversight powers retained by the citizens. [This
principle acknowledges another of the founders great
principles--the separation
of power at the federal level--but also suggests that such a
separation be implemented at the state level as well. It
also directly addresses oversight
powers of the citizens themselves so as to be able to override
potential collusion within the 3 branches of government, which is
particularly threatening at this time.]
C. Each separate
jurisdiction of government, including citizens, should have
investigative and enforcement powers to ensure access to truth,
expose corruption, and enforce compliance within their proper and
respective realms of authority. [One of the weaknesses
of the Constitutions separation of power is the lack of
enforcement and investigative powers on the part of the
Judiciary. Even the
Congress has no enforcement powers except that of
impeachment. The bar has
been raised so high on impeachment that Congress has little power
to enforce its investigative authority.
In one
particular case, President F. D. Roosevelt took direct advantage of
the judiciarys weakness by refusing to abide by one of its
rulings. It set the world
on notice that the court had no power to enforce any of its
rulings, or do basic fact-finding on issues of
compliance. As for citizen
oversight, citizens have been given (by Congress) a minor power to
investigate government through the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA), but are
powerless to break through the governments improper use of secrecy
to hide all illegal acts from discovery through ultimate control of
the FOIA procedure. The
courts almost always refuse to assist the citizens in penetrating
this control.]
Principle #7: JUDGMENT AND PUNISHMENT FOR
CRIMES.
A. In criminal proceedings, equal justice through due process of constitutional law
should be provided all citizens and residents. Due process should always include the
right of the accused to have ready access, in person, to a
representative of his choice to prepare a defense, the right to a
speedy and public hearing on the cause for detention, and timely
trial not to exceed a certain time limit from the time of
detention. [This
principle sustains the two bedrock principles of traditional
law--equal justice and due process for every accused person. The
language establishing the rights of the accused are important to
ensure that each prisoners condition is capable of being known
outside the justice system, and that a speedy and public trial is
mandated. The time limits
for a speedy hearing and trial are essential to avoid the grave
injustice of wrongful imprisonment or refusal by the government to
yield up the prisoner (Habeas Corpus).]
B. The accused should
be considered as innocent as the current level of
credible evidence permits. [Even though everyone thinks
we presently act under the dictum of innocent until proven
guilty
this is not completely true. Judgments about bail,
tendency to flight, and danger
to society, always involve
some determination of the credibility of the evidence, and the
seriousness of the crime at the initial hearing. This
replacement language states the
conditional principle of innocence more plainly.]
C. Access to the courts to defend
ones fundamental rights, in criminal cases, should never be denied
due to inability to pay, although the assessment of reasonable user
fees and fines are appropriate once guilt and blame are
established. Access to the courts for civil proceedings may be
limited to those who sustain and support the legal
system.
It is inappropriate
for the Courts, in either criminal or civil matters, to grant
court-approved representatives the exclusive power to
represent persons before the court. [While access should
not be denied due to inability to pay, neither does this principle
mandate unlimited taxpayer support for court-appointed attorneys,
which have less than a stellar record for fair
representation. There are
other partial solutions, such as in D below, where the judge
himself is responsible to make sure the rights of both parties are
secured. Other solutions
would include a loan fund for the indigent accused that would be
paid back by the user in prison-work fare programs, so as not to
present a burden to taxpayers. The support qualification mentioned
in civil proceedings is important so that non-participants cannot
claim the same level of access to the system as citizen
taxpayers. A fair user fee
would be the appropriate remedy.]
D. Punishment for infractions of law
should be uniformly applied to all offenses of similar threat to
fundamental rights. Punishments should be fair, proportional to the
offense, provide deterrence, provide restitution to victims by the
perpetrators, and remove permanently from society chronic offenders
who refuse to control their predation upon others. [The
principle of uniformity, qualified by the violation of rights
test, differs from the current danger to society test, which
often is used more today to heavily penalize anyone who presents a
challenge to the government or court system itself (tax
protesters, constitutionalists, government whistleblowers), instead
of focusing on criminal threats to the public. The list of
criteria herein for proper
punishment is meant to establish fairness and increase the
deterrent effect of the judicial system. The principle of
removing chronic
offenders of any category permanently from society can mean life
imprisonment, the death penalty or even banishment.
Providing an ultimate penalty for
recidivism, even among petty criminals will have a powerful
deterrent effect as well.
To facilitate victim restitution and reduce the burden on
taxpayers, a vigorous prison
work system should be instituted.]
E. All prosecution of
criminal acts should be tried before a judge and citizen jury, trained
in the applicable law, where the judge is responsible to ensure
that rights of all parties are protected and the jury has the power
to judge the facts of the case, the applicability of the law to the
particular case, and the appropriate punishment. Access to a jury trial should be an
absolute right for all criminal cases and an absolute option for
civil cases, where the parties to the case are willing to accept
their share of the appropriate user fees. [It is my belief that both
judges and
juries should be trained in the applicable law, so that those who
make the final judgments on guilt are less likely to be influenced
by bad arguments on sophisticated issues outside their area of
expertise. The history of jury manipulation and excessive control
by judges through restrictive jury instructions leads me to
the conclusion that juries must possess the ultimate authority to
judge both the application of the law to the situation and the
facts of the case.]
Principle
#8: PROPER FUNDING OF
GOVERNMENT
A. Government should
be financed by general
taxes only for universal
services that are directly related to the defense of fundamental
rights of all and that render no specific benefit to an individual
or group constituting less than the whole. [This one
principle would do more to stop the power of government to
redistribute wealth than any other. It would also provide
a major obstacle
to political corruption since no politician would be able to
promise direct benefits to any individual or group. This
principle was the basis for the
original general welfare clause of the Constitution--which had
nothing to do with welfare benefits and everything to do with
restricting government to those things which related to the defense
of everyones rights.]
B. User fees must be employed to
cover all costs, and only those costs, for any direct government
services or benefits to individuals, groups, and such user fees
should be applied to those same services, which produce the
fee. [The principle of user fees allows government to
offer cooperative and selective services to less than the whole, as
needed, without violating the property rights of the general
taxpayer. Restricting user
fees to actual government costs effectively prohibits legislatures
from tacking on new and unrelated taxes and calling them user
fees.]
C. A mix of general tax revenues and user
fees is appropriate to support a single government service
which provides both a general protection of rights and a specific
legal or other service to an individual or group. [This
is most appropriate for civil trials in the judicial sector, as
well as where there are mixed-use benefits to public commercial
enterprises like seaports, airports, and use of the
commons--oceans, airwaves, and space, etc.]
D. The type of taxation employed should
be directly levied upon the persons or properties protected by
government services. [The two primary entities protected
by the military and police powers of government are people and
property (which includes land, buildings, factories, and
farms). A truly fair tax
system will directly tax those entities in proportion to how much
they benefit from government defense and administrative
services. Any other form
of taxation, no matter how convenient to tax is a violation of
someones rights.]
E. Taxation should never be allowed
on commerce, income, inheritance or gifts. Neither should taxes be hidden within
an economic price, interfere with or distort economic processes, or
force any person to pay a higher proportion of taxes when no higher
protection is required from government services. [The
greatest way to keep government expansion in check is by keeping
the cost of government up front and painful to the
taxpayer. The prohibition
against todays common forms of taxation effectively forces
government to tax openly and directly the people and property
directly protected.]
F. There must be
no taxation without
representation and no form of taxation voted upon with
majoritarian powers should be valid unless applied to all citizens
and residents. [The intent of this principle is to stop
the human tendency to tax the other guy by seeking to add other
types of taxes on products that have no majority constituency in
the legislature to protest.
G. No state should be allowed to incur a
budget deficit and no
deficit should be allowed at the national level except in time of
declared war. All
government liabilities and expenditures should be included in the
budget. [Government should only be allowed to
spend what the citizens are willing to pay for each
year. A nation must have
the power to save itself in wartime, even if it means extensive
borrowing, but that deficit should be limited to the principles of
debt in H. Todays
governments distort and hide their real financial condition with a
variety of accounting tricks. Everything should be up
front and
transparent.]
H. Total indebtedness should not exceed a
certain percentage of total annual tax revenue of any government
entity (perhaps, 10%) and every separate debt issue should be
retired within 10 years so that those who vote for it pay for its
retirement. No tax burden
should be shifted to the next generation through debt or unfunded
entitlement programs. [Debt is a form of future taxation and
is an insidious form of government funding because it makes the
expenditure seem less painless than it is. A tight time
and quantity limitation
on debt is important to avoid the threat of exceeding a nations
solvency, or violating the prohibition against transferring a debt
to the next generation without their consent.]
Principle
#9:
LIMITS ON POLICE
POWER.
A. Military and police power of
government should only be used to prosecute and punish actual
violations of fundamental rights of its citizens, or imminent
threats to those rights, whether foreign or domestic. [This language
restates the
basic principle that all police actions must be tied directly to
the defense of someones rights or the rights of the nation as a
whole. Military
intervention prior to enemy action is appropriate under the very
limited circumstances of imminent threat--a strict legal term
meaning that a lethal threat poses a real and present danger.]
B. Citizens should be
secure in their privacy
from government search, intrusion, surveillance, and seizure except
when credible evidence exists of a crime against fundamental rights
or an imminent threat to liberty. [This presents the basis
for constitutional language that would require that a warrant be
issued by a judge before a search or seizure could take
place. It should also be
required that police must have the warrant available for
inspection, naming a specific person or place to be searched and
detailing the evidence justifying the warrant. Too often,
the Constitutions strict
language on warrants is totally disregarded. Surveillance
is also routinely
conducted without any warrant. Thus, government agents
must be held
strictly liable for the violation of these limitations on police
intrusion.]
C. Government power
to enforce secrecy should not be applied to the specific knowledge
any person may have concerning crimes committed by government
officials. [This principle directly addresses the major
reason why government illegal activities continue unabated despite
numerous attempts to discover them--laws and penalties for
violating a governments national security mandate are entirely
one-sided, aimed at suppressing the testimony of any agent who
threatens to blow the whistle on illegal activities.
Despite lip service to whistle blowing
laws, agents have little effective recourse to overturn or object
to secrecy orders covering government illegal activities when the
courts often refuse to side with government critics.]
D. Officers of
government should not have immunity from acts committed by
themselves or by others under their knowing supervision that
violate the fundamental rights of others. [Immunity,
coupled with excessive powers over secrecy, allows powerful forces
for evil to grow up under the mantel of government
enforcement. The excuse
that police or military are only following orders has
lead
to historys greatest human holocausts. Military command
and control is
important but it must never be used to create a cadre of abject
yes-men, as was the case in Germany, Russia, and now
America. There is no
substitute for ample training of every government agent, including
military personnel, to know when their actions constitute a
violation of fundamental rights. Only the threat of
personal liability
will make sure each is motivated to learn the law and keep it high
on his list of priorities.]
E. In Foreign affairs, any assistance
in behalf of liberty given to other nations or peoples, where a
significant threat to this nations rights cannot be
demonstrated, should be encouraged and allowed by government,
but carried out by voluntary measures. [This
principle prohibits tax-payer assisted military involvement in
foreign wars where no direct threat to our nations liberties can
be demonstrated. It also
establishes the right of volunteers to help with private arms and
manpower. Presently the US
uses the Neutrality Act
to prohibit all private assistance to freedom movements.]
F. No citizens or
residents of this nation should be allowed to use the shield of
government protection of fundamental rights herein to undermine the efforts of other
foreign persons seeking to establish similar fundamental
rights. [This point does allow government to prohibit US
citizens from using this nation as a base of operations to foment
or assist revolutions against liberty.]
Principle #10:
CITIZENSHIP BY COVENANT AND
QUALIFICATION
A. Citizenship should
be by covenant and
qualification rather
than by birth alone, whereby the fundamental rights of citizens,
voluntary limitations on those rights, and the duties and
responsibilities of both citizens and government are clearly
specified. [The concept of citizenship by qualification
solves the greatest and most persistent internal threat to
liberty--an ignorant
populace with the
power to vote themselves benefits without any understanding
of the law or the principles necessary to maintain
liberty. The two most
prevalent causes of citizen ignorance are a controlled media and a
controlled system of public education. By requiring all
potential voting
citizens to pass a test on law and government, each person has an
inducement to get whatever education is required to pass the
test.
Without such
a test, conservatives have to compete with Socialists for control
of education in order to
ensure a knowledgeable voting public. But with a test of
understanding,
citizenship itself serves to induce all people to seek out the
necessary information on liberty in order to qualify. I
believe strongly that linking
knowledge of liberty to citizenship is a more viable solution than
trying to control peoples education, which in and of
itself, is a violation of liberty. Besides, the battle to
control
education has not been successful and shows little hope for
improvement, given the high percentage of the public (including
conservatives) that has become addicted to the tax monopoly funding
of public education. This
welfare benefit allows their children to receive education funding
for lavish buildings and programs far in excess of the taxes they
personally pay.
The citizenship
test needs to be
extensive and complete so that all citizens understand the full
range of what constitutes bad law and illegal actions. But
it need not be tricky, complex or
difficult. The questions
can even be known in advance so that people can openly prepare for
the test. The tests
purpose is not to stop good people from becoming citizens, but to
ensure no one becomes a citizen with the power to vote without
having the requisite understanding of how to maintain
liberty.
There are
other essential things that can be done in the context of a
citizenship compact that are equally useful in establishing a
government that maintains fundamental rights and moral values
without doing so through the dangers of majority rule.
For example, the citizenship compact
is the appropriate place for all citizens to sign on to the
recognition to fundamental rights, to take a pledge not
to violate those rights, and agree to some voluntary
limitations of those rights, for example, taking part in jury
duty, a citizen militia or a limited military wartime draft;
accepting some very limited eminent domain takings of property for
public purposes (with compensation); and agreeing to basic
community standards of decency in public. Each of these
functions I have listed
are problem areas when implemented by the force of law without the
consent of those whose lives and property are used involuntarily or
taken by government.]
B. It is, therefore,
proper to establish other classifications of residence for the
protection and training of those not yet qualified for
citizenship. [The purpose of this form of citizenship by
qualification is to offer citizens a higher level of protection and
privilege in society in exchange for a higher level of knowledge
and commitment to preserve liberty. Since this form of
citizenship is not
imposed upon unwilling participants, it must be structured to offer
inducements for others to join so that the circle of
supporters is ever-increasing. Citizenship privileges
offer one of
the major inducements for people to join and qualify. It
is therefore appropriate to have
lesser categories of resident or visitor
for those who have not
yet qualified or who do not wish to do so.
Residents
and visitors would not have a free
ride, however. They would
pay different types of taxes and user fees than most citizens if
they wanted to have access to any public services or public
property. In like manner,
not having joined the covenant as a citizen, they most likely would
not have access to any public property governed by the new
government unless they at least agreed to the community standards
on public behavior and paid appropriate user fees. There
must, of necessity, be some
disadvantages to remaining in a resident status so that people
have the incentive to move up to citizenship, but the differences
must not be so onerous as to make being a resident a non-viable
choice. I think there is
even room to allow residents to have some limiting voting rights on
local issues (especially taxes) that directly affect them, as
well.
One of the
most important differences between citizen and non-citizen might be
a restriction from owning titled property, a privilege only
extended to citizens.
Residents and visitors could own the full range of normal goods but
would have to rent housing, cars, businesses or certain investments
that are defended by legal title. This is not an onerous
difference
since all responsible people can easily become citizens should they
want to own titled property. What the restriction does do
is induce
all industrious people to qualify for citizenship and to link
increased privilege with increased responsibility for maintaining
liberty.
This
is simply an overview of the basic
concept. The details of
implementation would require much careful thought and
discussion.
Non-participants with the new government always have the full range
of private fundamental rights that all men possess that pre-date
any new government, including property rights, but they would not
be able to have those property rights defended by the new
government unless they agreed to come into the compact as a
citizen. Those who chose to
stay completely outside the system would be considered foreigners
and have to rely on their own fundamental right of
self-defense.
This form of
citizenship also helps solve one of the major problems in a world
of open markets and free trade, where an unequal balance of
payments results
between different trading countries. Currently foreign
holders of dollars
evade purchasing American products and choose instead to buy up
portions of America itself: government debt, land, capital
and business
enterprises. Since all of
these are titled property, under this new proposal they would be
restricted to citizens only. Foreign buyers would not be
able to
buy up the capital assets of America unless they became
citizens. In this way,
either they become committed to our version of liberty through the
citizenship qualification process, or they apply their excess
dollars to American products. In both cases, liberty
wins.]
C. Children of
citizens fall under the protection of their parents citizenship
until reaching an age or ability to become self-responsible, or
they become disqualified by criminal or rebellious
behavior. [Children of citizens (or residents, for that
matter) automatically come under the respective category of
protection that their parents possess. Thus, children are
fully protected
under the umbrella of their parents citizenship, but arent
considered citizens themselves until they qualify. Once
reaching the minimum age to apply
for citizenship, they would become residents until they otherwise
qualify for personal citizenship status.]
Principle
#11:
CITIZEN ACTIONS FOR
SELF-DEFENSE.
A. All citizens should
be free to own and possess the means of effective personal
protection and to use appropriate force to protect life and
property from harm when police forces are not immediately available
or willing to help. [This language is extremely
effective in recognizing a broad degree of power for the individual
in the exercise of his right of self-defense. It does not
specifically limit the
types of arms a person may possess, though a citizen may agree to
do so in the citizen compact. It allows the use of force
to defend
both life and property, and is not contingent upon permission from
police.]
B. Citizens acting in self-defense of
fundamental rights should use only the force necessary to eliminate
the perceived threat. [This presents the basic principle
of how much force is appropriate. It focuses on the issue
of the threat,
as seen through the eyes of the one threatened. Naturally,
specific kinds of force
would be more clearly defined in constitutional and statutory
law.]
C. A privately armed citizenry also
serves as a proper counter-force and deterrence to government
tyranny. [This principle recognizes the legitimate role
that an armed citizenry has in deterring government
tyranny. This is essential
since the threat of government tyranny is very real today, but
carefully hidden.]
Principle
#12: FREELY COMPETING, NON-COERCIVE
VALUES.
A. All non-coercive values should be
free to compete for adherents in both private and public domains,
with government serving only in its role of maintaining public
order. [This principle establishes that government is
not to promote or detract from the private or public competition of
ideas, but is only to ensure public order and to ensure that
neither side has use of the public purse nor enforcement powers to
promote its position as stated in B.
B. Government should
never use general revenues or its lawmaking power to establish or
promote any system of belief except that which directly protects
fundamental rights or which is agreed upon by all participants in a
citizen compact covering community standards of public
conduct. [This
principle adds the concept that governments can only go beyond
fundamental rights to enforce some limited community standards of
public conduct (not private) as long as all citizens who form the
government have agreed to those standards. In this case fairness would
dictate that only a reasonable set of community standards is going
to be capable of engendering wide support. That is why
excluding private conduct
is an important element of gaining wide acceptance among people who
are not totally moral by Gods standards, but recognize the wisdom
of keeping such conduct to themselves and not flaunting it in
public. One must be careful
to implement a citizen compact while there still exists a majority
of people at least sensitive to these moral issues, otherwise the
best that a compact can do is govern a break-away sector of good
people who declare their freedom from the corrupt
majority.]
C. Officials should
not be restricted, however, from making statements of personal
belief, including religious
references to a duty to God or a belief in a Supreme Being, or
praying publicly to God, as long as such pronouncements are stated
as their own personal beliefs or feelings, represent part of his or
her leadership role to constituents, and do not require mandatory
acceptance by others. [This principle establishes
that even though officers of government are paid employees, they
may express their personal convictions about politics, philosophy
and religion etc., as long as those expressions are part of their
leadership responsibility, are not at odds with their official
capacity requiring fairness and justice, and are stated as their
own personal opinions or feelings. Leaders are paid to
lead, and not
simply parrot mechanistic rules. If a leader oversteps the
bounds of
propriety in this area, there are other checks and balances,
including the election process or legislative censure that can
serve to counterbalance excesses.]
D. Private citizens
should not be prohibited from using public property on a temporary
basis, without cost to the government, for religious or other
celebrations of belief as long as such activities are voluntary and
coordinated with other normal public needs. [Religions
are no different than any other association of belief. All
such associations (that do not
threaten fundamental rights, or the community standards established
by voluntary compact on public comportment), ought to have free
access to public property, even to promulgate their beliefs--as
long as any costs to the taxpayer for administration or maintaining
public order is reimbursed.]
E. Officials should not, in an official
capacity, publicly disparage the beliefs of others, unless those
beliefs violate fundamental rights. [Again, the criteria
for official criticism of a belief system must be strictly limited
acts or intentions that violate or present an imminent threat to
fundamental rights--not mere dislike or disagreement for the belief
system that is otherwise voluntary. Naturally, criticism
can be leveled at
beliefs or actions of the group that may violate the agreed upon
standards of public comportment as well--especially since even
those members agreed to those standards.]
SUMMARY
The key
elements of this system of principles, that distinguish it from our
present system, are these:
It provides a workable
legal definition for fundamental rights that effectively stops
the creation of false rights that always accompany Socialist
demands.
It limits the powers of
enforcement to the defense of fundamental rights so that law
enforcement officers and citizens can better know the proper bounds
of police action.
It provides a basis for
forming a government or covenant societies within that government
based upon initial unanimous consent so that no persons
rights are violated at the onset.
It provides a mechanism to
keep the voting public bound to the principles of liberty,
without having to control the education system or the distribution
of information.
It provides a system that
allows for a variety of covenant compacts to govern matters
of community standards for public behavior, avoiding the dangers
of putting such powers in the hands of majority rule.
It provides for a system of
government funding that absolutely prohibits the use of
general tax revenues to support the redistribution of wealth,
property, or belief systems (other than the defense of fundamental
rights).
All of the
above are so significant in their potential for restoring and
preserving liberty that they deserve the attention of all good men
and women. There is room in
this system for widest possible expressions of belief and action
for both religious and non-religious people and groups.
This system also allows for a variety
of different covenant societies so that strict uniformity is not
mandated throughout the nation.
No system completely
eliminates the myriad of conflict possible between human beings,
but this system establishes a stable foundation that eliminates the
most serious disagreements on basic issues for all those who
endorse liberty instead of government redistribution or
control. The principles
will not end conflict with those who want to harness government for
their own power, but they do at least give us reasonable and fair
grounds upon which to challenge their moral
pretensions. Only raising
up a strong majority of people dedicated to stop the improper use
of government power will solve this battle, ultimately.
While my readers may have differences
of opinions on specific implementation, I would hope that we can
come to an agreement on basic principles. I appeal to
each of you to help in
the quest to perfect these principles in the spirit of
non-conflict, rather than tear them down. We have the
finest historical legacy
of liberty anywhere in the world. Let us build upon it for
the
restoration of the full range of our liberties.
Joel M.
Skousen April 6, 2001