https://libertyreview76.blogspot.com/2017/02/february-22-2017-fictional-rights-by.html
Fictional Rights
By Tammy Derouin
Not that long ago, most Americans
understood that in order to secure the blessings of our liberty and
to be able to pass it on to our posterity, we had to establish
justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense
and promote the general welfare. These were all necessary orders to
forming a more perfect union.
The words, “a more perfect union”
not perfect union, were used in the Preamble of the Constitution.
The founders knew that a perfect world did not exist. Attempting to
create one would be futile but there was always room for improvement.
Besides, by whose standards would perfection be determined?
The founders understood that happiness
and prosperity could only be obtained by the individual. It was not
the job of the government to determine the definition of happiness or
success. It was, however, the job of the government to protect the
rights of the people as set forth in the U.S. Constitution.
There was a time when our freedoms and
liberties were highly valued and therefore, the story of our country
and our system of government were actually taught to the next
generation. Without the knowledge of our past and an understanding
of what led to our founding, it would become too easy to take such
basic freedoms for granted.
If you do not understand the value of
something you hold, it becomes something which can be easily traded.
In the quest for power, government is all too willing to take
advantage of ignorance. It preys upon the uninformed and dangles
promises, which no government can truly keep.
We are an exceptional nation because we
are free. We are free because we stood up to tyranny and tied it
down with the U.S. Constitution. Without the Constitution, we loose
our exceptionalism, our freedom. We become just another nation of
men;
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