We all know that we face something new in our history and that we live in a time of great peril. We have placed a president in power who has no intention of playing the role that the Constitution assigns to him – namely, executing the laws that Congress enacts. We have a Congress that has been willing to give away its power, and a Supreme Court that is helping to insure that it can. We are a public that has lost touch with the idea and practice of “self‑government,” with that phrase meaning a government that is “of, by, and for the people,” and with that “by the people” commitment being, by far, the most important one.
Let me quote Tom Paine. We are confronting an “American Crisis.” These are, as Paine said, “the times that try our souls.”
We can – and we must, as individuals and collectively - reallocate our time. This is what we must do if we wish to maintain a system of “self-government” in the United States of America. We need to reengage with “politics,” and stop thinking that “politics” is something to be shunned. We need to get together – old and young together - and create thousands of small groups, all across the country. We cannot wait for “political parties” or various non-profit groups to solve our problem for us. We need to meet, in person, in these small groups, on a frequent basis, and communicate with other such groups, like the “Committees of Correspondence” did before the American Revolution. We need, based on what these small groups decide, to make our local governments respond to the issues we see in our local communities, and to force Congress (our “representatives”) to take action to stop the current abuses of executive authority at the national level. To accomplish this we must, each one of us, pledge our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.
If that last statement sounds familiar, it is, and I am not alone in highlighting its importance. This year marks the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution, and we need to renew our vows.
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