03/19/10
From Pajamas Media
Our Individual and National Duty of Self-Preservation
"Real Americans" as described by General Patton versus
apologists such as the 44th president.
- by AWR Hawkins
Natural rights are rights that flow to man from God through nature. Because
these rights rest on God rather than government, America’s Founding Fathers
described them as inalienable. And since they exist upon a divine foundation,
the Founders argued that they were fixed and unchanging — and warned that they
were not to be infringed. Moreover, because the source of natural rights was
(and is) God himself, our Founders believed those rights carried more weight
than they otherwise would, which meant each natural right was coupled with a
corresponding duty.
Samuel Adams, one of the driving forces behind the American Revolution, made
this point when he
described “the duty of self-preservation … [as] the first law of nature.” In
other words, the first lesson he drew from natural law was not only that we have
an individual right to preserve our lives but a duty to do so as well. Like many
of America’s Founding Fathers, Adams’ worldview had been framed by the writings
of Enlightenment philosopher John Locke,
who wrote that our lives were our chief property, and that those lives,
being the gift of God, come to us joined with an intrinsic obligation to defend
them.
Throughout this nation’s history, even those who have never read the works of
Adams or Locke have intuitively understood the things about which they wrote.
And this understanding has translated into everything from deadbolts on our
front doors to concealed-carry guns on our persons and the emergence of “castle
doctrine” legislation in states throughout the land.
What we must grasp is that from every individual right and duty a national
equivalent can be extrapolated. Adams indicated as much when
he wrote: “Government
was instituted for the purposes of common defense.” And in Federalist 41,
James Madison
was even more specific when he wrote that “security against foreign danger is
one of the primitive objects of civil society.”
To put it plainly, those to whom we entrust power in government — the president,
the Congress, and the Senate — should use that power to defend our nation and
the lives of our fellow citizens the way we use our individual powers to defend
our own lives and the property we possess. And while there are many honorable
ways by which our elected officials could do this, three clear examples would be
the construction of fences on our borders, using missile defense shields to
cover our shores, and supporting a dominant and ruthless military that is ready
to respond to any threat at a moment’s notice.
The preservation of this nation ought not be burdensome; instead, it should be a
labor of love. President Calvin Coolidge made this clear in 1927, while speaking
at Arlington National Cemetery: “As
Americans we are always justified in glorying in our own country. … Not to
know and appreciate the many excellent qualities of our own country constitutes
an intellectual poverty which … ought to be acknowledged with shame.”
Because these things are intuitive to the kind of citizens whom George C. Scott
described as “real
Americans” in the opening scenes of the 1970 film Patton, it is no wonder so
many Americans spent last year attending tea parties. They are bothered that
America’s current president does not share Coolidge’s propensity to “[glory] in
our country.” In fact, instead of extolling the many virtues of this great
nation, Obama apologizes for it’s few shortcomings.
These Americans are also bothered by the fact that he does not demonstrate an
acquaintance with Madison’s emphasis on the government’s role in providing
“security against foreign danger.” This is evident in the fact that he does not
take the threat from militant Islam as seriously as he should, as demonstrated
by his administration’s June 2009 “pledge”
to strike “a new beginning between the United States and the Muslim community …
[and] to [use] criminal and civil rights laws to protect Muslim Americans.”
(This statement ultimately betrays a mentality that blames the United States for
terrorist acts committed by militant Islamists against the United States. It
also expresses the administration’s misguided hope that shielding militant Islam
from criticism will make would-be terrorists abandon their terrorist plots.)
Although a majority of the blame for such
convoluted policies rests
at the feet of Obama, a share in their continued implementation also lies
with every senator, representative, cabinet member, and mainstream media anchor
who defends such an anti-American posture — a posture that runs counter to
precepts of natural law and therefore against the very spirit of our nation’s
founding. The danger of such a posture is crystal clear in situations like we
see now, where Obama and the Democrat-controlled Congress are working together
to
deny our military the planes and weapons it needs to retain air superiority
over other nations.
As individuals we defend and preserve our lives and property because God gave us
not simply the right to that defense, but the duty to carry it out as well. Our
government is likewise bound to defend and preserve this nation. To refuse to
carry out this duty is to turn the world upon its head by warring against the
very laws of nature.
AWR Hawkins is a conservative writer who holds a Ph.D. in
military history from Texas Tech University.
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