Monday, May 22, 2017

Republic versus Democracy by Dennis Haugh

The following article is definitely nonconventional in nature. It challenges a lot of orthodoxy, but it is based upon the basics of political thought and introduces an entirely new perspective on Marxism. Of course, it is not the only perspective possible.

What is the difference between a democracy and a republic? Americans today have gotten sloppy in referring to them as synonyms. They are definitely not, and the distinction is very important. As James Madison warned in Federalists #10:

Hence it is, that such Democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security, or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives, as they have been violent in their deaths.[1]


In other words, democracies do nothing to guarantee liberty or safety. In this article we will explain why democracies are incompatible with personal security and rights of property. Republics are not perfect, but they are superior. To understand why, we need to understand what the difference is.

Students are taught in United States’ civics classes that whereas democracy is direct involvement of the citizens, a republic is “representative government”. This statement is only partially true. It describes the implementation of the republic that the framers designed. What a republic really is requires understanding the abstract concept laid out by Aristotle over two millennia ago. In short, a republic is a form of government that enables the middle class to rule.[2] The key component to this definition is that what defines the middle class has nothing to do with wealth.[3]

Within society, there have always been the poor and the rich. Aristotle chronicled that as societies flourished a third, middle class grew.[4] Unlike our view today where these classes are defined by an artificial number based upon wealth, Aristotle’s categorization was based upon attitude.[5] The poor defined themselves by being envious. The rich were greedy. The middle class was neither greedy nor envious. As such, they would defend the poor from the power of the rich. In so doing, they ensure personal security. Conversely, they would defend the rich from the numbers of the poor; thus, ensuring the rights of property. Therefore, the “best” form of government is one where the middle class rules. That is what we call a republic.

On the other hand, we know that democracy is rule of the many (majority). The distinction with democracy is that the middle class is not large enough to buffer the enmity between rich and poor. Since the middle class is too weak to defend the rich from the numbers of the poor, democracy is rule by the poor – who are the majority. The rights of property become insecure because of the poor’s envy. With no security in one’s property, personal security becomes a casualty shortly thereafter.

Republics are inclined toward meritocracy. The pursuit of happiness is a natural phenomenon in a society that lacks greed or envy. Society profits as a by-product. A democracy is different. The envy of the ruling class (the poor) discourages personal improvement.

When I was a cadet at the Air Force Academy in the early 70’s, we all had to go through a simulated Prisoner of Was (POW) camp as a part of the Survival Escape Resistance and Evasion (SERE - pronounced “SEER-EE”, not “SEER”) program. (NOTE: with the change in enemies over the years the program has swapped the two E’s and the need for the POW training has diminished). The year after being an “object of the exercise”, I returned to the SERE program to be an “aggressor” (specifically an interrogator). We wore black-dyed fatigues and funky communist beanies with a red star. We called ourselves “The People’s Democratic Republic” (PDR). While we were trucked to Jacks Valley one day, I can remember reflecting how cynical it was that all the communist countries inserted “Democratic” into the title of their nation. Some also abused “Republic”.

Recently I began to realize that the communist use of the term “democracy” may in fact not be cynical. What I have come to realize is that Marx did not really create a new form of government. What he actually did was figure out how to stabilize democracy – sort of. If we look at the socialist/communist revolutions like the Bolshevik Revolution and Mao’s Cultural Revolution, what do we see? Ignoring Marx’s terminology, the masses (poor) rise up against the powerful (rich). After great turmoil (and death), the established traditions are replaced with new traditions to program the society to accept what is really an oligarchy in disguise. The transition from democracy to oligarchy is seamlessly done through coercion, but the social upheaval destroys any resistance to the new order. The poor are the enforcers because they are true believers. Subsequent generations are indoctrinated into the “traditions” of the new social order.

We tend to think that socialism only replaces tyranny, but that is not necessarily the case. Consider the following passage from Madison’s Federalist 10, which Madison wrote long before Marx.

So strong is this propensity of mankind to fall into mutual animosities, that where no substantial occasion presents itself, the most frivolous and fanciful distinctions have been sufficient to kindle their unfriendly passions and excite their most violent conflicts. But the most common and durable source of factions has been the various and unequal distribution of property. Those who hold and those who are without property have ever formed distinct interests in society[6]

All that is required to take down a republic is to move enough of the population from the middle class to the poor in order to enable Marxist dogma to activate. This can be done without taking a dime from anyone. All that must happen is to convince members of the middle class that they are being taken advantage of by “the rich” to amplify envy. The effect is to shrink the middle class and grow the poor, thereby creating a democracy where a republic had existed. The transition to a socialist/communist state is but a heartbeat away. All that is required is for the majority to focus on sharing over opportunity. That transition is Marx’s legacy.

The key distinction between a democracy in antiquity and a Marxist state is the programming of the poor. In antiquity the outcome was unpredictable. Socrates and Plato thought there was a cycle of government; Aristotle did not. Once Marxism is introduced and embraced, a totalitarian oligarchy prevails that is reinforced by the poor. Indoctrination of the young entrenches the system for potentially lifetimes.

Unlike during the Cold War, many Americans have embraced the notion that “socialism isn’t that bad” with the belief that an American version would be kinder and gentler than others. They are kidding themselves. F. A. Hayek grew up in the heart of socialist Europe prior to World War II. He was inculcated into socialism at a young age but witnessed the horrors begot by socialism first hand. As he writes in The Road to Serfdom, Hitler’s rise would have been inconceivable 15 years earlier. It took socialism to prepare the country.[7] Per Marxist doctrine, socialism is a transient state to communism.[8] The holocaust in World War II left six million dead in its wake, but the numbers of dead due to communism are staggering and dwarf the holocaust. A more complete compilation of the death toll can be found on http://victimsofcommunism.org/, but just consider three examples:[9]

·         Stalin was responsible for at least 60 million deaths
·         Mao’s Cultural Revolution killed 70 million
·         Pol Pot was responsible for killing 20% of the population of Cambodia

All deaths were within national boundaries and committed by fellow citizens. They do not include the loss of life during the Bolshevik Revolution, or a number of other communist purges. Our casualties during the Cold War were but a pin prick by comparison. To put it into perspective, our bloodiest war, the Civil War cost 620,000 lives over four years.

Does the government the founders laid out in the Constitution protect us from such a transition? The founders themselves didn’t think so. In his closing speech at the Constitutional Convention , Ben Franklin stated clearly that he thought the government would be well administered for a course of years but would eventually devolve to despotism.[10] Likewise, John Adams did not consider the Republic bulletproof:

We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge and licentiousness would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a religious and moral people. It is wholly inadequate for the government of any other.[11]

Franklin’s retort to Mrs. Powel when she asked him what kind of government the Convention had developed, “A republic, if you can keep it” further demonstrates that the founders well understood the vulnerability of the republic.[12]

How did the founders create a republic? They didn’t directly; they did it indirectly by enabling a population with a dominant middle class to rule itself by limiting government. An unlimited government will eventually become either a tyranny (like Franklin projected) or an oligarchy (as Marx designed).

The theory of a written constitution is to stabilize and restrict government for the good of society. The enumeration of powers and restrictions on powers are the key elements in the U.S. Constitution. The familiar separation of powers at the national level has actually been around since antiquity. Classically the three branches provided a way for the three classes of society to check each other’s power. Such a scheme is less effective in our “classless society”. This is why the innovation of a federal system of opposing governments was so important in limiting the power and the size of both state and national governments. It is no accident that the growth of the national government takes off in 1913, the year the 16th and 17th amendments were ratified. Coupled with the long-term effects of McCulloch v. Maryland, state government power has declined precipitously since. We will explore how federal the U.S. constitutional system is in the next article.



[10] Political Vertigo, Appendix A

Thursday, May 18, 2017

The Mueller Report: June 15, 2018

            IM:  Gentlemen, I had an interesting dream last night.  It involved a report by newly appointed special counsel Robert Mueller to the Deputy Attorney General, Rod Rosenstein.  It summarized findings stemming from his investigation.  With Rosenstein’s permission the report was allowed to be made public at a national press conference on Friday, June 15, 2018 at 2:00 PM Eastern Standard Time.


            AM:  I suspect, as Democrats have been pining for, Mueller's report sought prosecution of President Trump and some of his lieutenants.  After all, when Mueller was the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), he actually reported to Comey when Comey was the Deputy Attorney General.  News reports indicate they had a cozy relationship. In the left’s opinion, prosecution would be suitable retribution for colluding with the Russians to steal the election.
            
          Old Gadfly:  IM, before we hear about your dream, let me remind you that there is a reason we have heard members of the left refer to the current developments as “Nixonian” or “shades of Watergate.”  There have been deliberate actions by Democrats that parallel efforts to take down Nixon.  The media amplified the effect then as now. On the 10th of May, this was a New York Times headline:  “In Trump Firing of James Comey, Echoes of Watergate.”  Today’s Democrats essentially held Rod Rosenstein hostage to the idea of a special counsel in order to secure confirmation.  Similar actions took place when Democrats held hostage Elliott Richardson and William Ruckelshaus for attorney general and deputy attorney general, respectively.  This took place during Senate confirmation hearings as Watergate was unfolding.  Although this may sound like a strange connection, Richardson’s so called “independent prosecutor,” Archibald Cox, was cozy with Democrats, actually inviting Senators Ted Kennedy and the widow of Robert Kennedy to his swearing in ceremony.[1]  One would think that Cox would take the necessary precautions to avoid appearing partisan. 

As I explained in a previous discussion, in the 1950s U.S. Congressman Richard Nixon was the lead investigator that led to the conviction of Alger Hiss, a Communist agent for the Soviet GRU but a close friend of highly placed Democrats.  According to Philip Elman, in 1943, he, Alger Hiss, and Archibald Cox worked together under Dean Acheson at the State Department.[2]  Do you get the drift? 

Unfortunately, a lot of what we know about Watergate is folklore.  More recent historians secured access to recently released original documents that indicate Nixon was innocent of any crimes yet unjustly convicted based on fabrications and manipulation of the public narrative.  In other words, Nixon was tried and convicted in the public court, orchestrated by power centers on the left:  Democrats (elected and in judicial roles) and the media.  In the process, laws were broken in terms of conspiracy and collusion by prosecutors and judges.[3]  And the media loves leaks now as they did then.  Tell me again.  How are The New York Times and The Washington Post different from Wikileaks?
            
           AM:  They are worse—they betray the essence of freedom of the press in America.  However, there is some irony and an abundance of truth in Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s observation that American newspapers are like the Communist newspapers of the former Soviet Union.  So Trump is screwed!!  Déjà vu all over again!!  
           
           IM:  Take a breath guys.  Let me tell you my dream.  You are going to find this hard to believe.  Here goes . . .

Going into the summer of 2018, Democrats were projected to rout Republicans in the mid-term elections—nationally and at the state level.  The media was already spiking the football as public figures from the left talked about the final phase of a transformed America.  Finally, one political party was on the verge of completely dominating political values for America.  America was about to become Soviet America, adopting the Communist Party USA’s slogan:  people and planet before profit.

Democrats kept investigations going in the House and Senate, periodically giving press reports that they were close to completing them, that they were convinced of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians.  Every week there was some bombshell report in The New York Times or Washington Post based on leaks from anonymous sources within the government.  Hillary Clinton began building a campaign staff for the 2020 elections.  Surprisingly, throughout this time, Mueller provided absolutely no reports on the investigation.  Miraculously, there were no leaks from his staff.

Then, on Thursday, June 14, 2018, Mueller announced that he would publicly present the results of the investigation the next day at 2:00 PM Eastern Standard Time.  Not known for drama, Mueller requested a coliseum and maximum coverage on all the networks.  Republicans and Trump supporters were already preparing for the bad news.  Democrats and the media were already talking about lengthy prison terms and celebrating final retribution for stealing the election.

The appointed time arrived.  Mueller took the stage and announced two major findings.  First, there was no evidence of collusion with Russia.  Second, the investigation into any evidence of obstruction of justice revealed serious violations of the law.  Commentators on MSNBC and CNN wanted to be the first to start listing names of those they believed were involved:  President Trump when he suggested that “I hope you can let it go,” Lt General Flynn, Jared Kushner, Steve Bannon, and so forth. 

Then, Mueller looked into the camera and declared the investigation revealed a network of conspirators with an overwhelming rabbit trail of incriminating evidence.  Secret grand juries had already been held, gag orders were issued to all parties involved. 

The thread for this aspect of the investigation began with Comey.  Mueller wanted to know if the Wikileaks material had any other source other than Russia.  He discovered that the Washington DC police had been investigating the death of Seth Rich, an idealistic 27-year old staff member of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) but had been pressured by Comey to back off since the FBI was already investigating this issue in light of the broader Russian collusion investigation.  Mueller discovered that while Russia had in fact hacked into the DNC email system, the actual material from Wikileaks actually came from Seth Rich.  Rich was found with two bullets to the back.  His wallet was intact with cash and credit cards—clearly the appearance of an assassination.  Authentic emails from Podesta previously expressed the intent to make an example of a leaker, “whether or not we have any real basis for it.”  This communication was more than circumstantial and far more egregious than President Trump’s “I hope you can let it go” request of Comey.  The Clinton campaign insisted upon not working with the press, unless they could directly control the narrative.  Yet, when it came to their attempt to spin the news with the trumped up Russian dossier on candidate Trump, I became very concerned that the FBI actually contributed to the narrative by leaking it to the press.

Obviously, we opened the aperture and justified reopening the Clinton email case.  We reversed immunity granted to various members associated with this case.  Despite an aggressive attempt to destroy evidence—an act that is obstruction of justice—we gathered sufficient evidence to seek indictments from a grand jury.  Besides Hillary, husband William, John Podesta, Sidney Blumenthal, and a host of other associates, we will be pursuing prosecutions and maximum sentences.  Commentators on MSNBC and CNN were visibly shocked.  Some began to cry uncontrollably.

Mueller continued.  The thread of our investigation led to other criminal activity within the Justice Department, the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the National Security Council (NSC), the National Security Agency (NSA), and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).  Although Lois Lerner deserved prosecution for her role in censoring voices on the right, we granted immunity to get evidence that took us not only to the political officer appointed to the IRS, but to members of the White House staff.  Valerie Jarrett immediately sought immunity to provide evidence that proved Barack Obama was involved in covering up illegal activity in Fast and Furious, the Benghazi attack, prisoner exchanges with Afghanistan and Iran, and other less known activities.  Attorneys General Holder and Lynch also conspired to support political actions contrary to public law.  These were the big fish in the conspiracy.  Since the evidence is irrefutable, we are pressing forward with these prosecutions as we also continue to follow the thread throughout the conspiracy, to include leakers within the NSC, the FBI, the NSA, and the CIA.  We are also considering seditious behavior considerations for journalists who collaborated in these activities knowing the motive or intent of the leakers was to subvert the legitimacy of a constitutionally elected President.

Although I did not vote for President Trump, nor do I even appreciate his agenda or style, as a man of the law, I had no other moral obligation but to enforce actions in his attempt to drain the swamp.  That completes my presentation; I will be taking no questions.

AM:  Wow.  Your dream is wishful thinking.

Old GadflyCicero observed similar dangers in his own day.  We would be wise to recognize the similarities captured in Cicero's statement:

A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear.

Let us hope that Mueller understands this caution and helps our nation save its soul.   




[1] For a well-documented history on Archibald Cox and his Watergate connection, see Archibald Cox. (2017, May 18). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 22:50, May 18, 2017, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Archibald_Cox&oldid=780960548
[2] Norman I. Silber, With All Deliberate Speed:  The Life of Philip Elman:  An Oral History Memoir in Mr. Elman’s Words, (Ann Arbor, MI:  The University of Michigan Press, 2004), p. 140.
[3] For instance, see Geoff Shepard, The Real Watergate Scandal:  Collusion, Conspiracy, and the Plot that Brought Nixon Down, (Washington, DC:  Regnery History, 2015).