In
the midst of a rancorous presidential nominating season, when we are
bombarded every day with promises by politicians about how they will
create jobs or educate our children better or get the economy rolling
again, few if any candidates seem to grasp the purpose of government in
America. The purpose of government is to preserve liberty.
That
would include protecting us from foreign enemies who seek to take our
freedom and from people who come into our nation illegally, either as
illegal immigrants or as terrorists. Protecting the legal integrity of
our borders and our citizenship is an aspect of protecting American
liberty. Nothing matters, though, if liberty first is not preserved.
Listen,
then, to the next Republican debate. What are the candidates talking
about? Who will create the most jobs, who will jump-start the economy,
who will improve our educational system. We do not need government,
especially the federal government, for any of that. The economy hums
along just fine without politicians. Jobs are created when people work
and not when the Bureau of Labor Statistics captures data for dreary and
dull reports.
Do
we need government to educate us? We need government less than at any
time in human history to educate us. There are a hundred different ways
for children these days to learn to read and write, and once children
are literate, there is a limitless universe of knowledge that eager and
willing minds can pump to become truly and magnificently educated.
Indeed, it is incomparably better for de-institutionalized willing minds
to learn to keep learning than to earn a diploma, which implies
entitlement or merit when often it means nothing at all.
Liberty,
though, is quite different. It is the very air free minds need to
survive. It is the soil in which wealth grows. There is no substitute
for liberty, no government program that can simulate liberty, no
regulation that can mandate liberty. It cannot be bought, and it ought
not be sold.
When
our Declaration of Independence states that it is to preserve liberty
that governments are formed by men, and when the Preamble to our
Constitution states that the reason for this experiment in federalism is
"to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and to our posterity,"
that is the heart of what America is, or what it was founded to be.
Articles: The Purpose of Government
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