The Choice Between Prosperity and Decline
By
Jeff LukensThis land of a free people
and a free-market economy has generated a great wave of innovation that has
benefited all of humanity. The essence of freedom and prosperity that moved
around the world in past 200 and some years has been driven primarily by the
United States. With our economy now stagnating, it has become more important
than ever to return to the basic Constitutional freedoms that have made
prosperity possible.
My son came home from college to visit recently.
After some time of catching up on things, the conversation turned to topics
that interest him -- and that means all things electronic. He explained to
me why I needed the latest operating system update for the computer and how
properly to configure the surround sound system for the HDTV. I could barely
keep up with it. Somewhere in the conversation, it occurred to me that in
the long view of human history, we have come a long way in a very short
time.
Think about it. In the 1600s, the ships that brought
the first settlers to our shores, and tools for tilling the soil they
brought with them, were not much more advanced than those used by people
thousands of years before. In the relatively short time since their arrival
in the New World, there has been an explosion in technology and the standard
of living for ordinary people.
Communications, for example, were revolutionized
first by the telegraph, then by telephone, then radio, then television, and
now by the Internet and the computer. In that same time, the average length
of life has been doubled, and the quality of life has been greatly enhanced.
Homes, heating, cooling, clothing, transportation, food, education, and
medicine have quickly advanced as well.
While people around the globe have benefited and
other countries have contributed, the American spirit of innovation and free
enterprise has been a driving force behind much of the change. And that
change has flowed primarily from the fruits that come from the individual
freedoms that the Founders understood and turned loose.
In his book, W. Cleon Skousen calls this American
phenomenon "The 5000 Year Leap" that changed the world. Whether it was
actually a 5000-year leap forward is hard to say, but it certainly was a
giant step in the advancement of human civilization.
The Founders generally agreed that the only reliable
basis for sound government and just human relations is Natural Law. The
Declaration of Independence called this "the laws of Nature and Nature's
God." Constitutional precepts such as unalienable rights, habeas corpus,
limited government, separation of power, no taxation without representation,
were based on Natural Law.
The Founders intended a government that is
subservient to the people (rather than the reverse), that rights are not
derived by government but by a higher power, that the free market system
more than any other provides the best, most efficient and most just
opportunity for individual prosperity and for the welfare of the nation as a
whole.
It would be wonderful if every American studied
writings of Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Adams, Alexander Hamilton,
and others that have made our great nation possible, but sadly this is not
so. In our collective ignorance, we are becoming hostages to our very own
government. As Ben Franklin said, "Only a virtuous people are capable of
freedom. As nations become more corrupt and vicious, they have more need of
masters."
Has our idea of "rights" become so corrupt that we
are allowing the government to become our master? As the health care battle
rages on Capitol Hill, could we be seeing a reversal of roles by the
government and its citizens?
Today, many in Washington wish to overturn what they
see to be outmoded notions of Constitutional law. We hear of conferring new,
artificial rights not granted by the Creator, but by other men. The "right"
to government-sponsored health care is only the latest example. And in the
end, it is nothing more than a ruse intended to empower the state and deny
everyone his or her true inalienable rights.
In just the past few weeks, we have seen it all.
From grossly irresponsible spending of taxpayer money, to an ever-increasing
national debt, to corrupt political payoffs, to expanding entitlements that
we cannot pay for, the list goes on. The government corruption and
mismanagement of our finances has been going on for decades, and it is
getting worse. We must face the possibility that the great wave of
prosperity that this nation has known from the beginning could be ending,
and that our government is causing the decline.
The economic trend lines do not paint a pretty
picture. Not to be too dramatic, but the bankruptcy of our government, a
collapse of the American economy, and hence the world economy, could happen.
That almost happened in the 1930s, and this time it could be worse.
One thing for certain, fixing society's problems is
not accomplished by growing government and the overstepping its
constitutional role, but by a return to founding principles. For prosperity
and innovation to continue, we must choose to preserve the honest
relationship of self-interested individuals working in cooperation with a
government of limited and divided authority.
From the beginning until today, the "noble
experiment" of free people and free enterprise has produced phenomenal
results. There has never been of greater need than now, however, to preserve
our Constitutional principles. Our children's future is depending on
it.