We’ve been urging Bob Marshall of the Virginia House of
Delegates to get in touch with CESJ president Norman Kurland. Most immediately, of course, this would kick
start the economy in Virginia, provide an example for the other states, begin
the process of shifting from money supply backed with government debt to a
money supply backed with private sector hard assets, create jobs, and so on.
Bob and Catharine Marshall |
What's been going on in the U.S. since Scott v. Sandford (1857) — the Dred Scott case — is that the
concept of inalienable (i.e.,
natural) rights, inherent and absolute in the human person, has been almost
completely neutralized, even eliminated.
Politicians and judges seeking power have confused in people’s minds the
difference between having a right
such as life, liberty, and property, and exercising
that right in a limited manner within the common good.
People have rights
absolutely, by nature itself, i.e.,
as a grant from God, and God’s gifts are irrevocable. By their very nature, however, no rights may
be exercised absolutely. Dominion
is thus absolute and inalienable, granted by God unconditionally, while usufruct is socially determined and
limited, depending on the wants and needs of the right holder, other
individuals and groups, and the common good as a whole.
What’s happened, however, is — as a result of the massive
power-grab by the State over the past 150 years as capital ownership
opportunities for ordinary people have disappeared (why Frederick Jackson
Turner claimed that the end of “free” land meant the end of democracy) —
there’s been a deliberate confusion fostered about the differences between
individual good, common goods, and the common good.
By lumping all three types of goods together as “common,”
and acknowledging that the State has responsibility for the common good (which
is perfectly true), and then adding the fact that the State’s role is to define
the limited exercise of rights held absolutely by the citizens, the State
achieves total power by the simple expedient of confusing title with use.
Daniel Webster |
Since possession of rights defines someone as a person, when
the State claims to be the source of rights as well as the definer of their
exercise, the State decides who or what is a person, and even what is a right. Everyone becomes a “mere creature of the
State.”
Fortunately, however, we need merely keep in mind, as Daniel
Webster reminded us, that “power naturally and necessarily follows
property.” To restore America,
restore private property. Only by becoming
empowered through capital ownership can we restore our inalienable rights to
life, liberty and property.
And, by the way, it’s never too late to send an e-mail to
Bob Marshall, delegatebobmarshall [at] Hotmail [dot] com, letting him know you
think he should talk to CESJ president, Norman Kurland.
LINK TO BOB MARSHALL'S NEW BOOK
LINK TO BOB MARSHALL'S NEW BOOK
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