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Ballot-box plan to thwart 'scheme for oligarchic dominance'
Has the Constitution failed us?
Or have "we the people" failed the
Constitution?
An
article I read recently quoted the leader of an American grassroots
citizens' movement as saying:
"For more than five years, 'we the people'
have been writing, calling, faxing Congress, the media, screaming in town halls,
marching, rallying, demonstrating, petitioning, all to no avail.... Every branch
of government looks at 'we the people,' whom they have taken an oath to serve,
as 'pests,' interfering with their political agenda, cramping their
self-serving, greedy agendas. We have no faith in the ballot box any longer, as
many believe this sacred secret box has been compromised."
Anyone
familiar with my speeches and writing over the past few years knows how deeply I
share the frustration these words express. Frankly though, I also find it
frustrating that people who lament the fact that people in government have
abandoned the Constitution express themselves in a way that suggests that they
have abandoned it themselves – for periodic elections are the vital heart of the
republican form of government the Constitution establishes. Someone who has lost
faith in the ballot box has in fact lost faith in the U.S.
Constitution.
Of course, if it were factually the case that the ballot
box has been compromised, we would have no choice but to conclude that the
Constitution has failed – but what factual evidence justifies this conclusion?
To be sure, elected officials in Congress haven't been representing the people
who elected them. But the problem isn't fraudulent electoral outcomes in the
constitutional elections (i.e., the biennial November elections). For example,
in the 2010 elections, voters restored control of the U.S. House of
Representatives to the GOP. The GOP's margin of victory came from so-called
tea-party candidates, elected to represent grassroots demands for the
restoration of limited government, beginning with limits on debt and
spending.
Thus, the voters weren't thwarted at the ballot box. Their
election mobilization succeeded. But it was thwarted during the congressional
session because the GOP is controlled by elitist faction leaders who actually
depend upon and support the expansion of U.S. government power and domination.
So in the two years following the 2010 election, each time the smoke of mock
legislative combat cleared, it was clear that the expansion of government
continued unchecked, as it does to this day. So does the abrogation of vital
provisions of the U.S. Constitution, such as the provision that revenue-raising
measures must originate in the U.S. House of Representatives, or that the
president must faithfully execute laws made pursuant to the
Constitution.
The problem, therefore, isn't that the biennial fall
elections are hopelessly corrupted. The problem is that the so-called two-party
system is a manipulative sham. The Democratic and Republican parties are not
truly opposed to one another. They are controlled by wings of the same elitist
clique. That clique is bent on replacing government of, by, and for the people
with government strictly controlled by the elitist few. Such elitist oligarchies
have been the rule for human governments throughout human history.
Thanks
to the goodwill of America's prevalent founders, the U.S. Constitution became,
for a time, the basis for the first and only real exception to that rule.
When Obama or the elitist faction's pundits and academics pontificate about the
end of American exceptionalism, this is the real import of their boast. I saw an
article not long ago about an academic report that purported to confirm that
the U.S. government has been transformed into an oligarchy that "does not
represent the interests of the majority of the country's citizens, but is
instead ruled by those of the rich and powerful."
If true, this defeats
the whole purpose of the U.S. Constitution. Its purpose was to implement what Madison called a
"scheme of representation" implemented through frequent, periodic elections
by the people. Again we must ask, has the Constitution failed? Is that why we
get results, especially in Congress, that no longer represent the people? I say,
to the contrary, that it is we the people who have failed the Constitution.
Instead of taking the lead in the electoral process, we
have consented to become passive consumers of results produced by a party
system dominated by factors (mainly money and media) that are substantially
controlled by the elitist clique.
The sham party system plays to the
strength of this burgeoning oligarchy. Using thoroughly manipulated conventions
and primaries, where their money and media dominance usually gives them the whip
hand, they have a preponderant influence on the selection of candidates in both
parties. By controlling the choices available in the fall general elections,
they control the choice of the people. So, whichever way that choice goes, the
elitist faction's interests are served.
Electoral politics is like a war
of maneuver. It depends on strategically gathering and positioning your forces
before the day of battle (Election Day) so that, by the time that day arrives,
the disposition of your forces discourages the opposition forces from showing
up. The elitist clique uses the sham party system to create perceptions that
achieve this discouraging effect.
There is, however, a way to thwart this
scheme for oligarchic dominance. The key lies in direct, person-to-person
mobilization of voters, by means that don't rely on the media-fabricated
perceptions of candidates, issues, and events. Modern information technology now
offers grassroots people the chance to construct highly visible attestations of
electoral strength more salient than these media fabrications. Instead of phony
polls and bulging coffers, grassroots folks can build a database of voters, all
of them rallied around a cause that summarizes their most vital concerns; all of
them pledged to vote for no candidates who refuse, unequivocally, to pledge that
once elected they will act and vote as specified in the written pledge they have
signed.
Built with scrupulous integrity (i.e., verified pledgers,
pledging only once, whose voter status in their state or district is confirmed
before Election Day), the number of voters thus mobilized is publicized for all
to see. As the number increases, the political leverage it represents will
increase. It will increase because, as Election Day nears, candidates in
different states and congressional districts who have not taken the pledge will
have to deal with the reality of a large bloc of votes that is theirs for the
taking.
This is the strategic concept that informs the Pledge To Impeach voter mobilization
effort. It calls for people to rally in defense of the Constitution by
demonstrating the political will needed to elect a Congress that will impeach,
try, and remove Obama, Biden, and all the civil officers of the U.S. government
who are collaborating in their push to overturn the U.S. Constitution. Losing
faith in the ballot box only helps the Constitution's enemies succeed. So stop
putting your faith in what has repeatedly proven itself to be a sham party
system. Join in building a highly visible bloc of voters determined to
demonstrate the sovereign power over their government the Constitution leaves to
the American people, for use whenever they have good reason and sense enough to
use it.
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