By Myron Magnet
Friday, July 03, 2015
Men, not vast, impersonal forces — economic,
technological, class struggle, what have you — make history, and they make it
out of the ideals that they cherish in their hearts and the ideas they have in
their minds. So what were the ideas and ideals that drove the Founding Fathers
to take up arms and fashion a new kind of government, one formed by reflection
and choice, as Alexander Hamilton said, rather than by accident and force?
The worldview out of which America was born centered on
three revolutionary ideas, of which the most powerful was a thirst for liberty.
For the Founders, liberty was not some vague abstraction. They understood it
concretely, as people do who have a keen knowledge of its opposite. They
understood it in the same way as Eastern Europeans who have lived under
Communist tyranny, for instance, or Jews who escaped the Holocaust.
The Plymouth Pilgrims were only the first of many who
came to the New World to escape religious persecution. Hard as it may be to believe
it at this distance of time, British law once forbade non-Anglican Protestants
to worship freely — jailing and even burning them for dissenting in the 16th
and 17th centuries, and then, more liberally, fining them — and it barred them
(along with Catholics and Jews) from the great universities and from political
office. In response, thousands of Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Baptists,
Quakers, and others fled. Not incidentally, they brought with them their
dissenting tradition of governing their own congregations and hiring and firing
their own ministers — in other words, they brought to these shores a political
culture of self-government. Moreover, because they were accustomed to reading
the Bible and feeling free to judge its meaning for themselves — to believing,
that is, that they had a direct relation to God and his word independent of any
worldly institution or authority — they also brought a deeply rooted culture of
individualism and personal responsibility. For them, the individual and his
conscience were of preeminent importance.
William Livingston, a signer of the Constitution and
longtime governor of New Jersey, had earlier, in the 1750s, run a journal that
was key in turning the American mind toward revolution. In one issue he
reminded his readers how “the countless Sufferings of your pious Predecessors
for Liberty of Conscience, and the Right of private Judgment,” drove them “to
this country, then a dreary Waste and barren Desert.” His own Presbyterian
grandfather was among those pious predecessors. John Jay, our first chief
justice, wrote a gripping account of how his paternal grandfather, a French
Protestant, returned home to La Rochelle from a trading voyage abroad to find his
parents, siblings, and neighbors gone. Their houses were occupied by soldiers,
their church destroyed, their savings confiscated. While he had been away, he
learned, France had revoked its toleration of the Huguenots. He was lucky to be
able to sneak aboard a ship and sail away to freedom in the New World. Jay’s
maternal grandparents similarly had to flee anti-Protestant persecution, one
from Paris and one from Bohemia. Jay’s son and biographer tells us this
proudly; it was a living family legend.
As Edmund Burke warned his fellow members of Parliament
four weeks before Lexington and Concord, when it was already too late, “All
protestantism . . . is a sort of dissent,” but American Protestantism “is a
refinement on the principle of resistance; it is the dissidence of dissent, and
the protestantism of the protestant religion.” Whatever might be the
differences among the American Protestant sects, he said, they all agree “in
the communion of the spirit of liberty.”
Long before Emma Lazarus wrote about the huddled masses
yearning to breathe free, George Washington noted that for “the poor, the
needy, & the oppressed of the Earth,” America was already what he called
“the second Land of promise.” This Promised Land offered, said James Madison,
“an Asylum to the persecuted and oppressed of every Nation and Religion.”
In fact, for Madison — who studied at Princeton under the
radical Scottish-born Presbyterian John Witherspoon — it was red-hot outrage
over a remnant of religious oppression in the New World that drove him, until
then a sickly and directionless youth, into a political career. Virginia, where
Anglicanism was still the official, established religion until the Revolution,
had jailed a group of Baptist preachers for their unorthodox religious
writings. If you aren’t free to think your own thoughts and believe your own
beliefs, fumed Madison, you aren’t free, period, since freedom is seamless. And
as a practical matter, there can be no progress without intellectual freedom.
So when the 25-year-old revolutionary took part in drafting Virginia’s
Declaration of Rights, he rejected its original provision for religious
toleration. It’s not government’s business to “tolerate” somebody’s beliefs, he
maintained. You are free to think whatever your reason convinces you is true,
government or no government; and that’s what the Declaration of Rights ended up
saying. Madison would never use Thomas Jefferson’s high-flown language, but he
certainly agreed with his close friend’s sentiment that “I have sworn upon the
altar of god, eternal hostility to every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”
These men knew what it meant to individuals and to a whole culture to have to
parrot an official orthodoxy, or else remain silent — and they knew what
physical tyrannies such unfreedom of belief could unleash.
It is a deeply tragic paradox that the Founders also
valued liberty so highly because they lived amidst slavery. Even the
slave-owners among them knew how obscenely unjust the institution was. “The whole
commerce between master and slave,” wrote Jefferson, “is a perpetual exercise
of the most boisterous passions, the most unremitting despotism on the one
part, and degrading submissions on the other.” I needn’t detail the crushing
toil, the sadistic punishments, the sexual exploitation, the break-up of
families, the enforced ignorance, and the regulation of every aspect of life
comprehended in Jefferson’s decorous statement of the inhumanity of which human
nature is capable.
In 1759, more than a century before the Civil War,
Richard Henry Lee of Stratford Hall, later president of the Continental
Congress (and incidentally a cousin of the Stratford-born Robert E. Lee), made
his maiden speech in the Virginia House of Burgesses. His message to his fellow
slave-owners: End slavery. How can anyone who calls himself a Christian, he
demanded, think that “our fellow-creatures . . . are no longer to be considered
as created in the image of God as well as ourselves, and equally entitled to
liberty and freedom by the great law of nature?” On a more down-to-earth level,
he pointed out that slaves who see their masters living in luxury and freedom,
“whilst they and their posterity are subjected for ever to the most abject and
mortifying slavery,” must become “natural enemies to society, and their
increase consequently dangerous.”
Jefferson, who had written in the Declaration that all
men are created equal, wrote in 1786, in words that prefigure Abraham Lincoln’s
Second Inaugural, “When the measure of their tears shall be full, when their
groans shall have involved heaven itself in darkness, doubtless a god of
justice will awaken to their distress, and by diffusing light and liberality
among their oppressors, or at length by his exterminating thunder, manifest his
attention to the things of this world, and that they are not to be left to the
guidance of a blind fatality.”
So when the young and pigheaded King George III began
meddling in American affairs after decades of an official British policy of
“salutary neglect” toward the New World colonies, the Founders had a ready
explanation for his intentions. The king, Washington concluded in 1774, aimed
“to make us as tame, & abject Slaves, as the Blacks we Rule over with such
arbitrary Sway” — a sentiment whose full implications it took General
Washington a lifetime to grasp: He finally freed his slaves on his deathbed.
Even earlier, Richard Henry Lee’s brother Arthur, who became one of the
Revolution’s foreign agents, declared, “I cannot Conceive of the Necessity of
becoming a Slave, while there remains a Ditch in which one may die free.” For
such men, liberty wasn’t just a word. They could feel it and taste it. Choosing
your beliefs, your thoughts, your job, your officials, your laws, your taxes —
being equal citizens before a law that was the same for all — they never took
these freedoms for granted.
The Founders believed that the purpose of government was
to protect life, liberty, and property from what they called the depravity of
human nature — from man’s innate capacity to do the kinds of violence that
slave-owners, to take just one example, did every day. But government, they
recognized, is a double-edged sword. You arm officials with the power to
protect you; but those officials have the same fallen human nature as everyone
else, so who is to say that they won’t use that power to oppress you, as
European governments had oppressed the colonists’ forebears? From Pharaoh to
Nero to the Stuart kings, history teems with examples of such despotic
governments. Even the democratic republic the Founders created had to be run by
imperfect men, and thus even it could turn into what Richard Henry Lee called
an elective despotism. So the second great Founding idea is this: The mere fact
that you elect representatives to govern you is no sure-fire guarantee of
liberty. Or, as Madison saw it in Federalist No. 10: Taxation with
representation can be tyranny.
This danger worried the Founders constantly, and they
struggled to protect their new government from it. Their first experiment was
to make that government too weak to oppress them. But it was also, they found,
too weak to do its chief job of protecting them against violence. The
Revolutionary War proved longer and harder than it need have been, since the
central government lacked authority to tax in order to pay soldiers or buy
arms. But when the Founders set out to write a new Constitution to give the
federal government powers sufficient to its purpose, they did so with their
hearts in their mouths. They strictly limited those powers to what they deemed
absolutely essential, and they carefully spelled out what those powers were.
They divided and subdivided power, and made each branch of government a check on
the others, to guard against overreaching. They required frequent elections,
gave the president a veto, and in turn made him and other officials subject to
impeachment.
Madison, the Constitution’s chief designer, constructed
his exquisitely balanced mechanism to work by the power of ambition countering
ambition, and interest countering interest. A realist about human nature, like
most of the Founders, he devised a government for ordinary men as they really
were, not for prodigies of virtue. Even so, he conceded, there had to be at
least a smidgen of virtue somewhere. If “there is not sufficient virtue among
men for self-government,” he wrote, then only “the chains of despotism can
restrain them from destroying and devouring each other.”
Washington was even more explicit about this, the third
of the great Founding ideas: A democratic republic requires a special kind of
culture, one that nurtures self-reliance and a love of liberty. Constitutions
are all very well, the Founders often observed, but they are only “parchment
barriers,” easily breached if demagogues subvert the “spirit and letter” of the
document. They can do this dramatically, in one revolutionary putsch, or they
can inflict a death by a thousand cuts, gradually persuading citizens that the
Constitution doesn’t mean what it says but should be interpreted to mean
something different, or even something opposite.
The ultimate safeguard against such usurpation is the
vitality of America’s culture of liberty. In his first State of the Union
speech, Washington stressed this point, emphasizing a view universal among the
Founders. The “security of a free Constitution,” he said, depends on “teaching
the people themselves to know and to value their own rights; to discern and
provide against invasions of them; to distinguish between oppression and the
necessary exercise of lawful authority; . . . to discriminate the spirit of
liberty from that of licentiousness,” and to unite “a speedy, but temperate
vigilance against encroachments, with an inviolable respect for the laws.” If
citizens start to take liberty for granted, if their culture — molded by
journalists and writers, preachers and teachers — starts to hold other values
in higher esteem, then the spirit that gives life to the Constitution will
flicker out. Americans, Washington wrote on another occasion, should guard
against “listlessness for the preservation of natural and unalienable rights,”
for “no mound of parchm[en]t can be so formed as to stand against the sweeping
torrent of boundless ambition on the one side, aided by the sapping current of
corrupted morals on the other.”
The Founders well understood, as John Adams reminisced in
1818, that it was a change in the “principles, opinions, sentiments, and
affections” of Americans that had sparked the Revolution. They considered that
new culture of freedom that had arisen among them in the decades before
Lexington and Concord, along with the new Constitution they created, to be the
most precious inheritance they bequeathed to future generations of their fellow
citizens. That vision offers us an instructive standard by which to gauge the
present.
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