Sunday, July 10, 2011

Restore the U.S. Constitution

Geezer says, restore the U.S. Constitution--
Once our Federal Constitution had been established, those
developments called "The French Revolution," had divided our
republic's leadership among, first, those solidly committed to
that Constitution, such as President George Washington and
Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, as, second,
compared with the pro-English President John Adams, and those
pro-French Revolution partisans such as Thomas Jefferson. Later,
President John Adams' son, Secretary of State, and, later,
President John Quincy Adams, who had been a protégé of Benjamin
Franklin, emerged, as both U.S. Secretary of State, a one-term
President, and the living conscience of patriotism throughout the
remainder of his life. The proponents of Hamilton's and John
Quincy Adams' remained the beacons of our patriotic tradition as
American republicans, despite scoundrels such as Andrew Jackson
who were tied to their attachment to Britain's agents Aaron Burr
(and, one-time Jefferson Vice-President) and Burr's successor on
Wall Street, Martin van Buren.

Under the indicated, and comparable, centrifugal tendencies
within the Presidencies of the U.S.A., the Congress of the United
States had often degenerated in its quality of function, that to
the effect, that the original intention of our Federal
Constitution was corrupted deeply, as it became, more and more,
the victim, through expressions of imported European
parliamentary opportunism inherent in partisan, centrifugal
tendencies within the electoral processes of our nation, as in
the errant tendencies of partisan break-away from the original
Constitutional intention.

This corrupting trend, is a trend expressed by the increase
of the influence of the morally decadent, Europe-like role of
partisanship among our Federal institutions. This had become a
trend toward "party first," rather than citizen-ruled law-making
within our Legislative bodies.

The notable result of that trend has been the ruin of our
constitutional system by legislative and related trends of the
degeneration of the proceedings of our law-making institutions,
into those kinds of expressions of parliamentary faction which
tend to degrade our U.S.A. into a systemic reign of the kind of
partisanship, through which the efforts for self-destruction of
our political system have gained the power to corrupt whose
effects we are suffering presently.

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