Friday, July 3, 2026

July 4, 1776: Words that Will Never Be Erased

 

“It is . . . from the perspective of the bloody millennia of mankind's history . . . that I want you to look at the birth of a miracle: the United States of America. If it is ever proper for men to kneel, we should kneel when we read the Declaration of Independence."Ayn Rand


The Fourth of July is a national holiday that, to me, stands far above all of the others. It represents the greatest political achievement in world history. More than that, the birth of the United States of America represents a towering and unprecedented philosophical achievement. America, born of the Enlightenment, is the first nation founded on the principle that man the individual has a fundamental, inalienable right to his own life, and that government’s responsibility is to protect that right…that the people act by right, while the government acts by permission.


When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.


We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.


So opened the document that marked the starting point of the United States of America as a sovereign nation. Above are the most radical words ever written as the foundation for a nation. For the first time in human history, a government was to be the servant of the people, by conscious design and on principle. “The people” were understood to be, not a collective, but a collection of sovereign individuals recognized as possessing unalienable individual rights to his own life, liberty, property, and pursuit of happiness. America was the triumph of reason, which was understood to be a faculty of every individual. The government would now be charged with the task of—not ruling—but protecting every individual’s freedom to act on his own sovereign, reasoning mind … as a matter of unalienable right.


The birth of America was the culmination of Mankind’s long tortuous philosophical journey that began with Aristotle, and continued through his rebirth via Aquinas, the Renaissance, the Age of Reason, and the Enlightenment. Tribalism was to be swept into the dustbin of history, along with “The Divine Right of Kings” and all manner of omnipotent ruler. Men—meaning all people, average people, the “common man”—would be set free from the forcible domination of other men. Every individual would be free—not by permission of some King, cleric, lord, oligopoly, majority, or tribal chief—but by moral right. Rights don’t come from government, the Founders held. Rights precede government; then “to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed”—“just powers” being understood to be only those limited powers required to carry out the job of protecting individual rights, not the power to violate rights by redistributing private wealth, regulating our lives, and the like.


The signers of the Declaration of Independence, America’s Founding Fathers, were not conservative in any fundamental sense. They were radicals in the complete and honorable sense: They represented a concept entirely new to mankind. Standing up against the tide of history, with only the winds of the ideas of John Locke and the Enlightenment thinkers at their backs, and reflecting the moral revolution that had taken place in the American mind in the decade prior to 1776, this unique group of intellectuals took action. Indeed, the ideological radicalism of the ideas to which they pledged their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor turned to actual armed rebellion. The rest, as is said, is history.


America’s Founding was flawed in many respects - the failure to eradicate the ancient evil of slavery from American soil until 7 decades after the ratification of the Constitution being the most obvious and most egregious. The anti-slavery forces simply did not have the strength to defeat that vampire at the outset, and so slavery lingered into the young nation. But the moral groundwork had been laid – that all men are created equal – and the fate of the slave states was sealed. 89 years after the signing of the Declaration, America’s Founding ideals caught up with the slave states. Reactionaries have pointed to America’s early history of slavery as proof of its basic depravity—its “Original Sin.” In fact, slavery was a birth defect, inherited from Mankind’s past. In fact, the defeat of slavery represented one of America’s finest hours, and a testament to the formidable power of its ideals. There were other birth defects, most notably the second class status of women. Indeed, those ideals underpinned freedom’s progress in regards to women’s suffrage and property rights, the defeat of Jim Crow segregation laws, the mid-20th Century Civil Rights movement, the end of black voter suppression laws, and marriage equality for gay people.


America’s Founding was the most monumental political achievement in world history. America is currently backsliding from its Founding ideals, heading in the direction of collectivism and statism. But we have the means to reverse that trend, in the words of Thomas Jefferson, which serves as the philosophic blueprint for our Constitution. As Harvey Milk, one of the early leaders in the “Gay Pride” fight for equal rights for gays, said at a 1978 speech,


In the Declaration of Independence it is written 'All men are created equal and they are endowed with certain inalienable rights . . . .' That’s what America is. No matter how hard you try, you cannot erase those words from the Declaration of Independence.


Indeed, the words of July 4, 1776 have been written. Ratified on July 4, signed on August 2, the Declaration of Independence will never be erased. But its ideals can be forgotten, twisted, evaded, or ignored. We can not let that happen. The Fourth of July reminds us that the fight for freedom is a philosophical fight—a long term, never-ending fight—fought not on foreign military battlefields but right here at home, on the intellectual battleground of ideas. Freedom can not be won and secured by the sword. It can only be won by the pen. It’s not enough to merely uphold the U.S. Constitution, either in its original form or in its current allegedly “living” form. We must remember and reassert “The Conscience of the Constitution,” as one scholar called the Declaration of Independence. It is indispensable intellectual ammunition for those of us fighting to establish the fully free society that the Founders envisioned and came close to achieving.


Proof of the moral and practical power and viability of individual liberty is written across the brief span of the past 250 years. The ideas of reason, individualism, and capitalism have been unleashed. The philosophical foundation for an American rebirth has been laid by a Twentieth Century philosopher/novelist whom I call America's Last Founding Father—quoted above—and the final route of statism is tantalizingly close—yet still so far.


And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.


By closing out the Declaration with that pledge, those great men of 1776 declared that they would accept no substitute for the ideals in which they believed. As the world watched, they laid it all on the line—their property, their families, their lives—for those ideals. They would succeed or perish. That utterly uncompromising stand gave us the United States of America. The least we could do in honor of these Founding Fathers is to pledge to recommit to and uphold those principles, to roll back the compromises that are undermining them, and to accept no substitute.


Happy Birthday—and long live—the United States of America.


Related Reading:


The Declaration of Independence


Atlas Shrugged: America’s Second Declaration of Independence—Onkar Ghate


On This Constitution Day, Remember the Declaration of Independence


The Conscience of the Constitution: The Declaration of Independence and the Right to Liberty – Timothy Sandefur 


America's Revolutionary Mind: A Moral History of the American Revolution and the Declaration That Defined It - C. Bradley Thompson


A Revolution of “Minds and Hearts” - Paul Meany


Juneteenth, the Offspring of the Fourth of July


Thursday, June 18, 2026

Juneteenth, the Offspring of the Fourth of July

 In 1852, amid July 4th celebrations of America's independence, the great American intellectual and Abolitionist Frederick Douglass called on America to live up to the great principles of its Declaration of Independence and Constitution, and abolish slavery within its borders. In June of 1865, America finally did just that.


On June 19th, we celebrate Juneteenth as a National Holiday—and justly so. This is the day that, in June 1865, Union soldiers reached the last enslaved Americans in Galveston, Texas, with the news that slavery had been abolished and that they were now free.


The abolition of slavery, an evil institution that America inherited at its Founding, is a major cause for celebration and among America’s finest hours. The day the last slaves were liberated certainly rises to the level of deserving of a national holiday. But it must be remembered that the principles of the American Founding made possible the end of slavery. If not for the Fourth of July, we’d have no Juneteenth. Professor Jason D. Hill, author of We Have Overcome, aptly calls the abolition of slavery America’s Second Founding.  


By all means, celebrate Juneteenth, also known as Emancipation Day. But put it on a par with Constitution Day, which celebrates the document that Frederick Douglass called “a glorious liberty document.” Like The U.S. Constitution, Juneteenth owes its existence to the Declaration of Independence and the philosophy behind it


It’s a damn shame that it took almost a Century for the promises of the Declaration of Independence to reach all Americans of African descent. But it did, finally erasing America’s most glaring birth defect. 


Happy Juneteenth.


Related Reading:


Juneteenth and 'America's Original Sin': What The Seattle Times Gets Right—and Terribly Wrong


If Not for the Fourth of July, We’d Have No Juneteenth.


The ‘1619 Project’ Fraud Begins its Poisonous Infiltration into American Politics


A New Textbook of Americanism — edited by Jonathan Hoenig


QUORA: ‘Why do law schools teach constitutional law but not the Declaration of Independence as an animating principle?’


The 'New American Socialists' Dilemma: The Declaration is as much anti-Socialist as anti-Slavery


Biden Cancels America


On Juneteenth, Let’s Celebrate the Atlases of Abolition by Jon Hersey for The Objective Standard 


Martin Luther King Jr. and the Fundamental Principle of America


WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE SLAVES IF EMANCIPATED? By Frederick Douglass' Monthly, January, 1862


What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? by Frederick Douglass | July 5, 1852

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Re: Supreme Court Updates: Justices Further Weaken Voting Rights Act, Igniting Political Scramble by The New York Times

My FaceBook Post


ANOTHER DEFEAT FOR RACISM!!! 


Don’t believe the NYT wording. Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 “prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, color, or membership in one of the language minority groups.” This ruling doesn’t “weaken” or “gut” the Voting Rights Act.

It is consistent with it, and a resounding affirmation of the 14th Amendment. Note that the 3 Liberal justices dissented, saying that the ruling would “systematically dilute minority citizens’ voting power.” In fact, all of the hysteria by Leftists focuses on some similar collectivist tribal argument, as if certain “minority” GROUPS have a privileged entitlement to elect a representative with a particular skin color or ethnicity. It’s a viewpoint straight out of the Dred Scott decision that informed the Confederacy’s defense of its slave system.


But this racist viewpoint is anti-Enlightenment and anti-American. America guarantees an INDIVIDUAL right to vote, not some primitive tribal “right” or “voting power.” The 14th Amendment guarantees EACH CITIZEN equal protection. This ruling affirms the “one-person-one-vote” principle, and nobody’s right to vote is compromised or restricted—in fact, only strengthened. So-called “voting power” rests with individuals, not groups.


The violent Leftist reaction to the ruling also affirms the fundamental racial/collectivist orientation of the Left and the Democratic Party (I deliberately chose the NYT article to demonstrate this). That political block sees every issue through a lens of race. But, MEMO to the Left: dark skinned people are INDIVIDUALS, each with a mind of their own, capable of deciding FOR THEMSELVES how to vote, just like every other person. They are not some homogenous colored herd with some collective brain that they must be told they must follow.


Don’t believe the way most of the press is characterizing this ruling. This decision is a great outcome.