What are a freedom loving people to do?
What are our detractors [those who embrace voter fraud] to expect when the government of a freedom loving people become their oppressors, ignore the country’s written Constitution, pass laws in violation of that Constitution, and engage in activities under color of law which threaten the common defense and general welfare of their country? What are the people to do?
The fact is, there are no “conspiracy theories” as constantly reported by our Fifth Column media and Yellow Journalists about the election. There are specific charges made of massive voter fraud, state election laws altered in violation of the law, and a federal judiciary that has refused to hear such complaints and review supportive evidence in spite of our Constitution placing original jurisdiction of such matters in the hands of our United States Supreme Court. Where, I ask, are the people to turn to resolve the injustices claimed?
The truth is, we were amply warned about submitting to such tyranny!
“When a free people submit to oppressive acts, passed in violation of their constitution, for a single day, they have thrown down the palladium of their liberty. Submit to despotism for an hour and you concede the principle. John Adams said, in 1775, Nip the shoots of arbitrary power in the bud. It is the only thing a people determined to be free can do. Republics have often failed, and have been succeeded by the most revolting despotisms; and always it was the voice of timidity, cowardice, or false leaders counseling submission, that led to the final downfall of freedom. It was the cowardice and treachery of the Senate of Rome that allowed the usurper to gain power, inch by inch, to overthrow the Republic. The history of the downfall of Republics is the same in all ages. The first inch that is yielded to despotism __ the first blow, dealt at the Constitution, that is not resisted is the beginning of the end of the nation’s ruin.” ___ THE OLD GUARD, A MONTHLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE PRINCIPLES OF 1776 AND 1787.
JWK
" I believe that there are more instances of the abridgement of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachment of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations." ___ Madison
Elliot`s Debates, vol. III, page 87