1872 lines
109 KiB
Plaintext
1872 lines
109 KiB
Plaintext
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NO TREASON
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The Constitution of No Authority
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by Lysander Spooner
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I.
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The Constitution has no inherent authority or obligation. It has no
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authority or obligation at all, unless as a contract between man and
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man. And it does not so much as even purport to be a contract between
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persons now existing. It purports, at most, to be only a contract
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between persons living eighty years ago. [This essay was written in
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1869.] And it can be supposed to have been a contract then only between
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persons who had already come to years of discretion, so as to be
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competent to make reasonable and obligatory contracts. Furthermore,
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we know, historically, that only a small portion even of the people
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then existing were consulted on the subject, or asked, or permitted to
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express either their consent or dissent in any formal manner. Those
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persons, if any, who did give their consent formally, are all dead now.
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Most of them have been dead forty, fifty, sixty, or seventy years. AND
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THE CONSTITUTION, SO FAR AS IT WAS THEIR CONTRACT, DIED WITH THEM. They
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had no natural power or right to make it obligatory upon their children.
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It is not only plainly impossible, in the nature of things, that they
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COULD bind their posterity, but they did not even attempt to bind them.
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That is to say, the instrument does not purport to be an agreement
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between any body but "the people" THEN existing; nor does it, either
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expressly or impliedly, assert any right, power, or disposition, on their
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part, to bind anybody but themselves. Let us see. Its language is:
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We, the people of the United States (that is, the people THEN EXISTING
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in the United States), in order to form a more perfect union, insure
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domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the
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general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves
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AND OUR POSTERITY, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the
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United States of America.
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It is plain, in the first place, that this language, AS AN AGREEMENT,
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purports to be only what it at most really was, viz., a contract between
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the people then existing; and, of necessity, binding, as a contract,
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only upon those then existing. In the second place, the language neither
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expresses nor implies that they had any right or power, to bind their
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"posterity" to live under it. It does not say that their "posterity"
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will, shall, or must live under it. It only says, in effect, that their
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hopes and motives in adopting it were that it might prove useful to
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their posterity, as well as to themselves, by promoting their union,
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safety, tranquility, liberty, etc.
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Suppose an agreement were entered into, in this form:
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We, the people of Boston, agree to maintain a fort on Governor's Island,
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to protect ourselves and our posterity against invasion.
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This agreement, as an agreement, would clearly bind nobody but the people
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then existing. Secondly, it would assert no right, power, or disposition,
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on their part, to compel their "posterity" to maintain such a fort. It
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would only indicate that the supposed welfare of their posterity was one
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of the motives that induced the original parties to enter into the
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agreement.
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When a man says he is building a house for himself and his posterity, he
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does not mean to be understood as saying that he has any thought of binding
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them, nor is it to be inferred that he is so foolish as to imagine that he
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has any right or power to bind them, to live in it. So far as they are
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concerned, he only means to be understood as saying that his hopes and
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motives, in building it, are that they, or at least some of them, may find
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it for their happiness to live in it.
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So when a man says he is planting a tree for himself and his posterity,
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he does not mean to be understood as saying that he has any thought of
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compelling them, nor is it to be inferred that he is such a simpleton as
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to imagine that he has any right or power to compel them, to eat the fruit.
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So far as they are concerned, he only means to say that his hopes and
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motives, in planting the tree, are that its fruit may be agreeable to them.
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So it was with those who originally adopted the Constitution. Whatever may
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have been their personal intentions, the legal meaning of their language,
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so far as their "posterity" was concerned, simply was, that their hopes and
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motives, in entering into the agreement, were that it might prove useful
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and acceptable to their posterity; that it might promote their union, safety,
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tranquility, and welfare; and that it might tend "to secure to them the
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blessings of liberty." The language does not assert nor at all imply,
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any right, power, or disposition, on the part of the original parties to
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the agreement, to compel their "posterity" to live under it. If they had
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intended to bind their posterity to live under it, they should have said
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that their objective was, not "to secure to them the blessings of liberty,"
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but to make slaves of them; for if their "posterity" are bound to live under
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it, they are nothing less than the slaves of their foolish, tyrannical,
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and dead grandfathers.
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It cannot be said that the Constitution formed "the people of the United
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States," for all time, into a corporation. It does not speak of "the
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people" as a corporation, but as individuals. A corporation does not
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describe itself as "we," nor as "people," nor as "ourselves." Nor does a
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corporation, in legal language, have any "posterity." It supposes itself
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to have, and speaks of itself as having, perpetual existence, as a single
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individuality.
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Moreover, no body of men, existing at any one time, have the power to
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create a perpetual corporation. A corporation can become practically
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perpetual only by the voluntary accession of new members, as the old ones
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die off. But for this voluntary accession of new members, the corporation
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necessarily dies with the death of those who originally composed it.
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Legally speaking, therefore, there is, in the Constitution, nothing that
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professes or attempts to bind the "posterity" of those who established it.
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If, then, those who established the Constitution, had no power to bind, and
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did not attempt to bind, their posterity, the question arises, whether
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their posterity have bound themselves. If they have done so, they can
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have done so in only one or both of these two ways, viz., by voting, and
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paying taxes.
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II.
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Let us consider these two matters, voting and tax paying, separately. And
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first of voting.
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All the voting that has ever taken place under the Constitution, has been
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of such a kind that it not only did not pledge the whole people to support
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the Constitution, but it did not even pledge any one of them to do so, as
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the following considerations show.
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1. In the very nature of things, the act of voting could bind nobody but
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the actual voters. But owing to the property qualifications required,
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it is probable that, during the first twenty or thirty years under the
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Constitution, not more than one-tenth, fifteenth, or perhaps twentieth of
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the whole population (black and white, men, women, and minors) were
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permitted to vote. Consequently, so far as voting was concerned, not more
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than one-tenth, fifteenth, or twentieth of those then existing, could
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have incurred any obligation to support the Constitution.
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At the present time [1869], it is probable that not more than one-sixth
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of the whole population are permitted to vote. Consequently, so far as
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voting is concerned, the other five-sixths can have given no pledge that
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they will support the Constitution.
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2. Of the one-sixth that are permitted to vote, probably not more than
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two-thirds (about one-ninth of the whole population) have usually voted.
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Many never vote at all. Many vote only once in two, three, five, or ten
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years, in periods of great excitement.
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No one, by voting, can be said to pledge himself for any longer period than
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that for which he votes. If, for example, I vote for an officer who is
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to hold his office for only a year, I cannot be said to have thereby
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pledged myself to support the government beyond that term. Therefore, on
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the ground of actual voting, it probably cannot be said that more than
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one-ninth or one-eighth, of the whole population are usually under any
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pledge to support the Constitution. [In recent years, since 1940, the
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number of voters in elections has usually fluctuated between one-third and
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two-fifths of the populace.]
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3. It cannot be said that, by voting, a man pledges himself to support the
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Constitution, unless the act of voting be a perfectly voluntary one on his
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part. Yet the act of voting cannot properly be called a voluntary one on
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the part of any very large number of those who do vote. It is rather a
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measure of necessity imposed upon them by others, than one of their own
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choice. On this point I repeat what was said in a former number, viz.:
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"In truth, in the case of individuals, their actual voting is not to
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be taken as proof of consent, EVEN FOR THE TIME BEING. On the
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contrary, it is to be considered that, without his consent having even
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been asked a man finds himself environed by a government that he cannot
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resist; a government that forces him to pay money, render service, and
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forego the exercise of many of his natural rights, under peril of
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weighty punishments. He sees, too, that other men practice this tyranny
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over him by the use of the ballot. He sees further, that, if he will
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but use the ballot himself, he has some chance of relieving himself from
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this tyranny of others, by subjecting them to his own. In short, he
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finds himself, without his consent, so situated that, if he use the
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ballot, he may become a master; if he does not use it, he must become
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a slave. And he has no other alternative than these two. In self-
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defence, he attempts the former. His case is analogous to that of a man
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who has been forced into battle, where he must either kill others, or
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be killed himself. Because, to save his own life in battle, a man takes
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the lives of his opponents, it is not to be inferred that the battle is
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one of his own choosing. Neither in contests with the ballot -- which is
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a mere substitute for a bullet -- because, as his only chance of self-
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preservation, a man uses a ballot, is it to be inferred that the contest
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is one into which he voluntarily entered; that he voluntarily set up
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all his own natural rights, as a stake against those of others, to be
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lost or won by the mere power of numbers. On the contrary, it is to be
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considered that, in an exigency into which he had been forced by others,
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and in which no other means of self-defence offered, he, as a matter of
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necessity, used the only one that was left to him.
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"Doubtless the most miserable of men, under the most oppressive government
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in the world, if allowed the ballot, would use it, if they could see any
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chance of thereby meliorating their condition. But it would not,
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therefore, be a legitimate inference that the government itself, that
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crushes them, was one which they had voluntarily set up, or even consented
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to.
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"Therefore, a man's voting under the Constitution of the United States, is
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not to be taken as evidence that he ever freely assented to the
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Constitution, EVEN FOR THE TIME BEING. Consequently we have no proof that
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any very large portion, even of the actual voters of the United States,
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ever really and voluntarily consented to the Constitution, EVEN FOR THE
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TIME BEING. Nor can we ever have such proof, until every man is left
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perfectly free to consent, or not, without thereby subjecting himself or
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his property to be disturbed or injured by others."
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As we can have no legal knowledge as to who votes from choice, and who from
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the necessity thus forced upon him, we can have no legal knowledge, as to
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any particular individual, that he voted from choice; or, consequently,
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that by voting, he consented, or pledged himself, to support the government.
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Legally speaking, therefore, the act of voting utterly fails to pledge
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ANY ONE to support the government. It utterly fails to prove that the
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government rests upon the voluntary support of anybody. On general
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principles of law and reason, it cannot be said that the government has
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any voluntary supporters at all, until it can be distinctly shown who its
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voluntary supporters are.
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4. As taxation is made compulsory on all, whether they vote or not, a large
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proportion of those who vote, no doubt do so to prevent their own money
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being used against themselves; when, in fact, they would have gladly
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abstained from voting, if they could thereby have saved themselves from
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taxation alone, to say nothing of being saved from all the other usurpations
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and tyrannies of the government. To take a man's property without his
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consent, and then to infer his consent because he attempts, by voting, to
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prevent that property from being used to his injury, is a very insufficient
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proof of his consent to support the Constitution. It is, in fact, no
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proof at all. And as we can have no legal knowledge as to who the
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particular individuals are, if there are any, who are willing to be taxed
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for the sake of voting, we can have no legal knowledge that any particular
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individual consents to be taxed for the sake of voting; or, consequently,
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consents to support the Constitution.
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5. At nearly all elections, votes are given for various candidates for the
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same office. Those who vote for the unsuccessful candidates cannot properly
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be said to have voted to sustain the Constitution. They may, with more
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reason, be supposed to have voted, not to support the Constitution, but
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specially to prevent the tyranny which they anticipate the successful
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candidate intends to practice upon them under color of the Constitution; and
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therefore may reasonably be supposed to have voted against the Constitution
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itself. This supposition is the more reasonable, inasmuch as such voting
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is the only mode allowed to them of expressing their dissent to the
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Constitution.
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6. Many votes are usually given for candidates who have no prospect of
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success. Those who give such votes may reasonably be supposed to have
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voted as they did, with a special intention, not to support, but to obstruct
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the exection of, the Constitution; and, therefore, against the Constitution
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itself.
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7. As all the different votes are given secretly (by secret ballot), there
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is no legal means of knowing, from the votes themselves, who votes for,
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and who votes against, the Constitution. Therefore, voting affords no
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legal evidence that any particular individual supports the Constitution.
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And where there can be no legal evidence that any particular individual
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supports the Constitution, it cannot legally be said that anybody supports
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it. It is clearly impossible to have any legal proof of the intentions of
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large numbers of men, where there can be no legal proof of the intentions
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of any particular one of them.
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8. There being no legal proof of any man's intentions, in voting, we can
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only conjecture them. As a conjecture, it is probable, that a very large
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proportion of those who vote, do so on this principle, viz., that if, by
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voting, they could but get the government into their own hands (or that of
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their friends), and use its powers against their opponents, they would then
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willingly support the Constitution; but if their opponents are to have the
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power, and use it against them, then they would NOT willingly support the
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Constitution.
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In short, men's voluntary support of the Constitution is doubtless, in most
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cases, wholly contingent upon the question whether, by means of the
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Constitution, they can make themselves masters, or are to be made slaves.
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Such contingent consent as that is, in law and reason, no consent at all.
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9. As everybody who supports the Constitution by voting (if there are any
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such) does so secretly (by secret ballot), and in a way to avoid all personal
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responsibility for the acts of his agents or representatives, it cannot
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legally or reasonably be said that anybody at all supports the Constitution
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by voting. No man can reasonably or legally be said to do such a thing as
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assent to, or support, the Constitution, UNLESS HE DOES IT OPENLY, AND IN
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A WAY TO MAKE HIMSELF PERSONALLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTS OF HIS AGENTS, SO
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LONG AS THEY ACT WITHIN THE LIMITS OF THE POWER HE DELEGATES TO THEM.
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10. As all voting is secret (by secret ballot), and as all secret governments
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are necessarily only secret bands of robbers, tyrants, and murderers, the
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general fact that our government is practically carried on by means of such
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voting, only proves that there is among us a secret band of robbers, tyrants,
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and murderers, whose purpose is to rob, enslave, and, so far as necessary
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to accomplish their purposes, murder, the rest of the people. The simple
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fact of the existence of such a vand does nothing towards proving that "the
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people of the United States," or any one of them, voluntarily supports the
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Constitution.
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For all the reasons that have now been given, voting furnishes no legal
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evidence as to who the particular individuals are (if there are any), who
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voluntarily support the Constitution. It therefore furnishes no legal
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evidence that anybody supports it voluntarily.
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So far, therefore, as voting is concerned, the Constitution, legally speaking,
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has no supporters at all.
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And, as a matter of fact, there is not the slightest probability that the
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Constitution has a single bona fide supporter in the country. That is to
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say, there is not the slightest probability that there is a single man in
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the country, who both understands what the Constitution really is, AND
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SINCERELY SUPPORTS IT FOR WHAT IT REALLY IS.
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The ostensible supporters of the Constitution, like the ostensible supporters
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of most other governments, are made up of three classes, viz.: 1. Knaves,
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a numerous and active class, who see in the government an instrument which
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they can use for their own aggrandizement or wealth. 2. Dupes -- a large
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class, no doubt -- each of whom, because he is allowed one voice out of
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millions in deciding what he may do with his own person and his own property,
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and because he is permitted to have the same voice in robbing, enslaving,
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and murdering others, that others have in robbing, enslaving, and murdering
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himself, is stupid enough to imagine that he is a "free man," a "sovereign";
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that this is "a free government"; "a government of equal rights," "the best
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government on earth," [1] and such like absurdities. 3. A class who have
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some appreciation of the evils of government, but either do not see how to
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get rid of them, or do not choose to so far sacrifice their private interests
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as to give themselves seriously and earnestly to the work of making a change.
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-----------
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[1] Suppose it be "the best government on earth," does that prove its own
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goodness, or only the badness of all other governments?
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-----------
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III.
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The payment of taxes, being compulsory, of course furnishes no evidence that
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any one voluntarily supports the Constitution.
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1. It is true that the THEORY of our Constitution is, that all taxes are
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paid voluntarily; that our government is a mutual insurance company,
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voluntarily entered into by the people with each other; that that each man
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makes a free and purely voluntary contract with all others who are parties
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to the Constitution, to pay so much money for so much protection, the same
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as he does with any other insurance company; and that he is just as free
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not to be protected, and not to pay tax, as he is to pay a tax, and be
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protected.
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But this theory of our government is wholly different from the practical
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fact. The fact is that the government, like a highwayman, says to a man:
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"Your money, or your life." And many, if not most, taxes are paid under
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the compulsion of that threat.
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The government does not, indeed, waylay a man in a lonely place, spring upon
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him from the roadside, and, holding a pistol to his head, proceed to rifle
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his pockets. But the robbery is none the less a robbery on that account;
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and it is far more dastardly and shameful.
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The highwayman takes solely upon himself the responsibility, danger, and
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crime of his own act. He does not pretend that he has any rightful claim
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to your money, or that he intends to use it for your own benefit. He does
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not pretend to be anything but a robber. He has not acquired impudence
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enough to profess to be merely a "protector," and that he takes men's
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money against their will, merely to enable him to "protect" those infatuated
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travellers, who feel perfectly able to protect themselves, or do not
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appreciate his peculiar system of protection. He is too sensible a man to
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make such professions as these. Furthermore, having taken your money, he
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leaves you, as you wish him to do. He does not persist in following you
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on the road, against your will; assuming to be your rightful "sovereign,"
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on account of the "protection" he affords you. He does not keep "protecting"
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you, by commanding you to bow down and serve him; by requiring you to do
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this, and forbidding you to do that; by robbing you of more money as often
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as he finds it for his interest or pleasure to do so; and by branding you
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as a rebel, a traitor, and an enemy to your country, and shooting you down
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without mercy, if you dispute his authority, or resist his demands. He
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is too much of a gentleman to be guilty of such impostures, and insults,
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and villanies as these. In short, he does not, in addition to robbing you,
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attempt to make you either his dupe or his slave.
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The proceedings of those robbers and murderers, who call themselves "the
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government," are directly the opposite of these of the single highwayman.
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In the first place, they do not, like him, make themselves individually
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known; or, consequently, take upon themselves personally the responsibility
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of their acts. On the contrary, they secretly (by secret ballot) designate
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some one of their number to commit the robbery in their behalf, while they
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keep themselves practically concealed. They say to the person thus
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designated:
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Go to A_____ B_____, and say to him that "the government" has need of money
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to meet the expenses of protecting him and his property. If he presumes to
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say that he has never contracted with us to protect him, and that he wants
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none of our protection, say to him that that is our business, and not his;
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that we CHOOSE to protect him, whether he desires us to do so or not; and
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that we demand pay, too, for protecting him. If he dares to inquire who
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the individuals are, who have thus taken upon themselves the title of "the
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government," and who assume to protect him, and demand payment of him,
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without his having ever made any contract with them, say to him that that,
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too, is our business, and not his; that we do not CHOOSE to make ourselves
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INDIVIDUALLY known to him; that we have secretly (by secret ballot)
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appointed you our agent to give him notice of our demands, and, if he
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complies with them, to give him, in our name, a receipt that will protect
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him against any similar demand for the present year. If he refuses to
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comply, seize and sell enough of his property to pay not only our demands,
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but all your own expenses and trouble beside. If he resists the seizure
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of his property, call upon the bystanders to help you (doubtless some of
|
|
them will prove to be members of our band.) If, in defending his property,
|
|
he should kill any of our band who are assisting you, capture him at all
|
|
hazards; charge him (in one of our courts) with murder; convict him, and
|
|
hang him. If he should call upon his neighbors, or any others who, like
|
|
him, may be disposed to resist our demands, and they should come in large
|
|
numbers to his assistance, cry out that they are all rebels and traitors;
|
|
that "our country" is in danger; call upon the commander of our hired
|
|
murderers; tell him to quell the rebellion and "save the country," cost
|
|
what it may. Tell him to kill all who resist, though they should be
|
|
hundreds of thousands; and thus strike terror into all others similarly
|
|
disposed. See that the work of murder is thoroughly done; that we may have
|
|
no further trouble of this kind hereafter. When these traitors shall have
|
|
thus been taught our strength and our determination, they will be good
|
|
loyal citizens for many years, and pay their taxes without a why or a
|
|
wherefore.
|
|
|
|
It is under such compulsion as this that taxes, so called, are paid. And
|
|
how much proof the payment of taxes affords, that the people consent to
|
|
"support the government," it needs no further argument to show.
|
|
|
|
2. Still another reason why the payment of taxes implies no consent, or
|
|
pledge, to support the government, is that the taxpayer does not know, and
|
|
has no means of knowing, who the particular individuals are who compose
|
|
"the government." To him "the government" is a myth, an abstraction, an
|
|
incorporeality, with which he can make no contract, and to which he can give
|
|
no consent, and make no pledge. He knows it only through its pretended
|
|
agents. "The government" itself he never sees. He knows indeed, by
|
|
common report, that certain persons, of a certain age, are permitted to
|
|
vote; and thus to make themselves parts of, or (if they choose) opponents
|
|
of, the government, for the time being. But who of them do thus vote,
|
|
and especially how each one votes (whether so as to aid or oppose the
|
|
government), he does not know; the voting being all done secretly (by
|
|
secret ballot). Who, therefore, practically compose "the government," for
|
|
the time being, he has no means of knowing. Of course he can make no
|
|
contract with them, give them no consent, and make them no pledge. Of
|
|
necessity, therefore, his paying taxes to them implies, on his part, no
|
|
contract, consent, or pledge to support them -- that is, to support "the
|
|
government," or the Constitution.
|
|
|
|
3. Not knowing who the particular individuals are, who call themselves "the
|
|
government," the taxpayer does not know whom he pays his taxes to. All he
|
|
knows is that a man comes to him, representing himself to be the agent of
|
|
"the government" -- that is, the agent of a secret band of robbers and
|
|
murderers, who have taken to themselves the title of "the government," and
|
|
have determined to kill everybody who refuses to give them whatever money
|
|
they demand. To save his life, he gives up his money to this agent. But
|
|
as this agent does not make his principals individually known to the
|
|
taxpayer, the latter, after he has given up his money, knows no more who
|
|
are "the government" -- that is, who were the robbers -- than he did before.
|
|
To say, therefore, that by giving up his money to their agent, he entered
|
|
into a voluntary contract with them, that he pledges himself to obey them,
|
|
to support them, and to give them whatever money they should demand of him
|
|
in the future, is simply ridiculous.
|
|
|
|
4. All political power, so called, rests practically upon this matter of
|
|
money. Any number of scoundrels, having money enough to start with, can
|
|
establish themselves as a "government"; because, with money, they can hire
|
|
soldiers, and with soldiers extort more money; and also compel general
|
|
obedience to their will. It is with government, as Caesar said it was in
|
|
war, that money and soldiers mutually supported each other; that with money
|
|
he could hire soldiers, and with soldiers extort money. So these villains,
|
|
who call themselves governments, well understand that their power rests
|
|
primarily upon money. With money they can hire soldiers, and with soldiers
|
|
extort money. And, when their authority is denied, the first use they
|
|
always make of money, is to hire soldiers to kill or subdue all who refuse
|
|
them more money.
|
|
|
|
For this reason, whoever desires liberty, should understand these vital
|
|
facts, viz.: 1. That every man who puts money into the hands of a
|
|
"government" (so called), puts into its hands a sword which will be used
|
|
against him, to extort more money from him, and also to keep him in
|
|
subjection to its arbitrary will. 2. That those who will take his money,
|
|
without his consent, in the first place, will use it for his further robbery
|
|
and enslavement, if he presumes to resist their demands in the future.
|
|
3. That it is a perfect absurdity to suppose that any body of men would
|
|
ever take a man's money without his consent, for any such object as they
|
|
profess to take it for, viz., that of protecting him; for why should they
|
|
wish to protect him, if he does not wish them to do so? To suppose that
|
|
they would do so, is just as absurd as it would be to suppose that they
|
|
would take his moeny without his consent, for the purpose of buying food
|
|
or clothing for him, when he did not want it. 4. If a man wants
|
|
"protection," he is competent to make his own bargains for it; and nobody
|
|
has any occasion to rob him, in order to "protect" him against his will.
|
|
5. That the only security men can have for their political liberty, consists
|
|
in their keeping their money in their own pockets, until they have
|
|
assurances, perfectly satisfactory to themselves, that it will be used as
|
|
they wish it to be used, for their benefit, and not for their injury.
|
|
6. That no government, so called, can reasonably be trusted for a moment,
|
|
or reasonably be supposed to have honest purposes in view, any longer than
|
|
it depends wholly upon voluntary support.
|
|
|
|
These facts are all so vital and so self-evident, that it cannot reasonably
|
|
be supposed that any one will voluntarily pay money to a "government," for
|
|
the purpose of securing its protection, unless he first make an explicit
|
|
and purely voluntary contract with it for that purpose.
|
|
|
|
It is perfectly evident, therefore, that neither such voting, nor such
|
|
payment of taxes, as actually takes place, proves anybody's consent, or
|
|
obligation, to support the Constitution. Consequently we have no evidence
|
|
at all that the Constitution is binding upon anybody, or that anybody is
|
|
under any contract or obligation whatever to support it. And nobody is
|
|
under any obligation to support it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
IV.
|
|
|
|
THE CONSTITUTION NOT ONLY BINDS NOBODY NOW, BUT IT NEVER DID BIND ANYBODY.
|
|
It never bound anybody, because it was never agreed to by anybody in such a
|
|
manner as to make it, on general principles of law and reason, binding
|
|
upon him.
|
|
|
|
It is a general principle of law and reason, that a WRITTEN instrument
|
|
binds no one until he has signed it. This principle is so inflexible a one,
|
|
that even though a man is unable to write his name, he must still "make
|
|
his mark," before he is bound by a written contract. This custom was
|
|
established ages ago, when few men could write their names; when a clerk --
|
|
that is, a man who could write -- was so rare and valuable a person, that
|
|
even if he were guilty of high crimes, he was entitled to pardon, on the
|
|
ground that the public could not afford to lose his services. Even at that
|
|
time, a written contract must be signed; and men who could not write,
|
|
either "made their mark," or signed their contracts by stamping their seals
|
|
upon wax affixed to the parchment on which their contracts were written.
|
|
Hence the custom of affixing seals, that has continued to this time.
|
|
|
|
The laws holds, and reason declares, that if a written instrument is not
|
|
signed, the presumption must be that the party to be bound by it, did not
|
|
choose to sign it, or to bind himself by it. And law and reason both give
|
|
him until the last moment, in which to decide whether he will sign it, or
|
|
not. Neither law nor reason requires or expects a man to agree to an
|
|
instrument, UNTIL IT IS WRITTEN; for until it is written, he cannot know
|
|
its precise legal meaning. And when it is written, and he has had the
|
|
opportunity to satisfy himself of its precise legal meaning, he is then
|
|
expected to decide, and not before, whether he will agree to it or not. And
|
|
if he do not THEN sign it, his reason is supposed to be, that he does not
|
|
choose to enter into such a contract. The fact that the instrument was
|
|
written for him to sign, or with the hope that he would sign it, goes for
|
|
nothing.
|
|
|
|
Where would be the end of fraud and litigation, if one party could bring
|
|
into court a written instrument, without any signature, and claim to have
|
|
it enforced, upon the ground that it was written for another man to sign?
|
|
that this other man had promised to sign it? that he ought to have signed
|
|
it? that he had had the opportunity to sign it, if he would? but that he
|
|
had refused or neglected to do so? Yet that is the most that could ever
|
|
be said of the Constitution. [1] The very judges, who profess to derive
|
|
all their authority from the Constitution -- from an instrument that nobody
|
|
ever signed -- would spurn any other instrument, not signed, that should be
|
|
brought before them for adjudication.
|
|
|
|
[1] The very men who drafted it, never signed it in any way to bind
|
|
themselves by it, AS A CONTRACT. And not one of them probably
|
|
ever would have signed it in any way to bind himself by it, AS A
|
|
CONTRACT.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, a written instrument must, in law and reason, not only be signed,
|
|
but must also be delivered to the party (or to some one for him), in whose
|
|
favor it is made, before it can bind the party making it. The signing is
|
|
of no effect, unless the instrument be also delivered. And a party is at
|
|
perfect liberty to refuse to deliver a written instrument, after he has
|
|
signed it. The Constitution was not only never signed by anybody, but it
|
|
was never delivered by anybody, or to anybody's agent or attorney. It can
|
|
therefore be of no more validity as a contract, then can any other
|
|
instrument that was never signed or delivered.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
V.
|
|
|
|
As further evidence of the general sense of mankind, as to the practical
|
|
necessity there is that all men's IMPORTANT contracts, especially those of
|
|
a permanent nature, should be both written and signed, the following facts
|
|
are pertinent.
|
|
|
|
For nearly two hundred years -- that is, since 1677 -- there has been on the
|
|
statute book of England, and the same, in substance, if not precisely in
|
|
letter, has been re-enacted, and is now in force, in nearly or quite all the
|
|
States of this Union, a statute, the general object of which is to declare
|
|
that no action shall be brought to enforce contracts of the more important
|
|
class, UNLESS THEY ARE PUT IN WRITING, AND SIGNED BY THE PARTIES TO BE HELD
|
|
CHARGEABLE UPON THEM. [At this point there is a footnote listing 34 states
|
|
whose statute books Spooner had examined, all of which had variations of
|
|
this English statute; the footnote also quotes part of the Massachussetts
|
|
statute.]
|
|
|
|
The principle of the statute, be it observed, is, not merely that written
|
|
contracts shall be signed, but also that all contracts, except for those
|
|
specially exempted -- generally those that are for small amounts, and are
|
|
to remain in force for but a short time -- SHALL BE BOTH WRITTEN AND SIGNED.
|
|
|
|
The reason of the statute, on this point, is, that it is now so easy a thing
|
|
for men to put their contracts in writing, and sign them, and their failure
|
|
to do so opens the door to so much doubt, fraud, and litigation, that men
|
|
who neglect to have their contracts -- of any considerable importance --
|
|
written and signed, ought not to have the benefit of courts of justice to
|
|
enforce them. And this reason is a wise one; and that experience has
|
|
confirmed its wisdom and necessity, is demonstrated by the fact that it has
|
|
been acted upon in England for nearly two hundred years, and has been so
|
|
nearly universally adopted in this country, and that nobody thinks of
|
|
repealing it.
|
|
|
|
We all know, too, how careful most men are to have their contracts written
|
|
and signed, even when this statute does not require it. For example, most
|
|
men, if they have money due them, of no larger amount than five or ten
|
|
dollars, are careful to take a note for it. If they buy even a small bill
|
|
of goods, paying for it at the time of delivery, they take a receipted bill
|
|
for it. If they pay a small balance of a book account, or any other small
|
|
debt previously contracted, they take a written receipt for it.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, the law everywhere (probably) in our country, as well as in
|
|
England, requires that a large class of contracts, such as wills, deeds,
|
|
etc., shall not only be written and signed, but also sealed, witnessed, and
|
|
acknowledged. And in the case of married women conveying their rights in
|
|
real estate, the law, in many States, requires that the women shall be
|
|
examined separate and apart from their husbands, and declare that they sign
|
|
their contracts free of any fear or compulsion of their husbands.
|
|
|
|
Such are some of the precautions which the laws require, and which
|
|
individuals -- from motives of common prudence, even in cases not required
|
|
by law -- take, to put their contracts in writing, and have them signed,
|
|
and, to guard against all uncertainties and controversies in regard to their
|
|
meaning and validity. And yet we have what purports, or professes, or is
|
|
claimed, to be a contract -- the Constitution -- made eighty years ago, by
|
|
men who are now all dead, and who never had any power to bind US, but which
|
|
(it is claimed) has nevertheless bound three generations of men, consisting
|
|
of many millions, and which (it is claimed) will be binding upon all the
|
|
millions that are to come; but which nobody ever signed, sealed, delivered,
|
|
witnessed, or acknowledged; and which few persons, compared with the whole
|
|
number that are claimed to be bound by it, have ever read, or even seen, or
|
|
ever will read, or see. And of those who ever have read it, or ever will
|
|
read it, scarcely any two, perhaps no two, have ever agreed, or ever will
|
|
agree, as to what it means.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, this supposed contract, which would not be received in any court
|
|
of justice sitting under its authority, if offered to prove a debt of five
|
|
dollars, owing by one man to another, is one by which -- AS IT IS GENERALLY
|
|
INTERPRETED BY THOSE WHO PRETEND TO ADMINISTER IT -- all men, women and
|
|
children throughout the country, and through all time, surrender not only
|
|
all their property, but also their liberties, and even lives, into the hands
|
|
of men who by this supposed contract, are expressly made wholly irresponsible
|
|
for their disposal of them. And we are so insane, or so wicked, as to
|
|
destroy property and lives without limit, in fighting to compel men to
|
|
fulfill a supposed contract, which, inasmuch as it has never been signed by
|
|
anybody, is, on general princples of law and reason -- such principles as
|
|
we are all governed by in regard to other contracts -- the merest waste of
|
|
paper, binding upon nobody, fit only to be thrown into the fire; or, if
|
|
preserved, preserved only to serve as a witness and a warning of the folly
|
|
and wickedness of mankind.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VI.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is no exaggeration, but a literal truth, to say that, by the Constitution
|
|
-- NOT AS I INTERPRET IT, BUT AS IT IS INTERPRETED BY THOSE WHO PRETEND TO
|
|
ADMINISTER IT -- the properties, liberties, and lives of the entire
|
|
people of the United States are surrendered unreservedly into the hands of
|
|
men who, it is provided by the Constitution itself, shall never be
|
|
"questioned" as to any disposal they make of them.
|
|
|
|
Thus the Constitution (Art. I, Sec. 6) provides that, "for any speech or
|
|
debate (or vote), in either house, they (the senators and representatives)
|
|
shall not be questioned in any other place."
|
|
|
|
The whole law-making power is given to these senators and representatives
|
|
(when acting by a two-thirds vote); [1] and this provision protects them from
|
|
all responsibility for the laws they make.
|
|
|
|
[1] And this two-thirds vote may be but two-thirds of a quorum -- that is
|
|
two-thirds of a majority -- instead of two-thirds of the whole.
|
|
|
|
The Constitution also enables them to secure the execution of all their
|
|
laws, by giving them power to withhold the salaries of, and to impeach and
|
|
remove, all judicial and executive officers, who refuse to execute them.
|
|
|
|
Thus the whole power of the government is in their hands, and they are made
|
|
utterly irresponsible for the use they make of it. What is this but
|
|
absolute, irresponsible power?
|
|
|
|
It is no answer to this view of the case to say that these men are under
|
|
oath to use their power only within certain limits; for what care they, or
|
|
what should they care, for oaths or limits, when it is expressly provided,
|
|
by the Constitution itself, that they shall never be "questioned," or held
|
|
to any resonsibility whatever, for violating their oaths, or transgressing
|
|
those limits?
|
|
|
|
Neither is it any answer to this view of the case to say that the men
|
|
holding this absolute, irresponsible power, must be men chosen by the
|
|
people (or portions of them) to hold it. A man is none the less a slave
|
|
because he is allowed to choose a new master once in a term of years.
|
|
Neither are a people any the less slaves because permitted periodically to
|
|
choose new masters. What makes them slaves is the fact that they now are,
|
|
and are always hereafter to be, in the hands of men whose power over them
|
|
is, and always is to be, absolute and irresponsible. [2]
|
|
|
|
[2] Of what appreciable value is it to any man, as an individual, that
|
|
he is allowed a voice in choosing these public masters? His voice
|
|
is only one of several millions.
|
|
|
|
The right of absolute and irresponsible dominion is the right of property,
|
|
and the right of property is the right of absolute, irresponsible dominion.
|
|
The two are identical; the one necessarily implies the other. Neither
|
|
can exist without the other. If, therefore, Congress have that absolute
|
|
and irresponsible law-making power, which the Constitution -- according to
|
|
their interpretation of it -- gives them, it can only be because they own
|
|
us as property. If they own us as property, they are our masters, and their
|
|
will is our law. If they do not own us as property, they are not our
|
|
masters, and their will, as such, is of no authority over us.
|
|
|
|
But these men who claim and exercise this absolute and irresponsible
|
|
dominion over us, dare not be consistent, and claim either to be our
|
|
masters, or to own us as property. They say they are only our servants,
|
|
agents, attorneys, and representatives. But this declaration involves an
|
|
absurdity, a contradiction. No man can be my servant, agent, attorney,
|
|
or representative, and be, at the same time, uncontrollable by me, and
|
|
irresponsible to me for his acts. It is of no importance that I appointed
|
|
him, and put all power in his hands. If I made him uncontrollable by me,
|
|
and irresponsible to me, he is no longer my servant, agent, attorney, or
|
|
representative. If I gave him absolute, irresponsible power over my
|
|
property, I gave him the property. If I gave him absolute, irresponsible
|
|
power over myself, I made him my master, and gave myself to him as a slave.
|
|
And it is of no importance whether I called him master or servant, agent
|
|
or owner. The only question is, what power did I put in his hands? Was
|
|
it an absolute and irresponsible one? or a limited and responsible one?
|
|
|
|
For still another reason they are neither our servants, agents, attorneys,
|
|
nor representatives. And that reason is, that we do not make ourselves
|
|
responsible for their acts. If a man is my servant, agent, or attorney,
|
|
I necessarily make myself responsible for all his acts done within the
|
|
limits of the power I have intrusted to him. If I have intrusted him, as
|
|
my agent, with either absolute power, or any power at all, over the persons
|
|
or properties of other men than myself, I thereby necessarily make myself
|
|
responsible to those other persons for any injuries he may do them, so long
|
|
as he acts within the limits of the power I have granted him. But no
|
|
individual who may be injured in his person or property, by acts of
|
|
Congress, can come to the individual electors, and hold them responsible
|
|
for these acts of their so-called agents or representatives. This fact
|
|
proves that these pretended agents of the people, of everybody, are really
|
|
the agents of nobody.
|
|
|
|
If, then, nobody is individually responsible for the acts of Congress, the
|
|
members of Congress are nobody's agents. And if they are nobody's agents,
|
|
they are themselves individually responsible for their own acts, and for the
|
|
acts of all whom they employ. And the authority they are exercising is
|
|
simply their own individual authority; and, by the law of nature -- the
|
|
highest of all laws -- anybody injured by their acts, anybody who is
|
|
deprived by them of his property or his liberty, has the same right to hold
|
|
them individually responsible, that he has to hold any other trespasser
|
|
individually responsible. He has the same right to resist them, and their
|
|
agents, that he has to resist any other trespassers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is plain, then, that on general principles of law and reason -- such
|
|
principles as we all act upon in courts of justice and in common life --
|
|
the Constitution is no contract; that it binds nobody, and never did bind
|
|
anybody; and that all those who pretend to act by its authority, are
|
|
really acting without any legitimate authority at all; that, on general
|
|
principles of law and reason, they are mere usurpers, and that everybody
|
|
not only has the right, but is morally bound, to treat them as such.
|
|
|
|
If the people of this country wish to maintain such a government as the
|
|
Constitution describes, there is no reason in the world why they should
|
|
not sign the instrument itself, and thus make known their wishes in an
|
|
open, authentic manner; in such manner as the common sense and experience
|
|
of mankind have shown to be reasonable and necessary in such cases; AND
|
|
IN SUCH MANNER AS TO MAKE THEMSELVES (AS THEY OUGHT TO DO) INDIVIDUALLY
|
|
RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTS OF THE GOVERNMENT. But the people have never
|
|
been asked to sign it. And the only reason why they have never been asked
|
|
to sign it, has been that it has been known that they never would sign
|
|
it; that they were neither such fools nor knaves as they must needs have
|
|
been to be willing to sign it; that (at least as it has been practically
|
|
interpreted) it is not what any sensible and honest man wants for himself;
|
|
nor such as he has any right to impose upon others. It is, to all moral
|
|
intents and purposes, as destitute of obligations as the compacts which
|
|
robbers and thieves and pirates enter into with each other, but never sign.
|
|
|
|
If any considerable number of the people believe the Constitution to be
|
|
good, why do they not sign it themselves, and make laws for, and administer
|
|
them upon, each other; leaving all other persons (who do not interfere with
|
|
them) in peace? Until they have tried the experiment for themselves, how
|
|
can they have the face to impose the Constitution upon, or even to
|
|
recommend it to, others? Plainly the reason for absurd and inconsistent
|
|
conduct is that they want the Constitution, not solely for any honest or
|
|
legitimate use it can be of to themselves or others, but for the dishonest
|
|
and illegitimate power it gives them over the persons and properties of
|
|
others. But for this latter reason, all their eulogiums on the Constitution,
|
|
all their exhortations, and all their expenditures of money and blood to
|
|
sustain it, would be wanting.
|
|
|
|
|
|
VIII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Constitution itself, then, being of no authority, on what authority does
|
|
our government practically rest? On what ground can those who pretend to
|
|
administer it, claim the right to seize men's property, to restrain them of
|
|
their natural liberty of action, industry, and trade, and to kill all who
|
|
deny their authority to dispose of men's properties, liberties, and lives
|
|
at their pleasure or discretion?
|
|
|
|
The most they can say, in answer to this question, is, that some half,
|
|
two-thirds, or three-fourths, of the male adults of the country have a
|
|
TACIT UNDERSTANDING that they will maintain a government under the
|
|
Constitution; that they will select, by ballot, the persons to administer
|
|
it; and that those persons who may receive a majority, or a plurality, of
|
|
their ballots, shall act as their representatives, and administer the
|
|
Constitution in their name, and by their authority.
|
|
|
|
But this tacit understanding (admitting it to exist) cannot at all justify
|
|
the conclusion drawn from it. A tacit understanding between A, B, and C,
|
|
that they will, by ballot, depute D as their agent, to deprive me of my
|
|
property, liberty, or life, cannot at all authorize D to do so. He is
|
|
none the less a robber, tyrant, and murderer, because he claims to act as
|
|
their agent, than he would be if he avowedly acted on his own responsibility
|
|
alone.
|
|
|
|
Neither am I bound to recognize him as their agent, nor can he legitimately
|
|
claim to be their agent, when he brings no WRITTEN authority from them
|
|
accrediting him as such. I am under no obligation to take his word as to
|
|
who his principals may be, or whether he has any. Bringing no credentials,
|
|
I have a right to say he has no such authority even as he claims to have: and
|
|
that he is therefore intending to rob, enslave, or murder me on his own
|
|
account.
|
|
|
|
This tacit understanding, therefore, among the voters of the country, amounts
|
|
to nothing as an authority to their agents. Neither do the ballots by which
|
|
they select their agents, avail any more than does their tacit understanding;
|
|
for their ballots are given in secret, and therefore in such a way as to
|
|
avoid any personal responsibility for the acts of their agents.
|
|
|
|
No body of men can be said to authorize a man to act as their agent, to the
|
|
injury of a third person, unless they do it in so open and authentic a manner
|
|
as to make themselves personally responsible for his acts. None of the
|
|
voters in this country appoint their political agents in any open, authentic
|
|
manner, or in any manner to make themselves responsible for their acts.
|
|
Therefore these pretended agents cannot legitimately claim to be really
|
|
agents. Somebody must be responsible for the acts of these pretended agents;
|
|
and if they cannot show any open and authentic credentials from their
|
|
principals, they cannot, in law or reason, be said to have any principals.
|
|
The maxim applies here, that what does not appear, does not exist. If they
|
|
can show no principals, they have none.
|
|
|
|
But even these pretended agents do not themselves know who their pretended
|
|
principals are. These latter act in secret; for acting by secret ballot is
|
|
acting in secret as much as if they were to meet in secret conclave in the
|
|
darkness of the night. And they are personally as much unknown to the agents
|
|
they select, as they are to others. No pretended agent therefore can ever
|
|
know by whose ballots he is selected, or consequently who his real principles
|
|
are. Not knowing who his principles are, he has no right to say that he has
|
|
any. He can, at most, say only that he is the agent of a secret band of
|
|
robbers and murderers, who are bound by that faith which prevails among
|
|
confederates in crime, to stand by him, if his acts, done in their name,
|
|
shall be resisted.
|
|
|
|
Men honestly engaged in attempting to establish justice in the world, have
|
|
no occasion thus to act in secret; or to appoint agents to do acts for which
|
|
they (the principals) are not willing to be responsible.
|
|
|
|
The secret ballot makes a secret government; and a secret government is a
|
|
secret band of robbers and murderers. Open despotism is better than this.
|
|
The single despot stands out in the face of all men, and says: I am the State:
|
|
My will is law: I am your master: I take the responsibility of my acts: The
|
|
only arbiter I acknowledge is the sword: If anyone denies my right, let him
|
|
try conclusions with me.
|
|
|
|
But a secret government is little less than a government of assassins. Under
|
|
it, a man knows not who his tyrants are, until they have struck, and perhaps
|
|
not then. He may GUESS, beforehand, as to some of his immediate neighbors.
|
|
But he really knows nothing. The man to whom he would most naturally fly
|
|
for protection, may prove an enemy, when the time of trial comes.
|
|
|
|
This is the kind of government we have; and it is the only one we are likely
|
|
to have, until men are ready to say: We will consent to no Constitution,
|
|
except such an one as we are neither ashamed nor afraid to sign; and we will
|
|
authorize no government to do anything in our name which we are not willing
|
|
to be personally responsible for.
|
|
|
|
|
|
IX.
|
|
|
|
What is the motive to the secret ballot? This, and only this: Like other
|
|
confederates in crime, those who use it are not friends, but enemies; and
|
|
they are afraid to be known, and to have their individual doings known,
|
|
even to each other. They can contrive to bring about a sufficient
|
|
understanding to enable them to act in concert against other persons; but
|
|
beyond this they have no confidence, and no friendship, among themselves.
|
|
In fact, they are engaged quite as much in schemes for plundering each
|
|
other, as in plundering those who are not of them. And it is perfectly well
|
|
understood among them that the strongest party among them will, in certain
|
|
contingencies, murder each other by the hundreds of thousands (as they
|
|
lately did do) to accomplish their purposes against each other. Hence they
|
|
dare not be known, and have their individual doings known, even to each
|
|
other. And this is avowedly the only reason for the ballot: for a secret
|
|
government; a government by secret bands of robbers and murderers. And
|
|
we are insane enough to call this liberty! To be a member of this secret
|
|
band of robbers and murderers is esteemed a privilege and an honor! Without
|
|
this privilege, a man is considered a slave; but with it a free man! With
|
|
it he is considered a free man, because he has the same power to secretly
|
|
(by secret ballot) procure the robbery, enslavement, and murder of another
|
|
man, and that other man has to procure his robbery, enslavement, and murder.
|
|
And this they call equal rights!
|
|
|
|
If any number of men, many or few, claim the right to govern the people of
|
|
this country, let them make and sign an open compact with each other to do
|
|
so. Let them thus make themselves individually known to those whom they
|
|
propose to govern. And let them thus openly take the legitimate
|
|
responsibility of their acts. How many of those who now support the
|
|
Constitution, will ever do this? How many will ever dare openly proclaim
|
|
their right to govern? or take the legitimate responsibility of their acts?
|
|
Not one!
|
|
|
|
|
|
X.
|
|
|
|
It is obvious that, on general principles of law and reason, there exists
|
|
no such thing as a government created by, or resting upon, any consent,
|
|
compact, or agreement of "the people of the United States" with each other;
|
|
that the only visible, tangible, responsible government that exists, is that
|
|
of a few individuals only, who act in concert, and call themselves by the
|
|
several names of senators, representatives, presidents, judges, marshals,
|
|
treasurers, collectors, generals, colonels, captains, etc., etc.
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, it is of no importance whatever
|
|
that these few individuals profess to be the agents and representatives of
|
|
"the people of the United States"; since they can show no credentials from
|
|
the people themselves; they were never appointed as agents or representatives
|
|
in any open, authentic manner; they do not themselves know, and have no
|
|
means of knowing, and cannot prove, who their principals (as they call them)
|
|
are individually; and consequently cannot, in law or reason, be said to have
|
|
any principals at all.
|
|
|
|
It is obvious, too, that if these alleged principals ever did appoint these
|
|
pretended agents, or representatives, they appointed them secretly (by secret
|
|
ballot), and in a way to avoid all personal responsibility for their acts;
|
|
that, at most, these alleged principals put these pretended agents forward
|
|
for the most criminal purposes, viz.: to plunder the people of their
|
|
property, and restrain them of their liberty; and that the only authority
|
|
that these alleged principals have for so doing, is simply a TACIT
|
|
UNDERSTANDING among themselves that they will imprison, shoot, or hang every
|
|
man who resists the exactions and restraints which their agents or
|
|
representatives may impose upon them.
|
|
|
|
Thus it is obvious that the only visible, tangible government we have is
|
|
made up of these professed agents or representatives of a secret band of
|
|
robbers and murderers, who, to cover up, or gloss over, their robberies
|
|
and murders, have taken to themselves the title of "the people of the
|
|
United States"; and who, on the pretense of being "the people of the United
|
|
States," assert their right to subject to their dominion, and to control
|
|
and dispose of at their pleasure, all property and persons found in the
|
|
United States.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XI.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, the oaths which these pretended
|
|
agents of the people take "to support the Constitution," are of no validity
|
|
or obligation. And why? For this, if for no other reason, viz., THAT THEY
|
|
ARE GIVEN TO NOBODY. There is no privity (as the lawyers say) -- that is,
|
|
no mutual recognition, consent, and agreement -- between those who take
|
|
these oaths, and any other persons.
|
|
|
|
If I go upon Boston Common, and in the presence of a hundred thousand people,
|
|
men, women and children, with whom I have no contract upon the subject,
|
|
take an oath that I will enforce upon them the laws of Moses, of Lycurgus,
|
|
of Solon, of Justinian, or of Alfred, that oath is, on general principles
|
|
of law and reason, of no obligation. It is of no obligation, not merely
|
|
because it is intrinsically a criminal one, BUT ALSO BECAUSE IT IS GIVEN
|
|
TO NOBODY, and consequently pledges my faith to nobody. It is merely given
|
|
to the winds.
|
|
|
|
It would not alter the case at all to say that, among these hundred thousand
|
|
persons, in whose presence the oath was taken, there were two, three, or
|
|
five thousand male adults, who had SECRETLY -- by secret ballot, and in a
|
|
way to avoid making themselves INDIVIDUALLY known to me, or to the remainder
|
|
of the hundred thousand -- designated me as their agent to rule, control,
|
|
plunder, and, if need be, murder, these hundred thousand people. The fact
|
|
that they had designated me secretly, and in a manner to prevent my knowing
|
|
them individually, prevents all privity between them and me; and consequently
|
|
makes it impossible that there can be any contract, or pledge of faith,
|
|
on my part towards them; for it is impossible that I can pledge my faith,
|
|
in any legal sense, to a man whom I neither know, nor have any means of
|
|
knowing, individually.
|
|
|
|
So far as I am concerned, then, these two, three, or five thousand persons
|
|
are a secret band of robbers and murderers, who have secretly, and in a way
|
|
to save themselves from all responsibility for my acts, designated me as
|
|
their agent; and have, through some other agent, or pretended agent, made
|
|
their wishes known to me. But being, nevertheless, individually unknown to
|
|
me, and having no open, authentic contract with me, my oath is, on general
|
|
principles of law and reason, of no validity as a pledge of faith to them.
|
|
And being no pledge of faith to them, it is no pledge of faith to anybody.
|
|
It is mere idle wind. At most, it is only a pledge of faith to an unknown
|
|
band of robbers and murderers, whose instrument for plundering and murdering
|
|
other people, I thus publicly confess myself to be. And it has no other
|
|
obligation than a similar oath given to any other unknown body of pirates,
|
|
robbers, and murderers.
|
|
|
|
For these reasons the oaths taken by members of Congress, "to support the
|
|
Constitution," are, on general principles of law and reason, of no validity.
|
|
They are not only criminal in themselves, and therefore void; but they are
|
|
also void for the further reason THAT THEY ARE GIVEN TO NOBODY.
|
|
|
|
It cannot be said that, in any legitimate or legal sense, they are given to
|
|
"the people of the United States"; because neither the whole, nor any large
|
|
proportion of the whole, people of the United States ever, either openly
|
|
or secretly, appointed or designated these men as their agents to carry the
|
|
Constitution into effect. The great body of the people -- that is, men,
|
|
women, and children -- were never asked, or even permitted, to signify, in
|
|
any FORMAL manner, either openly or secretly, their choice or wish on the
|
|
subject. The most that these members of Congress can say, in favor of their
|
|
appointment, is simply this: Each one can say for himself:
|
|
|
|
I have evidence satisfactory to myself, that there exists, scattered
|
|
throughout the country, a band of men, having a tacit understanding with each
|
|
other, and calling themselves "the people of the United States," whose
|
|
general purposes are to control and plunder each other, and all other persons
|
|
in the country, and, so far as they can, even in neighboring countries; and
|
|
to kill every man who shall attempt to defend his person and property against
|
|
their schemes of plunder and dominion. Who these men are, INDIVIDUALLY,
|
|
I have no certain means of knowing, for they sign no papers, and give no
|
|
open, authentic evidence of their individual membership. They are not known
|
|
individually even to each other. They are apparently as much afraid of being
|
|
individually known to each other, as of being known to other persons. Hence
|
|
they ordinarily have no mode either of exercising, or of making known, their
|
|
individual membership, otherwise than by giving their votes secretly for
|
|
certain agents to do their will.
|
|
\
|
|
But although these men are individually unknown, both to each other and to
|
|
other persons, it is generally understood in the country that none but male
|
|
persons, of the age of twenty-one years and upwards, can be members. It is
|
|
also generally understood that ALL male persons, born in the country, having
|
|
certain complexions, and (in some localities) certain amounts of property,
|
|
and (in certain cases) even persons of foreign birth, are PERMITTED to be
|
|
members. But it appears that usually not more than one half, two-thirds, or
|
|
in some cases, three-fourths, of all who are thus permitted to become
|
|
members of the band, ever exercise, or consequently prove, their actual
|
|
membership, in the only mode in which they ordinarily can exercise or prove
|
|
it, viz., by giving their votes secretly for the officers or agents of the
|
|
band. The number of these secret votes, so far as we have any account of
|
|
them, varies greatly from year to year, thus tending to prove that the band,
|
|
instead of being a permanent organization, is a merely PRO TEMPORE affair
|
|
with those who choose to act with it for the time being.
|
|
\
|
|
The gross number of these secret votes, or what purports to be their gross
|
|
number, in different localities, is occasionally published. Whether these
|
|
reports are accurate or not, we have no means of knowing. It is generally
|
|
supposed that great frauds are often committed in depositing them. They are
|
|
understood to be received and counted by certain men, who are themselves
|
|
appointed for that purpose by the same secret process by which all other
|
|
officers and agents of the band are selected. According to the reports of
|
|
these receivers of votes (for whose accuracy or honesty, however, I cannot
|
|
vouch), and according to my best knowledge of the whole number of male
|
|
persons "in my district," who (it is supposed) were permitted to vote, it
|
|
would appear that one-half, two-thirds or three-fourths actually did vote.
|
|
Who the men were, individually, who cast these votes, I have no knowledge,
|
|
for the whole thing was done secretly. But of the secret votes thus given
|
|
for what they call a "member of Congress," the receivers reported that I had
|
|
a majority, or at least a larger number than any other one person. And it
|
|
is only by virtue of such a designation that I am now here to act in concert
|
|
with other persons similarly selected in other parts of the country.
|
|
\
|
|
It is understood among those who sent me here, that all persons so selected,
|
|
will, on coming together at the City of Washington, take an oath in each
|
|
other's presence "to support the Constitution of the United States." By
|
|
this is meant a certain paper that was drawn up eighty years ago. It was
|
|
never signed by anybody, and apparently has no obligation, and never had any
|
|
obligation, as a contract. In fact, few persons ever read it, and doubtless
|
|
much the largest number of those who voted for me and the others, never even
|
|
saw it, or now pretend to know what it means. Nevertheless, it is often
|
|
spoken of in the country as "the Constitution of the United States"; and for
|
|
some reason or other, the men who sent me here, seem to expect that I, and
|
|
all with whom I act, will swear to carry this Constitution into effect. I
|
|
am therefore ready to take this oath, and to co-operate with all others,
|
|
similarly selected, who are ready to take the same oath.
|
|
|
|
This is the most that any member of Congress can say in proof that he has
|
|
any constituency; that he represents anybody; that his oath "to support the
|
|
Constitution," IS GIVEN TO ANYBODY, or pledges his faith to ANYBODY. He has
|
|
no open, written, or other authentic evidence, such as is required in all
|
|
other cases, that he was ever appointed the agent or representative of
|
|
anybody. He has no written power of attorney from any single individual.
|
|
He has no such legal knowledge as is required in all other cases, by which
|
|
he can identify a single one of those who pretend to have appointed him to
|
|
represent them.
|
|
|
|
Of course his oath, professedly given to them, "to support the Constitution,"
|
|
is, on general principles of law and reason, an oath given to nobody. It
|
|
pledges his faith to nobody. If he fails to fulfil his oath, not a single
|
|
person can come forward, and say to him, you have betrayed me, or broken faith
|
|
with me.
|
|
|
|
No one can come forward and say to him: I appointed you my attorney to act
|
|
for me. I required you to swear that, as my attorney, you would support the
|
|
Constitution. You promised me that you would do so; and now you have
|
|
forfeited the oath you gave to me. No single individual can say this.
|
|
|
|
No open, avowed, or responsible association, or body of men, can come forward
|
|
and say to him: We appointed you our attorney, to act forus. We required you
|
|
to swear that, as our attorney, you would support the Constitution. You
|
|
promised us that you would do so; and now you have forfeited the oath you
|
|
gave to us.
|
|
|
|
No open, avowed, or responsible association, or body of men, can say this to
|
|
him; because there is no such association or body of men in existence. If
|
|
any one should assert that there is such an association, let him prove, if
|
|
he can, who compose it. Let him produce, if he can, any open, written, or
|
|
other authentic contract, signed or agreed to by these men; forming themselves
|
|
into an association; making themselves known as such to the world; appointing
|
|
him as their agent; and making themselves individually, or as an association,
|
|
responsible for his acts, done by their authority. Until all this can be
|
|
shown, no one can say that, in any legitimate sense, there is any such
|
|
association; or that he is their agent; or that he ever gave his oath to them;
|
|
or ever pledged his faith to them.
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, it would be a sufficient answer for
|
|
him to say, to all individuals, and to all pretended associations of
|
|
individuals, who should accuse him of a breach of faith to them:
|
|
|
|
I never knew you. Where is your evidence that you, either individually or
|
|
collectively, ever appointed me your attorney? that you ever required me to
|
|
swear to you, that, as your attorney, I would support the Constitution? or
|
|
that I have now broken any faith that I ever pledged to you? You may, or you
|
|
may not, be members of that secret band of robbers and murderers, who act in
|
|
secret; appoint their agents by a secret ballot; who keep themselves
|
|
individually unknown even to the agents they thus appoint; and who, therefore,
|
|
cannot claim that they have any agents; or that any of their pretended agents
|
|
ever gave his oath, or pledged his faith to them. I repudiate you altogether.
|
|
My oath was given to others, with whom you have nothing to do; or it was idle
|
|
wind, given only to the idle winds. Begone!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
For the same reasons, the oaths of all the other pretended agents of this
|
|
secret band of robbers and murderers are, on general principles of law and
|
|
reason, equally destitute of obligation. They are given to nobody; but only
|
|
to the winds.
|
|
|
|
The oaths of the tax-gatherers and treasurers of the band, are, on general
|
|
principles of law and reason, of no validity. If any tax gatherer, for
|
|
example, should put the money he receives into his own pocket, and refuse
|
|
to part with it, the members of this band could not say to him: You collected
|
|
that money as our agent, and for our uses; and you swore to pay it over to
|
|
us, or to those we should appoint to receive it. You have betrayed us, and
|
|
broken faith with us.
|
|
|
|
It would be a sufficient answer for him to say to them:
|
|
|
|
I never knew you. You never made yourselves individually known to me. I
|
|
never game by oath to you, as individuals. You may, or you may not, be
|
|
members of that secret band, who appoint agents to rob and murder other
|
|
people; but who are cautious not to make themselves individually known, either
|
|
to such agents, or to those whom their agents are commissioned to rob. If you
|
|
are members of that band, you have given me no proof that you ever
|
|
commissioned me to rob others for your benefit. I never knew you, as
|
|
individuals, and of course never promised you that I would pay over to you
|
|
the proceeds of my robberies. I committed my robberies on my own account,
|
|
and for my own profit. If you thought I was fool enough to allow you to
|
|
keep yourselves concealed, and use me as your tool for robbing other persons;
|
|
or that I would take all the personal risk of the robberies, and pay over the
|
|
proceeds to you, you were particularly simple. As I took all the risk of my
|
|
robberies, I propose to take all the profits. Begone! You are fools, as
|
|
well as villains. If I gave my oath to anybody, I gave it to other persons
|
|
than you. But I really gave it to nobody. I only gave it to the winds. It
|
|
answered my purposes at the time. It enabled me to get the money I was after,
|
|
and now I propose to keep it. If you expected me to pay it over to you,
|
|
you relied only upon that honor that is said to prevail among thieves. You
|
|
now understand that that is a very poor reliance. I trust you may become
|
|
wise enough to never rely upon it again. If I have any duty in the matter,
|
|
it is to give back the money to those from whom I took it; not to pay it over
|
|
to villains such as you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
XIII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, the oaths which foreigners take, on
|
|
coming here, and being "naturalized" (as it is called), are of no validity.
|
|
They are necessarily given to nobody; because there is no open, authentic
|
|
association, to which they can join themselves; or to whom, as individuals,
|
|
they can pledge their faith. No such association, or organization, as "the
|
|
people of the United States," having ever been formed by any open, written,
|
|
authentic, or voluntary contract, there is, on general principles of law and
|
|
reason, no such association, or organization, in existence. And all oaths
|
|
that purport to be given to such an association are necessarily given only
|
|
to the winds. They cannot be said to be given to any man, or body of men,
|
|
as individuals, because no man, or body of men, can come forward WITH ANY
|
|
PROOF that the oaths were given to them, as individuals, or to any
|
|
association of which they are members. To say that there is a tacit
|
|
understanding among a portion of the male adults of the country, that they
|
|
will call themselves "the people of the United States," and that they will
|
|
act in concert in subjecting the remainder of the people of the United States
|
|
to their dominion; but that they will keep themselves personally concealed
|
|
by doing all their acts secretly, is wholly insufficient, on general
|
|
principles of law and reason, to prove the existence of any such association,
|
|
or organization, as "the people of the United States"; or consequently to
|
|
prove that the oaths of foreigners were given to any such association.
|
|
|
|
|
|
XIV.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, all the oaths which, since the war,
|
|
have been given by Southern men, that they will obey the laws of Congress,
|
|
support the Union, and the like, are of no validity. Such oaths are invalid,
|
|
not only because they were extorted by military power, and threats of
|
|
confiscation, and because they are in contravention of men's natural right
|
|
to do as they please about supporting the government, BUT ALSO BECAUSE THEY
|
|
WERE GIVEN TO NOBODY. They were nominally given to "the United States." But
|
|
being nominally given to "the United States," they were necessarily given to
|
|
nobody, because, on general principles of law and reason, there were no
|
|
"United States," to whom the oaths could be given. That is to say, there
|
|
was no open, authentic, avowed, legitimate association, corporation, or body
|
|
of men, known as "the United States," or as "the people of the United States,"
|
|
to whom the oaths could have been given. If anybody says there was such a
|
|
corporation, let him state who were the individuals that composed it, and
|
|
how and when they became a corporation. Were Mr. A, Mr. B, and Mr. C members
|
|
of it? If so, where are their signatures? Where the evidence of their
|
|
membership? Where the record? Where the open, authentic proof? There is
|
|
none. Therefore, in law and reason, there was no such corporation.
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, every corporation, association, or
|
|
organized body of men, having a legitimate corporate existence, and legitimate
|
|
corporate rights, must consist of certain known individuals, who can prove,
|
|
by legitimate and reasonable evidence, their membership. But nothing of this
|
|
kind can be proved in regard to the corporation, or body of men, who call
|
|
themselves "the United States." Not a man of them, in all the Northern
|
|
States, can prove by any legitimate evidence, such as is required to prove
|
|
membership in other legal corporations, that he himself, or any other man whom
|
|
he can name, is a member of any corporation or association called "the United
|
|
States," or "the people of the United States," or, consequently, that there
|
|
is any such corporation. And since no such corporation can be proved to exist,
|
|
it cannot of course be proved that the oaths of Southern men were given to any
|
|
such corporation. The most that can be claimed is that the oaths were given
|
|
to a secret band of robbers and murderers, who called themselves "the United
|
|
States," and extorted those oaths. But that is certainly not enough to prove
|
|
that the oaths are of any obligation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
XV.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, the oaths of soldiers, that they
|
|
will serve a given number of years, that they will obey the the orders of
|
|
their superior officers, that they will bear true allegiance to the
|
|
government, and so forth, are of no obligation. Independently of the
|
|
criminality of an oath, that, for a given number of years, he will kill all
|
|
whom he may be commanded to kill, without exercising his own judgment or
|
|
conscience as to the justice or necessity of such killing, there is this
|
|
further reason why a soldier's oath is of no obligation, viz., that, like all
|
|
the other oaths that have now been mentioned, IT IS GIVEN TO NOBODY. There
|
|
being, in no legitimate sense, any such corporation, or nation, as "the
|
|
United States," nor, consequently, in any legitimate sense, any such
|
|
government as "the government of the United States," a soldier's oath given
|
|
to, or contract made with, such a nation or government, is necessarily an
|
|
oath given to, or contract made with, nobody. Consequently such an oath or
|
|
contract can be of no obligation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XVI.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, the treaties, so called, which
|
|
purport to be entered into with other nations, by persons calling themselves
|
|
ambassadors, secretaries, presidents, and senators of the United States, in
|
|
the name, and in behalf, of "the people of the United States," are of no
|
|
validity. These so-called ambassadors, secretaries, presidents, and senators,
|
|
who claim to be the agents of "the people of the United States" for making
|
|
these treaties, can show no open, written, or other authentic evidence that
|
|
either the whole "people of the United States," or any other open, avowed,
|
|
responsible body of men, calling themselves by that name, ever authorized
|
|
these pretended ambassadors and others to make treaties in the name of, or
|
|
binding upon any one of, "the people of the United States," or any other open,
|
|
avowed, responsible body of men, calling themselves by that name, ever
|
|
authorized these pretended ambassadors, secretaries, and others, in their
|
|
name and behalf, to recognize certain other persons, calling themselves
|
|
emperors, kings, queens, and the like, as the rightful rulers, sovereigns,
|
|
masters, or representatives of the different peoples whom they assume to
|
|
govern, to represent, and to bind.
|
|
|
|
The "nations," as they are called, with whom our pretended ambassadors,
|
|
secretaries, presidents, and senators profess to make treaties, are as much
|
|
myths as our own. On general principles of law and reason, there are no such
|
|
"nations." That is to say, neither the whole people of England, for example,
|
|
nor any open, avowed, responsible body of men, calling themselves by that
|
|
name, ever, by any open, written, or other authentic contract with each other,
|
|
formed themselves into any bona fide, legitimate association or organization,
|
|
or authorized any king, queen, or other representative to make treaties in
|
|
their name, or to bind them, either individually, or as an association, by
|
|
such treaties.
|
|
|
|
Our pretended treaties, then, being made with no legitimate or bona fide
|
|
nations, or representatives of nations, and being made, on our part, by
|
|
persons who have no legitimate authority to act for us, have instrinsically
|
|
no more validity than a pretended treaty made by the Man in the Moon with
|
|
the king of the Pleiades.
|
|
|
|
|
|
XVII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On general principles of law and reason, debts contracted in the name of "the
|
|
United States," or of "the people of the United States," are of no validity.
|
|
It is utterly absurd to pretend that debts to the amount of twenty-five
|
|
hundred millions of dollars are binding upon thirty-five or forty millions of
|
|
people [the approximate national debt and population in 1870], when there is
|
|
not a particle of legitimate evidence -- such as would be required to prove a
|
|
private debt -- that can be produced against any one of them, that either he,
|
|
or his properly authorized attorney, ever contracted to pay one cent.
|
|
|
|
Certainly, neither the whole people of the United States, nor any number of
|
|
them, ever separately or individually contracted to pay a cent of these debts.
|
|
|
|
Certainly, also, neither the whole people of the United States, nor any
|
|
number of them, every, by any open, written, or other authentic and voluntary
|
|
contract, united themselves as a firm, corporation, or association, by the
|
|
name of "the United States," or "the people of the United States," and
|
|
authorized their agents to contract debts in their name.
|
|
|
|
Certainly, too, there is in existence no such firm, corporation, or
|
|
association as "the United States," or "the people of the United States,"
|
|
formed by any open, written, or other authentic and voluntary contract, and
|
|
having corporate property with which to pay these debts.
|
|
|
|
How, then, is it possible, on any general principle of law or reason, that
|
|
debts that are binding upon nobody individually, can be binding upon forty
|
|
millions of people collectively, when, on general and legitimate principles
|
|
of law and reason, these forty millions of people neither have, nor ever had,
|
|
any corporate property? never made any corporate or individual contract? and
|
|
neither have, nor ever had, any corporate existence?
|
|
|
|
Who, then, created these debts, in the name of "the United States"? Why, at
|
|
most, only a few persons, calling themselves "members of Congress," etc., who
|
|
pretended to represent "the people of the United States," but who really
|
|
represented only a secret band of robbers and murderers, who wanted money to
|
|
carry on the robberies and murders in which they were then engaged; and who
|
|
intended to extort from the future people of the United States, by robbery
|
|
and threats of murder (and real murder, if that should prove necessary), the
|
|
means to pay these debts.
|
|
|
|
This band of robbers and murderers, who were the real principals in
|
|
contracting these debts, is a secret one, because its members have never
|
|
entered into any open, written, avowed, or authentic contract, by which they
|
|
may be individually known to the world, or even to each other. Their real or
|
|
pretended representatives, who contracted these debts in their name, were
|
|
selected (if selected at all) for that purpose secretly (by secret ballot),
|
|
and in a way to furnish evidence against none of the principals INDIVIDUALLY;
|
|
and these principals were really known INDIVIDUALLY neither to their
|
|
pretended representatives who contracted these debts in their behalf, nor to
|
|
those who lent the money. The money, therefore, was all borrowed and lent in
|
|
the dark; that is, by men who did not see each other's faces, or know each
|
|
other's names; who could not then, and cannot now, identify each other as
|
|
principals in the transactions; and who consequently can prove no contract
|
|
with each other.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, the money was all lent and borrowed for criminal purposes; that
|
|
is, for purposes of robbery and murder; and for this reason the contracts
|
|
were all intrinsically void; and would have been so, even though the real
|
|
parties, borrowers and lenders, had come face to face, and made their
|
|
contracts openly, in their own proper names.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, this secret band of robbers and murderers, who were the real
|
|
borrowers of this money, having no legitimate corporate existence, have no
|
|
corporate property with which to pay these debts. They do indeed pretend to
|
|
own large tracts of wild lands, lying between the Atlantic and Pacific
|
|
Oceans, and between the Gulf of Mexico and the North Pole. But, on general
|
|
principles of law and reason, they might as well pretend to own the Atlantic
|
|
and Pacific Oceans themselves; or the atmosphere and the sunlight; and to
|
|
hold them, and dispose of them, for the payment of these debts.
|
|
|
|
Having no corporate property with which to pay what purports to be their
|
|
corporate debts, this secret band of robbers and murderers are really
|
|
bankrupt. They have nothing to pay with. In fact, they do not propose to
|
|
pay their debts otherwise than from the proceeds of their future robberies
|
|
and murders. These are confessedly their sole reliance; and were known to be
|
|
such by the lenders of the money, at the time the money was lent. And it
|
|
was, therefore, virtually a part of the contract, that the money should be
|
|
repaid only from the proceeds of these future robberies and murders. For
|
|
this reason, if for no other, the contracts were void from the beginning.
|
|
|
|
In fact, these apparently two classes, borrowers and lenders, were really one
|
|
and the same class. They borrowed and lent money from and to themselves.
|
|
They themselves were not only part and parcel, but the very life and soul, of
|
|
this secret band of robbers and murderers, who borrowed and spent the money.
|
|
Individually they furnished money for a common enterprise; taking, in return,
|
|
what purported to be corporate promises for individual loans. The only
|
|
excuse they had for taking these so-called corporate promises of, for
|
|
individual loans by, the same parties, was that they might have some apparent
|
|
excuse for the future robberies of the band (that is, to pay the debts of the
|
|
corporation), and that they might also know what shares they were to be
|
|
respectively entitled to out of the proceeds of their future robberies.
|
|
|
|
Finally, if these debts had been created for the most innocent and honest
|
|
purposes, and in the most open and honest manner, by the real parties to the
|
|
contracts, these parties could thereby have bound nobody but themselves, and
|
|
no property but their own. They could have bound nobody that should have
|
|
come after them, and no property subsequently created by, or belonging to,
|
|
other persons.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XVIII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Constitution having never been signed by anybody; and there being no other
|
|
open, written, or authentic contract between any parties whatever, by virtue
|
|
of which the United States government, so called, is maintained; and it being
|
|
well known that none but male persons, of twenty-one years of age and
|
|
upwards, are allowed any voice in the government; and it being also well
|
|
known that a large number of these adult persons seldom or never vote at all;
|
|
and that all those who do vote, do so secretly (by secret ballot), and in a
|
|
way to prevent their individual votes being known, either to the world, or
|
|
even to each other; and consequently in a way to make no one openly
|
|
responsible for the acts of their agents, or representatives, -- all these
|
|
things being known, the questions arise: WHO compose the real governing
|
|
power in the country? Who are the men, THE RESPONSIBLE MEN, who rob us of
|
|
our property? Restrain us of our liberty? Subject us to their arbitrary
|
|
dominion? And devastate our hooms, and shoot us down by the hundreds of
|
|
thousands, if we resist? How shall we find these men? How shall we know
|
|
them from others? How shall we defend ourselves and our property against
|
|
them? Who, of our neighbors, are members of this secret band of robbers and
|
|
murderers? How can we know which are THEIR houses, that we may burn or
|
|
demolish them? Which THEIR property, that we may destroy it? Which their
|
|
persons, that we may kill them, and rid the world and ourselves of such
|
|
tyrants and monsters?
|
|
|
|
These are questions that must be answered, before men can be free; before they
|
|
can protect themselves against this secret band of robbers and murderers, who
|
|
now plunder, enslave, and destroy them.
|
|
|
|
The answer to these questions is, that only those who have the will and power
|
|
to shoot down their fellow men, are the real rulers in this, as in all other
|
|
(so-called) civilized countries; for by no others will civilized men be
|
|
robbed, or enslaved.
|
|
|
|
Among savages, mere physical strength, on the part of one man, may enable him
|
|
to rob, enslave, or kill another man. Among barbarians, mere physical
|
|
strength, on the part of a body of men, disciplined, and acting in concert,
|
|
though with very little money or other wealth, may, under some circumstances,
|
|
enable them to rob, enslave, or kill another body of men, as numerous, or
|
|
perhaps even more numerous, than themselves. And among both savages and
|
|
barbarians, mere want may sometimes compel one man to sell himself as a slave
|
|
to another. But with (so-called) civilized peoples, among whom knowledge,
|
|
wealth, and the means of acting in concert, have becom diffusede; and who have
|
|
invented such weapons and other means of defense as to render mere physical
|
|
strength of less importance; and by whom soldiers in any requisite number, and
|
|
other instrumentalities of war in any requisite amount, can always be had for
|
|
money, the question of war, and consequently the question of power, is little
|
|
else than a mere question of money. As a necessary consequence, those who
|
|
stand ready to furnish this money, are the real rulers. It is so in Europe,
|
|
and it is so in this country.
|
|
|
|
In Europe, the nominal rulers, the emperors and kings and parliaments, are
|
|
anything but the real rulers of their respective countries. They are little
|
|
or nothing else than mere tools, employed by the wealthy to rob, enslave, and
|
|
(if need be) murder those who have less wealth, or none at all.
|
|
|
|
The Rosthchilds, and that class of money-lenders of whom they are the
|
|
representatives and agents -- men who never think of lending a shilling to
|
|
their next-door neighbors, for purposes of honest industry, unless upon the
|
|
most ample security, and at the highest rate of interest -- stand ready, at
|
|
all times, to lend money in unlimited amounts to those robbers and murderers,
|
|
who call themselves governments, to be expended in shooting down those who do
|
|
not submit quietly to being robbed and enslaved.
|
|
|
|
They lend their money in this manner, knowing that it is to be expended in
|
|
murdering their fellow men, for simply seeking their liberty and their rights;
|
|
knowing also that neither the interest nor the principal will ever be paid,
|
|
except as it will be extorted under terror of the repetition of such murders
|
|
as those for which the money lent is to be expended.
|
|
|
|
These money-lenders, the Rosthchilds, for example, say to themselves: If we
|
|
lend a hundred millions sterling to the queen and parliament of England, it
|
|
will enable them to murder twenty, fifty, or a hundred thousand people in
|
|
England, Ireland, or India; and the terror inspired by such wholesale
|
|
slaughter, will enable them to keep the whole people of those countries in
|
|
subjection for twenty, or perhaps fifty, years to come; to control all their
|
|
trade and industry; and to extort from them large amounts of money, under the
|
|
name of taxes; and from the wealth thus extorted from them, they (the queen
|
|
and parliament) can afford to pay us a higher rate of interest for our money
|
|
than we can get in any other way. Or, if we lend this sum to the emperor of
|
|
Austria, it will enable him to murder so many of his people as to strike
|
|
terror into the rest, and thus enable him to keep them in subjection, and
|
|
extort money from them, for twenty or fifty years to come. And they say the
|
|
same in regard to the emperor of Russia, the king of Prussia, the emperor of
|
|
France, or any other ruler, so called, who, in their judgment, will be able,
|
|
by murdering a reasonable portion of his people, to keep the rest in
|
|
subjection, and extort money from them, for a long time to come, to pay the
|
|
interest and the principal of the money lent him.
|
|
|
|
And why are these men so ready to lend money for murdering their fellow men?
|
|
Soley for this reason, viz., that such loans are considered better investments
|
|
than loans for purposes of honest industry. They pay higher rates of
|
|
interest; and it is less trouble to look after them. This is the whole
|
|
matter.
|
|
|
|
[To be continued.]
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Kevin S. Van Horn | "...no government, so called, can reasonably be
|
|
argosy!kevin@decwrl.dec.com | trusted for a moment, ... any longer than it
|
|
| depends wholly upon voluntary support."
|
|
| -- Lysander Spooner
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[Continuing the discussion about those who make loans to governments.]
|
|
|
|
The question of making these loans is, with these lenders, a mere question of
|
|
pecuniary profit. They lend money to be expended in robbing, enslaving, and
|
|
murdering their fellow men, solely because, on the whole, such loans pay
|
|
better than any others. They are no respecters of persons, no superstitious
|
|
fools, that reverence monarchs. They care no more for a king, or an emperor,
|
|
than they do for a beggar, except as he is a better customer, and can pay them
|
|
better interest for their money. If they doubt his ability to make his
|
|
murders successful for maintaining his power, and thus extorting money from
|
|
his people in future, they dismiss him unceremoniously as they would dismiss
|
|
any other hopeless bankrupt, who should want to borrow money to save himself
|
|
>from open insolvency.
|
|
|
|
When these great lenders of blood-money, like the Rothschilds, have loaned
|
|
vast sums in this way, for purposes of murder, to an emperor or a king, they
|
|
sell out the bonds taken by them, in small amounts, to anybody, and everybody,
|
|
who are disposed to buy them at satisfactory prices, to hold as investments.
|
|
They (the Rothschilds) thus soon get back their money, with great profits; and
|
|
are now ready to lend money in the same way again to any other robber and
|
|
murderer, called an emperor or king, who, they think, is likely to be
|
|
successful in his robberies and murders, and able to pay a good price for the
|
|
money necessary to carry them on.
|
|
|
|
This business of lending blood-money is one of the most thoroughly sordid,
|
|
cold-blooded, and criminal that was ever carried on, to any considerable
|
|
extent, amongst human beings. It is like lending money to slave traders, or
|
|
to common robbers and pirates, to be repaid out of their plunder. And the
|
|
men who loan money to governments, so called, for the purpose of enabling the
|
|
latter to rob, enslave, and murder their people, are among the greatest
|
|
villains that the world has ever seen. And they as much deserve to be hunted
|
|
and killed (if they cannot otherwise be got rid of) as any slave traders,
|
|
robbers, or pirates that ever lived.
|
|
|
|
When these emperors and kings, so-called, have obtained their loans, they
|
|
proceed to hire and train immense numbers of professional murderers, called
|
|
soldiers, and employ them in shooting down all who resist their demands for
|
|
money. In fact, most of them keep large bodies of these murderers constantly
|
|
in their service, as their only means of enforcing their extortions. There
|
|
are now [1870], I think, four or five millions of these professional murderers
|
|
constantly employed by the so-called sovereigns of Europe. The enslaved
|
|
people are, of course, forced to support and pay all these murderers, as well
|
|
as to submit to all the other extortions which these murderers are employed
|
|
to enforce.
|
|
|
|
It is only in this way that most of the so-called governments of Europe are
|
|
maintained. These so-called governments are in reality only great bands of
|
|
robbers and murderers, organized, disciplined, and constantly on the alert.
|
|
And the so-called sovereigns, in these different governments, are simply the
|
|
heads, or chiefs, of different bands of robbers and murderers. And these
|
|
heads or chiefs are dependent upon the lenders of blood-money for the means
|
|
to carry on their robberies and murders. They could not sustain themselves
|
|
a moment but for the loans made to them by these blood-money loan-mongers.
|
|
And their first care is to maintain their credit with them; for they know
|
|
their end is come, the instant their credit with them fails. Consequently
|
|
the first proceeds of their extortions are scrupulously applied to the payment
|
|
of the interest on their loans.
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In addition to paying the interest on their bonds, they perhaps grant to the
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holders of them great monopolies in banking, like the Banks of England, of
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France, and of Vienna; with the agreement that these banks shall furnish
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money whenever, in sudden emergencies, it may be necessary to shoot down more
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of their people. Perhaps also, by means of tariffs on competing imports,
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they give great monopolies to certain branches of industry, in which these
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lenders of blood-money are engaged. They also, by unequal taxation, exempt
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wholly or partially the property of these loan-mongers, and throw corresponding
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burdens upon those who are too poor and weak to resist.
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Thus it is evident that all these men, who call themselves by the high-sounding
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names of Emperors, Kings, Sovereigns, Monarchs, Most Christian Majesties,
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Most Catholic Majesties, High Mightinesses, Most Serene and Potent Princes, and
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the like, and who claim to rule "by the grace of God," by "Divine Right" --
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that is, by special authority from Heaven -- are intrinsically not only the
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merest miscreants and wretches, engaged solely in plundering, enslaving, and
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murdering their fellow men, but that they are also the merest hangers on, the
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servile, obsequious, fawning dependents and tools of these blood-money
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loan-mongers, on whom they rely for the means to carry on their crimes. These
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loan-mongers, like the Rothschilds, laugh in their sleeves, and say to
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themselves: These despicable creatures, who call themselves emperors, and
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kings, and majesties, and most serene and potent princes; who profess to wear
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crowns, and sit on thrones; who deck themselves with ribbons, and feathers,
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and jewels; and surround themselves with hired flatterers and lickspittles;
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and whom we suffer to strut around, and palm themselves off, upon fools and
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slaves, as sovereigns and lawgivers specially appointed by Almighty God; and
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to hold themselves out as the sole fountains of honors, and dignities, and
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wealth, and power -- all these miscreants and imposters know that we make
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them, and use them; that in us they live, move, and have their being; that
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we require them (as the price of their positions) to take upon themselves all
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the labor, all the danger, and all the odium of all the crimes they commit
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for our profit; and that we will unmake them, strip them of their gewgaws,
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and send them out into the world as beggars, or give them over to the
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vengeance of the people they have enslaved, the moment they refuse to commit
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any crime we require of them, or to pay over to us such share of the proceeds
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of their robberies as we see fit to demand.
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Kevin S. Van Horn | The means determine the ends.
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argosy!kevin@decwrl.dec.com |
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XIX.
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Now, what is true in Europe, is substantially true in this country. The
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difference is the immaterial one, that, in this country, there is no visible,
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permanent head, or chief, of these robbers and murderers who call themselves
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"the government." That is to say, there is no ONE MAN, who calls himself the
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state, or even emperor, king, or sovereign; no one who claims that he and his
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children rule "by the Grace of God," by "Divine Right," or by special
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appointment from Heaven. There are only certain men, who call themselves
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presidents, senators, and representatives, and claim to be the authorized
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agents, FOR THE TIME BEING, OR FOR CERTAIN SHORT PERIODS, OF ALL "the people
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of the United States"; but who can show no credentials, or powers of
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attorney, or any other open, authentic evidence that they are so; and who
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notoriously are not so; but are really only the agents of a secret band of
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robbers and murderers, whom they themselves do not know, and have no means of
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knowing, individually; but who, they trust, will openly or secretly, when the
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crisis comes, sustain them in all their usurpations and crimes.
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What is important to be noticed is, that these so-called presidents,
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senators, and representatives, these pretended agents of all "the people of
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the United States," the moment their exactions meet with any formidable
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resistance from any portion of "the people" themselves, are obliged, like
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their co-robbers and murderers in Europe, to fly at once to the lenders of
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blood money, for the means to sustain their power. And they borrow their
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money on the same principle, and for the same purpose, viz., to be expended
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in shooting down all those "people of the United States" -- their own
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constituents and principals, as they profess to call them -- who resist the
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robberies and enslavements which these borrowers of the money are practising
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upon them. And they expect to repay the loans, if at all, only from the
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proceeds of the future robberies, which they anticipate it will be easy for
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them and their successors to perpetrate through a long series of years, upon
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their pretended principals, if they can but shoot down now some hundreds of
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thousands of them, and thus strike terror into the rest.
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Perhaps the facts were never made more evident, in any country on the globe,
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than in our own, that these soulless blood-money loan-mongers are the real
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rulers; that they rule from the most sordid and mercenary motives; that the
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ostensible government, the presidents, senators, and representatives, so
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called, are merely their tools; and that no ideas of, or regard for, justice
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or liberty had anything to do in inducing them to lend their money for the
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war [i.e, the Civil War]. In proof of all this, look at the following facts.
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Nearly a hundred years ago we professed to have got rid of all that
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religious superstition, inculcated by a servile and corrupt priesthood in
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Europe, that rulers, so called, derived their authority directly from Heaven;
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and that it was consequently a religious duty on the part of the people to
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obey them. We professed long ago to have learned that governments could
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rightfully exist only by the free will, and on the voluntary support, of
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those who might choose to sustain them. We all professed to have known long
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ago, that the only legitimate objects of government were the maintenance of
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liberty and justice equally for all. All this we had professed for nearly a
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hundred years. And we professed to look with pity and contempt upon those
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ignorant, superstitious, and enslaved peoples of Europe, who were so easily
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kept in subjection by the frauds and force of priests and kings.
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Notwithstanding all this, that we had learned, and known, and professed, for
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nearly a century, these lenders of blood money had, for a long series of
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years previous to the war, been the willing accomplices of the slave-holders
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in perverting the government from the purposes of liberty and justice, to the
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greatest of crimes. They had been such accomplices FOR A PURELY PECUNIARY
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CONSIDERATION, to wit, a control of the markets in the South; in other words,
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the privilege of holding the slave-holders themselves in industrial and
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commercial subjection to the manufacturers and merchants of the North (who
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afterwards furnished the money for the war). And these Northern merchants
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and manufacturers, these lenders of blood-money, were willing to continue to
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be the accomplices of the slave-holders in the future, for the same pecuniary
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considerations. But the slave-holders, either doubting the fidelity of their
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Northern allies, or feeling themselves strong enough to keep their slaves in
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subjection without Northern assistance, would no longer pay the price which
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these Northern men demanded. And it was to enforce this price in the future
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-- that is, to monopolize the Southern markets, to maintain their industrial
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and commercial control over the South -- that these Northern manufacturers
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and merchants lent some of the profits of their former monopolies for the
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war, in order to secure to themselves the same, or greater, monopolies in the
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future. These -- and not any love of liberty or justice -- were the motives
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on which the money for the war was lent by the North. In short, the North
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said to the slave-holders: If you will not pay us our price (give us control
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of your markets) for our assistance against your slaves, we will secure the
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same price (keep control of your markets) by helping your slaves against you,
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and using them as our tools for maintaining dominion over you; for the
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control of your markets we will have, whether the tools we use for that
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purpose be black or white, and be the cost, in blood and money, what it may.
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On this principle, and from this motive, and not from any love of liberty,
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or justice, the money was lent in enormous amounts, and at enormous rates of
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interest. And it was only by means of these loans that the objects of the
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war were accomplished.
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And now these lenders of blood-money demand their pay; and the government, so
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called, becomes their tool, their servile, slavish, villanous tool, to extort
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it from the labor of the enslaved people both of the North and South. It is
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to be extorted by every form of direct, and indirect, and unequal taxation.
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Not only the nominal debt and interest -- enormous as the latter was -- are
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to be paid in full; but these holders of the debt are to be paid still
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further -- and perhaps doubly, triply, or quadruply paid -- by such tariffs
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on imports as will enable our home manufacturers to realize enormous prices
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for their commodities; also by such monopolies in banking as will enable them
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to keep control of, and thus enslave and plunder, the industry and trade of
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the great body of the Northern people themselves. In short, the industrial
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and commercial slavery of the great body of the people, North and South,
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black and white, is the price which these lenders of blood money demand, and
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insist upon, and are determined to secure, in return for the money lent for
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the war.
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This programme having been fully arranged and systematized, they put their
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sword into the hands of the chief murderer of the war, [undoubtedly a
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reference to General Grant, who had just become president] and charge him
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to carry their scheme into effect. And now he, speaking as their organ,
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says, "LET US HAVE PEACE."
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The meaning of this is: Submit quietly to all the robbery and slavery we
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have arranged for you, and you can have "peace." But in case you resist, the
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same lenders of blood-money, who furnished the means to subdue the South,
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will furnish the means again to subdue you.
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These are the terms on which alone this government, or, with few exceptions,
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any other, ever gives "peace" to its people.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Kevin S. Van Horn | As a criminal organization, the US gov't makes
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argosy!kevin@decwrl.dec.com | the Mafia look like a bunch of purse snatchers.
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[Continuing the discussion of the Civil War.]
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The whole affair, on the part of those who furnished the money, has been, and
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now is, a deliberate scheme of robbery and murder; not merely to monopolize
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the markets of the South, but also to monopolize the currency, and thus
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control the industry and trade, and thus plunder and enslave the laborers, of
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both North and South. And Congress and the president are today the merest
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tools for these purposes. They are obliged to be, for they know that their
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own power, as rulers, so-called, is at an end, the moment their credit with
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the blood-money loan-mongers fails. They are like a bankrupt in the hands of
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an extortioner. They dare not say nay to any demand made upon them. And to
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hide at once, if possible, both their servility and crimes, they attempt to
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divert public attention, by crying out that they have "Abolished Slavery!"
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That they have "Saved the Country!" That they have "Preserved our Glorious
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Union!" and that, in now paying the "National Debt," as they call it (as if
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the people themselves, ALL OF THEM WHO ARE TO BE TAXED FOR ITS PAYMENT, had
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really and voluntarily joined in contracting it), they are simply
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"Maintaining the National Honor!"
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By "maintaining the national honor," they mean simply that they themselves,
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open robbers and murderers, assume to be the nation, and will keep faith with
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those who lend them the money necessary to enable them to crush the great
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body of the people under their feet; and will faithfully appropriate, from
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the proceeds of their future robberies and murders, enough to pay all their
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loans, principal and interest.
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The pretense that the "abolition of slavery" was either a motive or
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justification for the war, is a fraud of the same character with that of
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"maintaining the national honor." Who, but such usurpers, robbers, and
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murderers as they, ever established slavery? Or what government, except one
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resting upon the sword, like the one we now have, was ever capable of
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maintaining slavery? And why did these men abolish slavery? Not from any
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love of liberty in general -- not as an act of justice to the black man
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himself, but only "as a war measure," and because they wanted his assistance,
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and that of his friends, in carrying on the war they had undertaken for
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maintaining and intensifying that political, commercial, and industrial
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slavery, to which they have subjected the great body of the people, both
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black and white. And yet these imposters now cry out that they have
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abolished the chattel slavery of the black man -- although that was not the
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motive of the war -- as if they thought they could thereby conceal, atone
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for, or justify that other slavery which they were fighting to perpetuate,
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and to render more rigorous and inexorable than it ever was before. There
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was no difference of principle -- but only of degree -- between the slavery
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they boast they have abolished, and the slavery they were fighting to
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preserve; for all restraints upon men's natural liberty, not necessary for
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the simple maintenance of justice, are of the nature of slavery, and differ
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>from each other only in degree.
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If their object had really been to abolish slavery, or maintain liberty or
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justice generally, they had only to say: All, whether white or black, who
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want the protection of this government, shall have it; and all who do not
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want it, will be left in peace, so long as they leave us in peace. Had they
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said this, slavery would necessarily have been abolished at once; the war
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would have been saved; and a thousand times nobler union than we have ever
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had would have been the result. It would have been a voluntary union of free
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men; such a union as will one day exist among all men, the world over, if the
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several nations, so called, shall ever get rid of the usurpers, robbers, and
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murderers, called governments, that now plunder, enslave, and destroy them.
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Still another of the frauds of these men is, that they are now establishing,
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and that the war was designed to establish, "a government of consent." The
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only idea they have ever manifested as to what is a government of consent, is
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this -- that it is one to which everybody must consent, or be shot. This
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idea was the dominant one on which the war was carried on; and it is the
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dominant one, now that we have got what is called "peace."
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Their pretenses that they have "Saved the Country," and "Preserved our
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Glorious Union," are frauds like all the rest of their pretenses. By them
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they mean simply that they have subjugated, and maintained their power over,
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an unwilling people. This they call "Saving the Country"; as if an enslaved
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and subjugated people -- or as if any people kept in subjection by the sword
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(as it is intended that all of us shall be hereafter) -- could be said to
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have any country. This, too, they call "Preserving our Glorious Union"; as
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if there could be said to be any Union, glorious or inglorious, that was not
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voluntary. Or as if there could be said to be any union between masters and
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slaves; between those who conquer, and those who are subjugated.
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All these cries of having "abolished slavery," of having "saved the country,"
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of having "preserved the union," of establishing "a government of consent,"
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and of "maintaining the national honor," are all gross, shameless,
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transparent cheats -- so transparent that they ought to deceive no one --
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when uttered as justifications for the war, or for the government that has
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suceeded the war, or for now compelling the people to pay the cost of the
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war, or for compelling anybody to support a government that he does not want.
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The lesson taught by all these facts is this: As long as mankind continue to
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pay "national debts," so-called -- that is, so long as they are such dupes
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and cowards as to pay for being cheated, plundered, enslaved, and murdered --
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so long there will be enough to lend the money for those purposes; and with
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that money a plenty of tools, called soldiers, can be hired to keep them in
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subjection. But when they refuse any longer to pay for being thus cheated,
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plundered, enslaved, and murdered, they will cease to have cheats, and
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usurpers, and robbers, and murderers and blood-money loan-mongers for
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masters.
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APPENDIX.
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Inasmuch as the Constitution was never signed, nor agreed to, by anybody, as
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a contract, and therefore never bound anybody, and is now binding upon
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nobody; and is, moreover, such an one as no people can ever hereafter be
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expected to consent to, except as they may be forced to do so at the point of
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the bayonet, it is perhaps of no importance what its true legal meaning, as a
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contract, is. Nevertheless, the writer thinks it proper to say that, in his
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opinion, the Constitution is no such instrument as it has generally been
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assumed to be; but that by false interpretations, and naked usurpations, the
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government has been made in practice a very widely, and almost wholly,
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different thing from what the Constitution itself purports to authorize. He
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has heretofore written much, and could write much more, to prove that such is
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the truth. But whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another,
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this much is certain -- that it has either authorized such a government as we
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have had, or has been powerless to prevent it. In either case, it is unfit
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to exist.
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[The end]
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