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Congress is Taxation Without Representation

It isn't irrevocably broken, but it's well on its way.

We are speeding headlong toward a time when our Congress will have become just like Mad King George’s Parliament, that body from which in 1776 the American colonists separated with the rallying cry of “no taxation without representation.” Our national government is fast becoming just as unrepresentative of the people as far off Briton was when we went to war to become the United States of America.

Does that seem like a hyperbolic statement to you? At first blush, it might. But a considered look at the direction in which we are quickly heading will prove that, compared to the British Parliament that raised the ire of our forefathers so long ago, today’s Congress shows many signs of the same, oppressive, haughty, disinterested politicians that considered their national government more important than the local’s interests and needs.

Representation is the key word, here. What does it mean? What did it mean then? Of course, the problem was that it meant two different things to the opposing sides of the Revolutionary era, hence the conflict. In England, representation meant that Parliament “represented” the whole of the country and that each member of that body was elected from their home to go forth and become a member of the whole. British politicians generally did not imagine that they were representing their hometown when they went to Parliament.

As an example of the basic assumption of Parliamentary representation, a pamphlet published in 1765 in London asserted that, “every Member of Parliament sits in the House not as a representative of his own constituents but as one of that august assembly by which all the commons of Great Briton are represented.” (“The Regulations Lately Made Concerning the Colonies and the Taxes Imposed Upon Them, Considered,” by Thomas Whately)

On the other side of the Atlantic, however, the American political system had evolved in the opposite direction. The distance between colonies, the fact that they didn’t all meet together and each represented distinct and separate proto-states, this tended to propel the colonial political scene toward local interests and control. Consequently, when someone was sent to any political office in the colonies, it was expected that he would represent those that sent him, not the greater body into which he entered. Local interests were premier.

Consequently, when it came time for Parliament to consider tax policies to be imposed on the colonists (the Paper Tax, Tea Tax, Towshend Duties, et al), there was no expectation among them that the colonists themselves needed any members of their own sitting in Parliament to represent their fellows. Parliament itself was considered the proper representation of all Great Briton’s possessions regardless of what individuals sat there.

The colonists, however, were quite upset that their own people had no voice in the national body and were incensed that taxes descended upon them without their ascent to the policy. Parliament seemed haughty, disinterested, unconnected and unconcerned with the colonist’s needs and desires and Americans felt as if enslaved to far off masters that never asked for as much as a by your leave. The people and the government seemed in no way connected to the colonists.

Now, doesn’t that sound like Congress today?

Of course, this is not to say that Congress is in every way a far off body of disinterested masters haughtily unconcerned with the voices back home. But who cannot see that it is becoming more like that every day?

Repeatedly, for instance, we find Congressmen and Senators suddenly adopting the national party line and doing a 180 from previous positions — the ones that got them elected — or succumbing to giant piles of cash from interests outside the state that elected them. Remember Al Gore, the staunchly anti-abortion politician from Tennessee that suddenly became a Roe fan once he entered Congress and decided he had national political ambitions? Even this year we saw Senator Gillibrand from New York do an instantaneous about face on the Second Amendment once she entered the Senate. She was well known as pro-Second Amendment and then she got appointed to the Senate and, voila, she’s suddenly anti-Second Amendment. Additionally, Republicans in Illinois just discovered that Congressman Mark Kirk is a proponent of Cap and Trade proving himself amenable to destroying the entire energy industry and laying an oppressive tax on every American despite what they might want. Why did he do it? Because he got money from the enviro-wacko lobby from outside his state and decided to give them his vote instead of the people of Illinois, that’s why. It was a simple, unprincipled dash for the cash.

Increasingly nationally focused Non-Governmental Organizations are gathering large sums of money to influence Congressmen to their cause whether the people back home care about the lobbyist’s issue or not and this is not to mention the increasingly demanding control of the national party establishment forcing Congressmen to spout the party line often times in contravention to what those at home support.

There are many reasons for this. The 17th Amendment, for instance, dangerously detached members of the Senate from local control by making them beasts of the party and elected by “the people,” instead of sent by the states to represent state interests. And there is the increasing cost of running for election. Any more, only the ultra rich can run a campaign without having to worry if the national party will support them financially — and that support is often keyed toward whether or not the candidate assumes the party line.

As it happens, the voice of the folks back home is receding farther and farther into the background as members of Congress pay increasing heed to national issues, donors outside their state, and party doctrine instead of local interests.

How long will it be until Congressmen will firmly decide that they represent “The United States” instead of the individual States there from? In fact, Congress is already far down that road toward ignoring the voices back home and deliberating on what they imagine is good for the whole of the country instead of those that sent them to D.C. in the first place.

So, how are they getting away with it? One way is that, while these unconnected, haughty pols make laws they deem it in their political interests to pass, they hide behind baubles and pork sent home in an insincere attempt to make it seem as if they are “doing something” for the folks back home.

Still, our voices from home can force a Congressman to change course. But it takes the collective outrage of the people back home to force that course correction because all too often it seems as if Congress is intent on its own agenda with no mind to what the little people back home might want. Instead of going to Congress with their constituents first and foremost in their minds, the people are an afterthought as the national agenda is pursued.

Congress may not quite yet be a perfect emulation of the Parliament that taxed American colonists without including them in on the decision making process, but how much longer will it be until that hubris is revisited on the people of this nation?

We should not entirely despair, of course. The true system that the founders created is still there underneath all the garbage that later generations piled on top of it. It will take dedication of the citizens to hold their representatives accountable to return this system to a more pure one, but more than that it will take education. As Ben Franklin is reputed to have said to a woman wondering what the founder had wrought, we have a Republic “if we can keep it.” That takes educating ourselves on the issues as well as just how our government is supposed to work.

All is not lost, to be sure. But with the poor education we are now offering our youth, it cannot be much longer before no one has the slightest clue what it was that the founders created and just why it is special enough not to let slip through our fingers.

We conservatives serve as the stopgap to the degradation of our country. Liberals and the uneducated see no reason not to rush headlong to wholesale destruction of what the United States “is.” They just don’t care a whit about what we are. Like Buckley said, it is our duty to stand athwart their path and yell STOP. But our duty is not just to be bellicose. Ours is to educate and keep this country on the straight and narrow and one of those duties involves holding our representatives accountable within the American system. We can fix it, if we have the fortitude. The alternative is to lose the world’s greatest nation and to see our great experiment end in failure and that is just what the left wants.

COMMENTS

  • artraveler

    From my point of view congress, supreme court and president have already passed the line between a free society and opression. In 1776 taxes were less than 20% of income today for many people taxes are in excess of 50% and the average is 30%; yet we sit humbly by asking Fedzilla for another piece of bread. Until we have a real revolution at the ballot box the loss of our liberty is going to continue.

  • Glendon Watts

    “The alternative is to lose the world?s greatest nation and to see our great experiment end in failure and that is just what the left wants.”
    I submit to you that once you brush away all of the partisan bickering, on a multitude of issues, I believe that you will find that there are only a very few in congress that claim to be on the “right” that isn’t playing the same shell games as the ones that are on the left. We are being bombarded with issues that are important to be sure, but they only serve to keep us separated as a people. “A house divided against itself cannot stand”…against them! As long as we pay attention to the partisan games that they play we will not see their true intentions and then rise to oppose them. Let’s take West Virginia’s very own Republican Shelly Moore-Capito, Congresswoman of the 2nd District. She believes in health care reform and stands by her belief that a portion of this reform is a non-partisan issue. Where was it said or written by any of our Founding Fathers that any part of health care is a Federal government issue? NOWHERE! Not until the progressives of the early 1900s twisted the words “Promote the General Welfare” into a perversion of what our nation’s Founders intended. Now we drift about in this societal thinking that our government should supply us with health care and those that speak out against it are labeled hate mongers, racists, and bigots. This is all a debate for another time, I am simply stating here to not to always look to those on the obvious “left” when the ones that can do just as much damage are those that appear to be “right” (pun intended).

    • LISA BULLOCK-HOCK

      I know some of the left wingers got hammered for their dissent, but not really that much. For my dissent I got labled a racist teabagging redneck.

  • Common_Cents
    • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • Spartan4Life

    Well, most voters are Americans, anyway. And most elections are legal(see Minn.). But with 60 Senate seats and a 79 seat advantage in Congress for the Dems, it is hard to argue that the folks aren’t getting exactly what they deserve.

    Franklin foreshadowed the end of the Republic, “When the people find they can vote themselves money….”

    • LISA BULLOCK-HOCK

      Why can’t we get people to show ID and verify information to register to vote? Oh that’s right dead people, non citizens, mickey mouse, donald duck, and double dippers couldn’t vote for the Democrats.

  • LISA BULLOCK-HOCK

    You are right. So many canidates on both sides change when they go to Washington. They let the system change them. Recently Democrats have been going along with what ever Obama wants and not raising any issues. A lot of times the real person is there in their associations and past dealings. If you are not willing to listen to both sides and hear all of the facts to be informed, PLEASE STAY HOME ON ELECTION DAY. I’m referring to: www.howobamagotelected.com . Please watch the interviews with Obama supporters. They had no clue of anything and didn’t care.

    I like your Al Gore example. He is the biggest liar of them all. He doesn’t give a hoot about the environment. He flies around on his private jet making more carbon emmissions than about 100 or so ordinary folks, and didn’t turn his lights off on the day we were supposed to turn everything off for an hour to “save energy”. He says whatever is convenient to get into office or get a nobel peace prize for junk science, according to a lot of experts.

    People if you are going to believe everything you hear, especially now (the main stream media HATE republicans) you deserve what you get, but you take the rest of us with you. The media did not report on Bill Ayers, Rev. Wright, Frank Marshall Davis (Obama’s childhood mentor & communist see my diary: http://www.redstate.com/lisainmd/2009/07/20/a-marxist-in-the-white-house-you-decide/).

    He said he was going to “spread the wealth” and wanted nationalized health care, and supported cap in trade, and constitutional rights for foreign enemy combatants (terrorists).

    I think that people really didn’t believe that when he got into office he was really going to do all of those things because after he got a look at everything, he would realize that those radical things would not make any sense. It makes sense to him because he and the other liberals want to keep us in our place and under control.

  • Return to Revolution

    This is a good exmample of the poison that results from a mixture of poor education and things like the 17th amendment – which make us more of a democracy than a republic.

    Its a vicious spiral: the more ignorant (less educated) people are, the less they’ll realize / care about (and thus enable) the destruction of their freedom, and the more democratic (i.e., majority makes law w/o constitutional constraints) we become the faster said destruction occurs.