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Something
to Think About
Whom Do
You Trust?
by Gordon Francis Corbett
When Ronald Reagan visited N. B. C.'s booth at
the 1968 Republican Convention, Chet Huntley was
ready for him. He asked, approximately, "Governor,
your call for smaller government sounds like
something fitted for a simpler time, when our
country was smaller. How do you answer those who
say that we need more government today?"
Reagan replied, approximately, "Well, there was
a politician who told his people that once, their
country was small, and their institutions were
small. They had small industry, small agriculture,
and small labor unions. But now, he said, we are
much bigger. Our industry is big, our farmers are
big, and our labor unions are big. Our society is
much more complex. And, we need more government to
keep all of these complexities in line.
"The name of that fellow was Benito
Mussolini."
Huntley's jaw sagged. He had just had his head
handed to him on national television, and he knew
it.
Reagan's argument did not prove that Italy had
needed smaller government, but it did show that
former journalist Mussolini had used it to obtain
totalitarian power; and, it implied that
then-current journalist Huntley was using it to
help his fellow liberals to do the same thing.
The issue dividing those who want limited
government, a gold standard, and national
independence, from those who want big government,
fiat currency, and "One World," is trust.
Our opponents trust politicians so much that
they want them to manage their rights and ours.
We trust no politicians, period. We want to
imprison them inside the Constitution, so that they
will only be able to protect our rights. We want
the power to manage our rights left to us, their
rightful owners.
Politicians, bureaucrats, or yourself: whom do
you trust?
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