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July 1, 2007
The Roots of
Liberty: "The Unanimous Declaration"
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
The roots of liberty and American government run
deep -- back to the year 1164 in Clarendon,
England. At that time, the idea of democratic
republicanism and the liberal state could hardly be
imagined. The student of English history will
remember this as the place and date of the
Constitutions
of Clarendon, which struck the decisive blow in
the battle over royal prerogatives between Henry
II, King of England, and Thomas a Becket, the
Archbishop of Canterbury.
Installed as a puppet, Becket had found true
faith and refused to bow to the whims of a
tyrannical king. Becket's refusal to sign and
submit to the Constitutions of Clarendon forced him
into exile and, ultimately, led to his
assassination at the hands of Henry's knights --
hardly a picture of democratic process.
Clarendon has been remembered as a loss of
rights for the church, a triumph of the secular
over the sacred. However true this interpretation
of events may be, Clarendon's significance for the
movement toward the modern liberal state is equally
important. With Clarendon, the English church would
no longer be able to use excommunication to enforce
its temporal demands over the subjects of the
crown. Rather, trial by jury began to remove
arbitrary justice from the hands of bishops and
kings alike, replaced by justice dispensed under a
code of law administered by fellow citizens.
Despite Henry's dubious intentions, Clarendon
begins to delineate the modern relationship between
church and state: Civil law, not Rome, would
hereafter govern temporal affairs.
Half a century later, in 1215, the next major
leap forward in modern liberal governance would be
ushered in with Magna
Carta, the "Great Charter," issued by King John
of England at the demand of his rebellious barons.
Magna Carta was reissued several times and comes to
us in its final form, issued in 1297 by Edward I,
John's grandson. Though the context for Magna Carta
is a very different one, it is nonetheless an
important corrective to the abuses of Clarendon,
establishing the inviolable freedom of the Church
of England from the English crown. If Clarendon
protected the state from the church, Magna Carta
protected the church from the intrusions of the
state.
Far from limited to church-state relations,
Magna Carta formalized the fundamental rights
enjoyed by all citizens of the modern liberal
state. Among others, Magna Carta codified the
following: rights of inheritance, property rights,
protections for debtors, the rights of localities
to a degree of self-government, trade rights,
retributive justice (designing punishments to fit
the crime, as opposed to one punishment for all
crimes), protections for citizens from the abuses
of domestic authorities, requirements of witnesses
to establish guilt, and the right to trial by one's
peers. Most important, however, was the heart of
Magna Carta, which established the objective rule
of law over and above the subjective rule of the
king. Rex Lex ("The king is law") was slowly being
replaced by Lex Rex ("The law is king"). With Magna
Carta, the king was bound under the law by a
national covenant -- a declaration of mutual
obligations of the ruler and those ruled to one
another.
John Locke would articulate this contractual
vision of a government of laws existing to protect
the liberties of its citizens in his Second
Treatise on Government (1690). The context
for Locke's thought was the Glorious Revolution
(1688) and the English
Bill of Rights (1689), in which William and
Mary of Orange affirmed the limits of government,
protecting the liberties of its citizens and
correcting the gross abuse of royal power under
James II.
It is in this setting that Locke summarizes the
purpose of the state. In Chapter
9 of his Second Treatise, "Of the Ends
of Political Society and Government," Locke writes
on the preservation of property, concluding that
men come together and subject themselves to laws.
Governments exist to judge and enforce this rule of
law. In this way men voluntarily covenant together
to form governments, each surrendering some freedom
in order to preserve the liberty of all. The one
(the state) and the many (its members) thus
mutually serve the cause of liberty.
When the Stamp Act was passed for the American
colonies in 1765, when courts of admiralty enforced
justice without trial by jury and a standing army
held in the colonies during a time of peace, the
purpose of government to guarantee the liberties of
its citizens was foremost in the minds of many
colonists.
The First Continental Congress met in October
1774 to seek redress for the colonies' grievances.
Their Declaration
and Resolves laid claim to the rights that had
evolved over the centuries, from Clarendon to the
English Bill of Rights. The colonies are entitled,
Congress declared, to "life, liberty and property,"
and "they have never ceded to any foreign power
whatever, a right to dispose of either without
their consent."
When the British crown and parliament refused to
recognize the equal rights of the colonists as
British citizens, the Americans seized upon another
essential feature of the idea of government as
covenant: If a government ceases to exist under its
obligations to its citizens as the preserver of
liberty, then the contract is broken and the
citizens reserve the right to abjure that
delinquent government. In other words, government
is by consent of the governed.
Over the course of America's struggle for
independence, this theme would be rearticulated and
expanded upon by some of the colonies' greatest
minds: Virginia's
Declaration of Rights, Thomas Jefferson's
Lockean forerunner to the colonies' Declaration of
Independence; Patrick Henry's Resolutions
of the Stamp Act (1765) and his later cry of,
"Give
me liberty or give me death!" (1775); Thomas
Paine's Common
Sense (1776) and The
Rights of Man (1792); and Samuel Adams'
speech
at the statehouse in Philadelphia (1776), to
name a few. Government is a covenant, they said,
and a covenant cannot be broken without
consequence.
Later, these Patriots would turn from
justifications for their declaration of
independence from the old government to
articulations of what should replace it. The 12
years between the institution of the Articles
of Confederation (1777), which maintained the
maximal autonomy of the individual states, and the
ratification and implementation of the United
States Constitution (1789), which would turn a
confederation of states into a federal republic,
where punctuated by heated debate about the
sustenance of liberty under any unified
government.
Having thrown off one tyrannical government,
federalists,
who advocated a strong central government, and
anti-federalists,
who advocated states' rights, were sharply divided
as to the powers of the new government. Which model
would better guarantee the objective of a
government existing to preserve the liberties of
its citizens?
The federalists won that debate, but two
centuries later, it is clear that many of the
elements of a "tyrannical government" have
re-emerged, as predicted by anti-federalist
protagonist Thomas Jefferson. Most notably,
Jefferson warned that the judiciary would become a
"despotic
branch" and that the Constitution would be "a
mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary
which they may twist and shape into any form they
please."
Indeed, the despotic branch has twisted and
shaped our government's foundational document into
what in now called in common parlance, a "Living
Constitution", effectively undermining
"Constitutional
eisegesis" -- the constructionist
interpretation of the Constitution as written and
ratified.
If the Constitution can be amended by judicial
diktat rather than as prescribed by law, then we
are a nation governed by men rather than the law,
and the consequences are dire.
Where does that leave us today? Few who serve in
the Executive, Legislative or Judicial branches of
our national government honor their oaths to
"support
and defend" our Constitution.
Of course, the Constitution is subordinate to
the Declaration of Independence. The Constitution's
author, James Madison, wrote Thomas Jefferson on 8
February 1825 these words concerning the supremacy
of the Declaration of Independence over our
nation's Constitution: "On the distinctive
principles of the Government... of the U. States,
the best guides are to be found in... The
Declaration of Independence, as the fundamental Act
of Union of these States."
The Declaration elucidates "that all men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among
these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of
Happiness." It also records "That whenever any Form
of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it
is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish
it, and to institute new Government..."
Liberty is elusive, and awaits its next great
leap forward.
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2007 by Publius Press, Inc. and
reprinted with permission.
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