Liberty
Letters

June 18, 2004
Samuel Adams, #11
Mind &
Morals, Freedom's Best Team
by Steve Farrell
Theodore Roosevelt warned, "to educate a man in
mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to
society."
If one such man is a menace -- and we can all
think of examples -- how about an entire
generation?
I think we know the answer. Such a group would
run roughshod over our constitution and liberties
without flinching, without looking back, without
even having the horse sense to see the value in
looking back.
And guess what? It's happened.
I refer to the pressing matter of four judges in
Massachusetts, spitting on the moral and legal
tradition of millennia, legalizing gay marriage by
decree.
I refer to the American people not having enough
backbone, wherewithal, and common sense to halt
this act of judicial tyranny (and other such acts),
in its tracks, via mass protest, media blitzes,
letter writing campaigns, recall elections, special
elections, impeachment, amendment, limiting the
jurisdiction of the courts -- or by whatever other
means necessary.
I refer to the descent of elements of our
military from liberators to sexual monsters of the
worst stripe, and the knee-jerk response of too
many American 'conservatives' that "the Iraqis have
done worse to us," or from liberals and
libertarians who see this as nothing more than a
'godsend' to kick out the neoconservatives, and put
their man in.
I refer to the millions of our fellow 'citizens'
who actually believe that rampant and gross
immorality set free, unrestrained, flaunting itself
here, jamming itself down our throats there,
threatening to overthrow the existing moral and
political order everywhere, is good, progressive,
American.
The chickens of amoral education have come home
to roost; and the picture isn't pretty, the
prospects are harrowing.
The Founders had a better idea about what
constitutes a true education -- an education in
mind and in morals, in the temporal and in the
spiritual, in theory and in practical reality --
because, 'how,' they wondered, 'can a people who
fail to govern their passions, successfully self
govern?' Think about it.
Founder Samuel Adams did.
He noted that Britain's policy to subjugate the
America's during the Colonial Era included a
strategic "attempt to corrupt the morals of the
people."
And why?
- I have long been convinced that our enemies
have made it an object, to eradicate from the
minds of the people in a general a sense of true
religion and virtue, in hopes thereby the more
easily to carry their point of enslaving them
...
-
- Freedom or slavery will prevail in a (city
or) country according as disposition and manners
of the people render them fit for the one or the
other... (1)
This is common sense. Those who are slaves to
their passions, make easy slaves to their
government. Didn't the Soviet's know this? Free
vodka and free sex, coupled with state antagonism
toward church, family, and tradition, made for an
oppressive, deadly combination.
Common sense, yes -- but etched in stone as
well. Adam's continued:
- Indeed, my friend, this is a subject so
important in my mind, that I know not how to
leave it. Revelation assures us that
'Righteousness exalteth a
nation'&emdash;Communities are dealt with in
this world by the wise and just Ruler of the
Universe. He rewards or punishes them according
to their general character. The diminution of
public virtue is usually attended with [the
diminution] of public happiness, and the
public liberty will not long survive the total
extinction of morals. (2)
History also testifies.
- The Roman Empire, says the historian,
must have sunk, though the Goths had not
invaded it. Why? Because the Roman virtue was
sunk.' (3)
And so, Sam Adam's concludes, "Could I be
assured that America would remain virtuous, I would
venture to defy the utmost efforts of enemies to
subjugate her." (4)
Adam's, Roosevelt, and Gibbons were right. To
educate a man in mind and not in morals is a
menacing prospect.
America's schools no longer educate in virtue.
This was no accident. We have enemies foreign and
abroad who know exactly what they are doing. They
circle like vultures. Their prey is readied. Too
many of us parents, likewise dulled by secularism
and hedonism, stand clueless and disabled. If we
expect to turn the tide, and we must, we need to
look back to the Christian foundations of our
Founders, instill them in our children, and share
them with our neighbors, so that our next
step, and their next step will be not be
bound up in shackles.
Footnotes
1. Cousins, Norman. In God We Trust: The
Religious Belief of Our Founding Fathers,
Harper & Brothers, New York, 1958, p. 351.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid. Samuel Adams quotes from Gibbon's
Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire.
4. Ibid.
<<
Letter 10
Enrich
your life with a book about politics and current
events...
Enrich
your political & social life with a politics or
news magazine...
|