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Daniel
M. Hoyt
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Matthew 6:25-34
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| How Long Do We Have |
February 9, 2008
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For the first time since I started this opinion column I'm going to post something, that I didn't say, in its entirety. I've checked the references given and it seems the source material is not 100% accurate. I've made corrections, which I've highlighted in yellow, to reflect accuracy as far as I can determine. I'm posting this anyway because I feel it's a wonderful commentary on the state of things in our new "democracy"... About the time our original thirteen states adopted their new constitution in 1787, Lord Woodhouselee, Alexander Fraser Tytler, a Scottish history professor at the University of Edinburgh, had this to say about the fall of the Athenian Republic some 2,000 years earlier: "A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." "From that moment on, the majority always vote for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship." "The average age of the world's greatest civilizations from the beginning of history, has been about 200 years." "During those 200 years, those nations always progressed through the following sequence:
Here are some interesting facts concerning the 2000 Presidential election: Number of States won by: Square miles of land won
by: Population of counties won
by: Murder rate per 100,000 residents
in counties won by: In aggregate, the map of the territory Bush won was mostly the land owned by the taxpaying citizens of this great country. Gore's territory mostly encompassed those citizens living in government-owned tenements and living off various forms of government welfare..." It seems the United States is now somewhere between the "complacency and apathy" phase of Professor Tyler's definition of democracy, with some forty percent of the nation's population already having reached the governmental dependency phase. If Congress grants amnesty and citizenship to some twenty million criminal invaders called illegals and they vote, then we can say goodbye to the USA in fewer than five years. On the virge of the next presidential election I wonder who will be the "lesser of two evils" when ALL the front-runner candidates are roughly equivalent themselves on key issues such as national health care, abortion, taxes and immigration? |
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| For God and Country, | ||||
| Daniel M. Hoyt A guy from Oshkosh (with a list) |
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