I just finished reading From Founding Fathers to
Fire-Eaters by James Rutledge Roesch. It’s a new book (2018) on an old
subject, but it’s an excellent, entertaining, and both an enjoyable and easy
read considering the complexity of the subject and the brilliant minds of the
Southern political theorists whose works Mr. Roesch has compiled and edited
into a succinct outline of the state rights doctrine of the Old South. [Take
that in conjunction with Alcorn’s comment in his 1870
inaugural speech about how Southerners should quit political theorizing and
jump in and wallow in the trough with the Yankees.]
The doctrine did not begin with the abolitionists or the Missouri Compromise or even the Constitutional Convention, and it was never about slavery. As Mr. Roesch shows to any reasonably intelligent person with only a modicum of knowledge regarding this nation’s history, the doctrine was there at the beginning, inherent in the colonial charters, the oldest of which was Virginia’s. I highly recommend anyone interested in truth regarding the state rights doctrine vis-a-vis the post-republic egalitarian/centralization doctrine get the book, devour it, and share it.
The doctrine did not begin with the abolitionists or the Missouri Compromise or even the Constitutional Convention, and it was never about slavery. As Mr. Roesch shows to any reasonably intelligent person with only a modicum of knowledge regarding this nation’s history, the doctrine was there at the beginning, inherent in the colonial charters, the oldest of which was Virginia’s. I highly recommend anyone interested in truth regarding the state rights doctrine vis-a-vis the post-republic egalitarian/centralization doctrine get the book, devour it, and share it.
The nationalists (centralizers) have been part of our
government from the start, much like the serpent was integral to the Garden of
Eden. They were the Tories who reluctantly joined the Patriot cause after the
short-sighted British Parliament refused to stop interfering with home rule, undermining
their influence at home. [This is me talking here. Mr. Roesch is kinder to all
the founders.] Embracing the cause of independence, these self-aggrandizers
embarked on the quest to build a new economic empire. To realize their goal,
they needed a supreme, centralized government and a national “democracy,”
served by said government.
Patriots to the republic managed to forestall them for
the bulk of the next century, first with the Articles of Confederation, then
with federalism, hallmarked by the state rights doctrine woven into the
Constitution. Nevertheless, with the ratification of said Constitution, the
states had sown the seeds of their demise. The destruction of the Southern
Confederacy ended the federal republic and gave the ghosts of those old Tories
their long-coveted crown. Hopefully they celebrated their victory in…, well,
never mind where.
Today, some neo-cons still give lip service to the
republic, or the Lincolnites’ perverse take on it, but with the Left picking up
their banner of egalitarianism/pure democracy and exploding it, the neo-cons
should be rethinking their position [Lincoln’s on the chopping block, too, and
it’s not us Southerners putting him there]. Instead, they appease. Truth is the
nationalists and the Left are both statists. Both need all references to state
rights (true federalism) gone.
The nationalists have hidden behind the holy crusade to
end slavery to justify their egregious violations of the Constitution since
halfway through the “Civil War.” [They had other unifying causes before the
abolitionists gave them slavery]. The farther time moves from those long-ago
events, the more clouded the historical memory of everyday folk, and lack of
education on the subject of both that War and the founding of the republic
hastens the encroaching shadows. That is by design. There is no difference in
the goal of modern Democrats and Republicans in regards to the republic.
Today’s attacks on the South not only go unchallenged by
“so-called” conservatives, who by default the South supports, but are actually
echoed by these same people, who mollify their treachery by stating something
to the effect that we need to keep the history, but annotate it to remember our
mistakes (sins). Pittance, I guess, is what these curs are trying to foster. Problem
is slavery isn’t the operative mistake here, and what really needs to be
remembered is being buried deeper and deeper beneath their obfuscation. The
gutless wonders fear the PC crowd and believe they are protecting themselves
from the Left’s onslaught by tossing such bones. Believers in the republic, or
perhaps those who simply respect its memory, whether Southern or not, have no
champion. Granted the republic is dead. The majority of Americans rejected it
long ago. Today most don’t even know what it was, its having been perverted by
self-aggrandizing politicians into something it wasn’t. But we Southerners
being told to piss on our ancestors’ graves, all too often now by other
Southerners, in order to further the ambitions of one statist group over those of
another, is going too far.
One can pinpoint a number of places in our antebellum
history highlighting the states’ and the peoples’ rejection of our federal
republic. The states’ failure to support Kentucky's and Virginia's resolutions
against Adams’ Alien and Sedition Acts and later South Carolina during the
Nullification Crisis; the application of the Constitution to the states by the
Supreme court under Marshall; and the Northern states’ answering Lincoln’s call
for troops to invade the South. The Missouri Crisis was a biggie. That’s when
the South should have left the Union. It was clear then that sectional
interests were simply too conflicting.
Reconstruction itself abounds with violations, but those
violations may not have been so pervasive had the Northern populace not given
Congress to the Radicals in the fall of 1866. But what did it matter at that
point? The South was in shambles, and Northerners as a block had already shown
how little they cared about our founders’ republic. They had, in fact, rejected
it. They wanted a centralized Union, and they created one by force of arms.
Today the old republic is only a memory being twisted into something evil, the
final step before the statists feel comfortable in eradicating it altogether.
We need to keep that history untarnished, y’all. It’s what our Confederate
ancestors fought for. In another time and another place, Patriots will need a
foundation on which to build again.
Thanks for reading,
Charlsie
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