7.4.2023 – people determined

people determined
correct what perceive to be
injustice, error

Now, some 180-odd years later, we can say that the proof of the pudding is in the eating.

We’ve made it.

And not because we have not come through some rough, indeed perilous, times.

The history of each of the amendments to the Constitution, including the first ten, our Bill of Rights, is invariably the story of a self-governing people determined to correct what they perceive to be injustice and error.

In fact, one might say that each amendment added to the Constitution was an attempt of the American people to expand and extend the blessings of self-government and its manifold benefits to an ever-wider circle of our citizenry.

John Henry Faulk wrote that back during the Watergate Era.

He wrote:

“… the office is invariably bigger, more important, and a lot more permanent than the officeholder.

The powers that go with the highest office in the land, the presidency, are awesome indeed.

But they belong to the people, all the people, still.

The man who holds that office and forgets whom those powers really belong to does so at his own peril.

As we have seen.”

What Mr. Faulk would have made of what is going on now is interesting to ponder.

Yet all I can come up with is that I understand why the Children of Israel “By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yea, we wept, When we remembered Zion.

During Watergate, Mr. Faulk wrote, “Now what’s causing all the confusion?

Why, the fact that we’ve got a prominent citizen, a man that has held the highest office in the land, suspected of some felony crimes.

But, he’s so prominent and held such a respected office, that we don’t know whether he even ought to be indicted, let alone made to stand trial.

More than that, it’s going to hurt a lot of people’s feelings if he is put through the wringer.

It’s going to hurt a lot of folks’ feelings if he ain’t.”

And that was all based on Watergate.

As Former President Obama said of Mr. Trump and the battle of the birth certificate, “Remember when we thought that was as crazy as he would get?”

It all reminds of something else Mr. Faulk wrote in his Pear Orchard series:

… you know, that there worries me a heap. By God, it seems that people don’t quite know what it’s all about no more. Them that talks loudest is the ones that seem to know the least.

All quotes from The uncensored John Henry Faulk by John Henry Faulk, 1985, Austin, Tex., Texas Monthly Press.

This is the flag I ordered through the office of Congressman John Lewis before he died.

I have a certificate that the flag once flew over the Capitol Building of the United States of America.

It used to mean a lot around the world.

… used to.

It used to stand for an American people eager to expand and extend the blessings of self-government and its manifold benefits to an ever-wider circle of our citizenry.

… an ever-wider circle of our citizenry.

It can again.

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