A New Declaration
July 3, 2006
On
the fourth day of July, in 1776, a small group of men, representing 13 colonies
in the far-off Americas, boldly told the most powerful nation on earth that they
were free.
They
declared, in terms that still are radical today, that all men are created equal,
and endowed with certain inalienable rights that government neither grants nor
can take away.
In
the Declaration of Independence, the founding fathers sought to demonstrate to
the world that they were rejecting a tyrannical king.
They listed the “injuries and usurpations” that contain the
philosophical basis for our Constitution and Bill of Rights.
One
point of consternation to our founding fathers was that the king had been
“imposing Taxes on us without our Consent.”
But 230 years later, taxation with representation has not worked
out much better.
Indeed,
one has to wonder how Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin would react to the
current state of affairs. After all, they were outraged by mere import tariffs
of a few pennies on the dollar.
Today, the average American pays roughly 50 percent of their income in
direct and indirect taxes.
In
fact, most Texans will not start working for themselves for another week.
Texans, like most Americans, work from January until early July just to pay
their federal income taxes, state and local taxes, and the enormous costs of
regulation. Only
about half the year is spent working to pay for food, clothing, shelter, or
education.
It
is easy to simply blame faceless bureaucrats and politicians for our current
state of affairs, and they do bear much of the blame.
But blame also rests with those who expect Washington DC to solve every
problem under the sun. If the public demanded that Congress abide by the
Constitution and pass only constitutional spending bills, politicians would have
no choice but to respond.
Everybody
seems to agree that government waste is rampant and spending should but
cut—but not when it comes to their communities or pet projects.
So members of Congress have every incentive to support spending bills and
adopt a go-along, get-along attitude.
This leads to the famous compromises, but the bill eventually comes due
on April 15th.
Our
basic problem is that we have lost sight of the simple premise that guided the
actions of our founding fathers. That premise? The government that governs least
is the government that governs best.
When we cut the size of government, our taxes will fall. When we reduce the power of the federal bureaucracy, the cost of government will plummet. And when we firmly fix our eyes, undistracted, on the principles of liberty, Americans truly will be free. That should be our new declaration.