Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.
Published on February 24, 2010 By Draginol In Politics

Warner Todd Huston has written a statement of conservative values that I found very interesting.  Here it is below.

The Huston Statement 

Since our political climate has long since drifted from the first principles of our founding and since we now face a crisis threatening to tear down our American moral center we commit ourselves to re-establishing our American character.

We believe that our Constitution and the principles espoused in the Declaration of Independence form the best guide by which to nurture our American character and provides a firm bedrock upon which to build a government.

We as Americans believe:

That as individuals we have the right of self-determination, to be free of overweening involvement in our lives by government at all levels from local, to state, to federal.

That as free men we must strongly assert that we are responsible for ourselves, our family, and our property and that others owe us nothing but to observe our rights as we observe theirs.

That our liberties depend on our civic virtue and that it is up to each of us to become informed citizens.

With these God-given liberties in mind, that our representatives must strive to keep government out of the lives of the people to the greatest extent practicable and that they should honor the principles of limited government as handed down to us from our founders.

And we assert that adherence to these principles will act as a beacon of freedom to the world, that we should actively promote them abroad giving succor to all those that would follow in our footsteps, and that we should not lend legitimacy to foreign bodies or nations that retreat from them.

We affirm that:

Private property is sacrosanct

The market-based economy free of government meddling must be preserved

Employees must be free of compulsory associations

Governments must be accountable to the voters not to judges and unions

Communities have the right to draft standards without federal approval

Education is a local responsibility solely under local and state control

It is freedom of religion, not freedom from religion

And that our Second Amendment rights are God-given and cannot be infringed

Additionally, we as Americans also reaffirm that legislation is the rightful duty of our constituted bodies of representatives and not the venue of capricious judges. Ruling from the bench is no better than the ill-considered tyrannies from the throne from which we so long ago rebelled.

Finally, let us understand these principles to be an affirmation of our American character one that has made our nation the richest and strongest nation in human history. Any force, whether domestic or foreign, that wishes to materially alter this character is an enemy to our nation and one that should not be treated lightly but faced squarely and with resolution.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Feb 24, 2010

Sounds good to me!

on Feb 24, 2010

I see where they are going to contort these to imply that conservatives are somehow baby eating neanderthals.

But then they would do that to even a simple statement like "I am".

A good list, and easy to affirm.

on Feb 24, 2010

I like this. Looks like something worth making into a poster. Also looks like something a Democrat would cringe at.

on Feb 24, 2010

All that was missing was a dramatic music score and the american flag flying in the background.. Way too much pathos for me.

God is not mentioned once in the constitution, I checked. I have an american friend who sent me a pocket version "of the best document that was ever written" (his words), and godgiven rights and liberties are not mentioned anywhere in it. Why do you insist that it was god that grants civil liberties when it is infact a secular concept of philosophy that puts the individual in the center and where that individual is not predetermined by religion, gender or social status that he/she was born into? Personal freedom and liberty are no religious concepts and judeochristian values were the basis for the puritan society and their fun and free way of living. I doubt that the puritans would have had agreed with most ammendments, for one.

Other than that, I can mostly agree with your list.

 

on Feb 24, 2010

Utemia -

It's an amalgam of principles from both the Declaration of Independence (which does mention 'our Creator') and the Constitution, as explicitly referenced in paragraph 2.

on Feb 24, 2010

All that was missing was a dramatic music score and the american flag flying in the background..

I agree, that would have made it better.

 

Way too much pathos for me.

I'm curious, why do you feel this way? The guy is passionate about what he believes in. Do you not feel passionate about what you believe in? Taking your comment into consideration I would say you are just as passionate about pointing out that God is not mentioned in the Constitution. I would conclude that your comment has too much pathos as well, for me.

on Feb 24, 2010

Forums went boom -> double post.

on Feb 24, 2010

godgiven rights and liberties

I have to agree that "godgiven" was not really necessary to point out that all people have these rights regardless what any Gov't around the world might say otherwise. Still, I won't hold it against him to add his religious belief to emphasize his words. He believes it's godgiven, be it in the Constitution or not. Does it matter he believe it is godgiven? I only care about the fact that it is my right as a person, godgiven or not.

on Feb 24, 2010

Utemia,

Why carry around something when  you have the internet?   Go to this site for both the Constitution and Declaration: http://www.usconstitution.net/

And you are right, the music would add pizazz.

on Feb 24, 2010

I'm curious, why do you feel this way?
I find the style too melodramatic and in a way too cheesy/sappy.
Taking your comment into consideration I would say you are just as passionate about pointing out that God is not mentioned in the Constitution. I would conclude that your comment has too much pathos as well, for me.
Touché. In fact I am a bit passionate about the secular principles of the Englightenment philosophy. I think that the american constitution is rooted in those principles and not primarily in juedochristian values, which is very often referenced. I did go into the philosophical debate someplace with Leauki - lol. (I don't think anybody read it though)

I read about the principles of the modern nation state in essays and historic journals, and they are rooted in those principles. The 18th century was quite an interesting time for that. Secularism changed the way states and societies are organized and THAT makes the free society in the US possible. Christian values are part of that, because ultimately the philosophers were christians, and for them life had intrinsic value because god created man - That is the judeo christian part. The part where individuals are persons (the kantian philosophical concept where a person has both rights and duties) that are born free and undetermined and can decide how to lead their life without outside influence of religion or society is not part of judeochristian value, at least not the way I remember the history of the 7th and 18th century. Of course, it would be difficult to interpret the values of the constitution without referencing the historic context and understanding of religion/church and philosophy at the time.

All in all, I believe that the american constitution is indeed a very great document and a prime example of how enlightenment philosophy influences society to this day.

on Feb 24, 2010

Dr Guy
Utemia,

Why carry around something when  you have the internet?   Go to this site for both the Constitution and Declaration: http://www.usconstitution.net/

And you are right, the music would add pizazz.
I think my friend always carries one with him at all times. I mostly have mine in a deskdrawer. I prefer reading real paper to reading of a screen.

Add to the music one of those really baritone narrators.. sheesh, it could be the next republican campaign commercial. But it would be really melodramatic and sappy and cheesy if someone based a script on that. But then, most commercials are exactly like that - they play on patriotic feelings and "godgiven" rights and that america is the greates land on earth.

on Feb 24, 2010

Utemia, I believe Brad could have said "self determination" and  it would have meant basically the same. His words are common vernacular in the US although the pc crowd do not want to upset atheists and agnostics. That's probably why the founding fathers used "Creator" in the DoI, that way if one believes their dog (big bang, earth, whatever) to be their god they can have it their way. I'd say 95% of Americans interpret it that way, with the other 5% ranging from dislike to bent out of shape when mentioned. The rest of the world might find it odd, South America much less so.

on Feb 24, 2010

I didn't reference the DoI - and I just checked with the link from DrGuy again just to be sure: in the US constitution, the document that is the basis of the US government, neither God nor Creator are mentioned.

I don't disagree with what Brad said about what the government should do or "That our liberties depend on our civic virtue and that it is up to each of us to become informed citizens" But that exactly the rub, those civic duties clash with often cited judeochristian values, at least how I understand them. Maybe I just don't really have the same understanding that  most americans do. Civic duties are not based on religious values, but those two are often mentioned in one breath in american vernacular as you mentioned and that is strange IMO because they are very different from each other. 

It was an enourmous accomplishment to write a document that allowed for a republic of united states, radically new and an example for the rest of the world. But that development would not have been possible without a secular understanding of how a state should function and what role the government should play. I very much doubt that the founding fathers had no knowledge of that philosophy or that it did not influence them alot. Being proud of christians values might overlap occasionally with that, but they are not identical.

on Feb 24, 2010

I didn't reference the DoI - and I just checked with the link from DrGuy again just to be sure: in the US constitution, the document that is the basis of the US government, neither God nor Creator are mentioned.

You didn't, but Huston did.  It's his statement of principles & he bases it on both.  Not to nitpick too much, but pointing out that God isn't mentioned in the Constitution itself is meaningless in this context.

It's difficult to completely divorce the reality of certain overlapping values in western religious beliefs from those in the Constitution, despite the absence of the words 'God' or 'Creator' in the text.  Obviously, the framers were very much opposed to any state-sanctioned or 'official' set of religious beliefs, hence the absence of such a reference in the Constitution itself, but acknowledged in the DoI the basis of the rights of free men being vested in them by their Creator.

on Feb 24, 2010

no no nitpicking is good.. the details matter almost all of the time in issues as this.

So which document do you think is more important or relevant, the Declaration of Indipendance because it was well, the birth certificate of an independant new republic, or the constitution where that republic defined its political structure and how the government was to work etc. ?

I agree with your analysis, very succinct. It's untrue to state that the authors disregarded any religious beliefs. But could it maybe have been possible or argued that the authors of the DoI wrote "that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." with a secular worldview in mind? Secular doesn't equal to atheist, and I believe I could make a good argument that liberty and pursuit of happiness were not part of the often cited judeochristian political values at the time it was written - and the DoI is a political document of sorts. That is maybe too narrow of me, because today the meaning evidently changed or is differently interpreted by contemporary americans. I don't think my argument would diminish any greatness of either the constitution or the DoI.

I don't understand the american tendency to mix secular principles with providence, shake, and then to declare the result as judeochristian conservative values.

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