The
Importance of the US Constitution
and
Property Rights

Below are two short
explanations of why property rights and the U.S.
Constitution are so critically important to our freedoms
and the American way of life, and how growing federal
power and social/environmental activism is destroying the
very foundations upon which they rest. Unless we return to
the Constitutional Republican form of government soon,
America will find herself in a downward slide to Third
World Nation status and tyranny. There have been no
exceptions in all of human history.
Property
Rights - The Foundation of Freedom
The
Growing Civil Unrest in America

THE
FOUNDATION OF FREEDOM
The
Feudal Nature of Federal Regulations
©1997 Environmental
Perspectives, Inc.
Federal Power --
The Road to Tyranny
Many Americans are
frustrated with unfunded mandates. What most Americans
don't realize is that these unfunded mandates are merely
the tip of an increasingly repressive regulatory iceberg.
There is growing concern that fellow Americans are being
sent to prison and property owners are being
systematically stripped of their life savings and
livelihoods for violating an explosion of totally
arbitrary and often ludicrous regulations that the average
person has no hope of understanding.
Although most Americans
intensely dislike unfunded mandates, they don't understand
why property owners are so upset. To them, it seems only
fair that property owners do their share to protect the
environment and our cultural heritage. After all don't
similar types of zoning protect property values in urban
and suburban areas? In response, property owners claim
they are not against protecting the environment or our
cultural heritage. Rather, they are upset the government
is forcing them to shoulder the cost of this protection by
controlling their property for the so-called
"public good."
The answer to these
confusing issues is found in our Founding Fathers
understanding of the feudal tyranny that led to the
Declaration of Independence, and how unalienable property
rights were intended to be the foundation of all
other civil rights in our U.S. Constitution. Ironically,
once these principles are understood, it becomes clear
that the tensions over unfunded mandates and loss of
property rights are both related to the same problem --
usurpation by the federal government of state and local
powers. Such usurpation, warned our Founders, inevitably
leads to growing tyranny and the type of tension we are
experiencing in our lives today.
In their recent efforts to
reverse this tyrannical trend, many in Congress have been
accused of rolling back 25 years of environmental
protection. To the contrary, Congress is attempting to
prevent the rolling back of over 200 years of freedom! By
denying the concept of unalienable property rights we may
be choosing a new feudalism over freedom, with devastating
consequences for all Americans.
Federal and Feudal
Tyranny
After breaking the feudal
bondage of England, our Founders were so fearful of
creating another feudal government that they severely
limited the Constitutional powers of the federal government
to only those pertaining to foreign relations and war. The
only exceptions were the "General Welfare" and
the "Interstate Commerce" clauses. The former
clause was intended to ensure life, liberty and
opportunity for all citizens equally, while the
second clause was intended to promote free commerce
between states. Neither of these two tiny clauses were
intended to subvert the rest of the Constitution in order
to make the federal government the supreme regulator of
America, as is the case today. So adamant were our
Founders about keeping power away from the federal
government that they included the Tenth Amendment to
prevent expansion of federal powers, Thomas Jefferson
warned,
"When all
government…shall be drawn to Washington as the
center of all power, it will render powerless the
checks provided of one government on another and will become
as venal and oppressive as the government from which we
separated."(1)
Jefferson called this
centralization of power the "feudal/ ruler" form
of government where the rights of the government become
superior to the rights of citizens. The foundation of this
form of government is almost always control of property --
he who controls the land (or water) controls the people.
If a person cannot own land and property to grow crops,
have a business, or build a home to shelter their family,
they are at the mercy of those who do hold that power.
Tragically, that power is
increasingly being held by the federal and some state
governments. How can a citizen use their First Amendment
right of free speech if the government agent to whom they
would speak against can deny them home, hearth and means
of livelihood?
Unalienable Property
Rights and the People's Law
Unalienable
property rights are fundamental in the protection against
feudal/ruler tyranny. John Adams warned that such tyranny
is the inevitable result of losing the inalienable right
to own and use land unencumbered by government
interference,
"The moment that the
idea is admitted into society that property is not as
sacred as the Laws of God, and that there is not a force
of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and
tyranny commence. Property must be sacred or liberty
cannot exist."(2)
James Madison not only
affirmed the sacred nature of property rights, but
emphatically proclaimed that the highest priority of
government is to protect these unalienable rights,
"Government is instituted to protect property of
every sort…This being the end of government,
that alone is a just government which impartially secures,
to every man, whatever is his own. That [which] is not [a]
just government, nor is property secure under it, [is one]
where arbitrary restrictions… deny to part of its
citizens that free use of their [property]"(3)
The underlying principle of
unalienable rights is simple. Men are governed by specific
natural laws. Violating
these laws results in depriving man of his freedom of
choice, his liberty, and his search for happiness. Sir
William Blackstone and Thomas Locke, both prolific writers
of these foundational concepts, were repeatedly quoted by
our Founders during the Constitutional debates,
"Those rights, then,
which God and nature have established, and are therefore
called natural rights, such as are life and liberty, need
not the aid of human laws…. On the contrary, no
human legislature has power to abridge or destroy
them..."(4)
Jefferson called these
natural laws "the laws of nature and of nature's
God" in the Declaration of Independence. Even though
they can not be "seen," these natural laws are
as certain as the law of gravity. For any legislature to
violate these laws is to invite tyranny upon its citizens
as certainly as death results from inadvertently walking
off a 1000 foot cliff.
Thomas Jefferson based our
U.S. Constitution on unalienable rights and called it the People's
Law. People are first protected by unalienable
rights. Secondly they hold all power. The people then
allocate a part of that power first to local government,
then to state government, and finally to the federal
government, with the latter having the least power of all.
Unalienable property rights
were to be limited only by the 1) right of imminent domain
for the public good -- but only with "just
compensation" as defined by the Fifth Amendment, or
2) common law concept of harm and nuisance. The latter was
intended to be invoked only at the local level where
zoning was under direct control of the people affected. It
could only be used where definable harm to another
person's health or property value could be demonstrated.
Further loss of property rights leads to abuse.
Dangers of the
"Public Good"
By misusing the concept of
the so-called "public good," the multi-billion
dollar environmental and public interest lobbies have
convinced a constitutionally ignorant American people to
pressure Congress into expanding federal powers. They are
using what James Madison called the "Tyranny of the
Majority". By claiming that the so-called
"majority" outside a local jurisdiction have the
right to intervene in local issues in the name of the
"public good," the environmental lobby has
convinced Congress to usurp local power by inserting
federal jurisdiction into local issues. In doing so, power
shifts from those who are accountable to the citizens
within a jurisdiction to federal agents having essentially
no accountability to any one local area. While this type
of "public good" seems democratic, James Madison
warns it leads to civil strife and national ruin,
"In all cases
where a majority are united by a common interest or
passion, the rights of the minority are in danger."(5)
"[A] pure democracy…can admit of no cure for the
mischiefs of [the majority]…and there is nothing to
check the inducements to sacrifice the weaker party. Hence
it is that such democracies have ever been spectacles of
turbulence and contention; have ever been found
incompatible with personal securities or the right of
property; and have in general been as short in their lives
as they have been violent in their deaths." (6)
That we are witnessing this
turbulence and contention today as the result of the
passions of the environmental movement, should be of grave
concern to all Americans -- especially Congress. A
democracy can provide freedom only within a
constitutional republic based upon
the People's Law and secured by unalienable rights. Yet,
almost every solution proposed by the environmental lobby
is structured around the feudal/ruler form of governance
that shifts power to appointed unaccountable regional
planning commissions, the state, or federal government. As
a consequence, Americans all across this nation have been
experiencing upset and disagreement with the government as
a new type of feudal rule becomes established.
Reestablishing
True Limits to Property Rights
The power to regulate
private property rights must be returned to state and
local governing units and confined to the strict original
concept of common law nuisance and harm backed by
empirical, peer-reviewed research. Cross-jurisdictional
appointed planning commissions are generally not
accountable to the people within their jurisdiction and
must be abolished or elected. When in doubt, property
rights must take precedence. It is incumbent upon the
state to prove its case, not the property owner.
Conversely, public interest
environmental laws are based on personal values for the
so-called "public good." Like highways, parks,
wildlife sanctuaries and other public benefits, they
should be subject to the Fifth Amendment requirements of
full just compensation. Paying 100% compensation would
force prioritization of public benefits, rather than
receiving a public benefit at the total expense of the
property owner. Making the property owner pay for such
public values is comparable to expropriating a person's
life saving's to pay for a public good such as reducing
the national debt.
Likewise, environmental
damage resulting from cumulative effects represent a total
societal problem to which all have contributed, so all
should bear partial fiscal responsibility. Regulations
protecting endangered species and wetlands fall into this
category. Compensation from the state is due the landowner
when economic loss exceeds a certain percent. By doing so,
both the property owner and the state would be forced to
find creative solutions or alternatives.
The growing tensions and
strife caused by the gradual reversion to feudal/ruler
governance in America was predicted by our Founding
Fathers. It will only get worse unless the process is
reversed. The choice is simple, freedom or feudalism. The
former will allow us to protect our environment with
common sense creativity. The later will strangle our
economy so we no longer have the ability to protect either
the environment or over 200 years of freedom -- taking
with it the light and hope of the world provided by the
greatest nation on earth.
References
1.
Albert Ellery Bergh, Ed. The
Writings of Thomas Jefferson. 20 vols. (Washington:
Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association). 1907. 15:332
2. John
Adams. Works. C. Francis Adams, ed. (Little &
Brown, Boston). 1854. Vol. 14:560.
3. 4
Letters and Other Writings of James Madison, 174.
Taken from the essay "Property" written in 1792
and published in the National Gazette, March 27,
1792.
4. Ibid,
pp 93.
5. James
Madison, Notes of debates of the Federal Constitution.
(Bicentennial Edition), 1987. At 76.
6. James
Madison, The Federalist Papers, 10.21-10.22.
For more
information on this subject contact Environmental
Perspectives (207) 945-9878
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THE
GROWING CIVIL UNREST IN AMERICA
The
Feudal Nature of Federal Regulations
©1997 Environmental
Perspectives, Inc.
THE NATURE OF FEDERALISM AND
FEUDALISM
There is a growing unrest
welling in America. Whether it is in western states
clamoring for states rights over federal land, or in the
growing frustration over unfunded mandates, the Endangered
Species Act, and wetlands regulations, the cause is the
same -- growing and unaccountable federal power. Thomas
Jefferson and other Founders warned us that excessive
federal power would result in the reestablishment of a
"feudal/ruler" structure of governance that
"will render powerless the checks provided of one
government on another and will become as venal and
oppressive as the government from which we separated."(1)
The Founders noted that such a government would exhibit
highly definable characteristics:
- Power is by compulsion, force,
conquest, or legislation usurpation.
- Power is concentrated in the one or
the few.
- The people are treated as
"subjects" of the one or few.
- The land is treated as the
"realm" of the one or few.
- The people lose their unalienable
rights.
- Government is by the rule of men
rather than the rule of law (i.e. arbitrary and
capricious).
- The people are structured into social
and/or economic classes.
- The thrust of government is always
from the top down, not from the people upward.
- Problems are always solved by issuing
new edicts, creating more bureaus, appointing more
administrators.(2)
There are others. Congress
should be concerned that much of the friction and
heartache vocalized by rural residents, western states
claiming rights over federal land, and states over
unfunded mandates are grounded in these feudal/ruler
characteristics.
Tragically, we are seeing
the first fruits of Jefferson's warning. State and local
rights are being usurped by the federal government.
Immense power is being consolidated in the hands of a few
thousand bureaucrats and citizens. Vast federal agencies
are becoming empires that spawn ever increasing
regulations which are applied to their subjects in an
arbitrary and capricious manner. Fellow Americans are
being sent to prison for dumping clean dirt on dry land
arbitrarily declared wetlands by federal bureaucrats.
Property is being confiscated from farmers who
inadvertently run over endangered rats that are too
numerous to avoid. Whole communities, families and lives
that depend on federal land are being destroyed.
It is the system
It is not that
federal employees are evil as often accused. Rather such
tyranny is in the very nature of federalism. The Latin
root word for both federalism and feudalism is foedus
or foedum, meaning strong central control. In
such governments the controllers are unaccountable to the
people whose lives and economic well being depend on them.
They can and will become tyrants without
realizing it.
A
shocking study done by Yale research psychologist Dr.
Stanley Milgram clearly showed that "…ordinary
people, simply doing their jobs, and without any
particular hostility on their part, can become agents in a
terrible destructive process."(3)
(Italics added) These conclusions were drawn from research
designed to determine whether "normal" Americans
would exceed personal moral limits of inflicting pain on
others if they believed they were doing so under a higher
authority, and for a good cause. Milgram and the
psychology world were stunned when he found that,
"a majority of people
would go to great lengths to comply with expert authority,
despite the stress induced by the conflict between what
they knew was right and what they were asked to do. Many
obeyed the experimenter by inflicting great pain,
regardless of the victim's agony and pleas for release
from the experiment. Those who volunteered for the
experiment were not sadists or cruel monsters recruited
from the fringes of society. They were ordinary people
drawn from the working, managerial, and professional
classes."(4)
It should therefore come as
no surprise that "normal" federal agents can
practice tyranny on a daily basis without thinking of
themselves as tyrants. Our Founding Fathers seemed to
clearly understand this principle. Hence, the powers of
the Federal government were severely limited within the
Constitution. A republic was created by dividing the
government into many levels so that no level or branch
could overpower another. Likewise, each level of
government was accountable to the people over whom they
governed. The greatest powers were to reside at the lower
levels (communities, counties and states). The least and
most restrictive power was given to the federal
government. These limitations were driven home in the
Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, "All powers
not specifically delegated to the Congress of the United
States by this Constitution, nor prohibited to the states
by this Constitution, are reserved to the states or to the
people." Jefferson called this the People's Law.
DANGERS OF THE "PUBLIC GOOD"
Although the Tenth
Amendment seems clear enough, the incredibly powerful
environmental lobby and others have pressured Congress to
abandon Constitutional limitations of federal powers.
Instead, federal jurisdictional authority now includes
powers initially intended for the states and local
governments. The justification for this usurpation is
based on the so-called "general public good"as
defined by majority rule. The public good, in turn, is
heavily influenced by the environmental and other special
interest lobbies. While this type of "public
good" sounds democratic, James Madison calls it the
tyranny of the majority,
In all cases where
a majority are united by a common interest or passion, the
rights of the minority are in danger."(5)
[emphasis added] "[A] pure democracy…can admit of
no cure for the mischiefs of [the majority] …and there
is nothing to check the inducements to sacrifice the
weaker party. Hence it is that such democracies have ever
been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever
been found incompatible with personal securities or the
right of property; and have in general been as short in
their lives as they have been violent in their
deaths." (6)
By itself a true democracy
is nothing more than mob rule controlled by whoever has
the most power and influence. Democracy can only work within
a republic based upon the People's Law -- where laws are
tailored and administered at the local level where there
is accountability, not at the federal level. Yet, almost
every solution proposed by the environmental lobby is
structured around the feudal/ruler structure of governance
where the federal government is supreme. As a consequence,
Americans all across this nation have been experiencing a
new type of feudal rule. Local citizens are under the
jurisdiction of federal (sometimes state) agents who are
only remotely accountable to them. Nonetheless, by having
jurisdiction over development and land use, these
unaccountable agents control the economic future of their
local communities.
Although Americans can't
put their finger on it, an increasing number know
something is terribly wrong. They blame federal
bureaucrats when, in fact, it is the system that is
causing the abuse and unrest. Both federalism and
feudalism inevitably lead to tyranny. It is worth
noting that James Madison wrote in the Federalist Papers,
"The accumulation of
all powers -- legislative, executive, and judiciary -- in
the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and
whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may
justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."
To trust our freedom to the
chance that our governors and regulators will be
"good" is folly. Patrick Henry asserts,
"Show me that age and
country where the rights and liberties of the people were
placed on the sole chance of their rulers being good men,
without a consequent loss of liberty! I say that the loss
of that dearest privilege has ever followed, with
absolute certainty, every such mad attempt."
Feudalism--The real
cause of the growing unrest in America
Congress has delegated
feudal power to our federal agents and the predictable
tension and unrest has resulted. Fifty-two percent of our
American citizens now say they are afraid of our federal
government. The growing civil unrest that we are now
witnessing throughout America is due to the growing
tyranny resulting from a government that is no longer
responsible to the individual people it governs. Congress
must begin the healing that has to occur in America before
the majority of its Citizens can once again say that they
are not fearful of their federal government. And that
cannot happen until state and local governments have
control over the laws and regulations that affect their
citizens -- as defined in the Constitution. Only then will
the agents of law and enforcement be accountable to the
people they govern.
References
1. Albert
Ellery Bergh, Ed. The Writings of Thomas Jefferson.
20 vols. (Washington: Thomas Jefferson Memorial
Association). 1907. 15:332
2. Adapted
from Skousen, W. Cleon. The Making of America -- The
Substance and Meaning of the Constitution. Washington
DC, The National Center for Constitutional Studies. 1985.
Pg 44.
3. Stanley
Milgram. Obedience to Authority. New York: Harper
Torchbooks. 1974. Also see, Zygumunt Bauman. Modernity
and the Holocaust. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University
Press. 1989.
4. Robert
G. Lee. Broken Trust Broken Land. Wilsonville,
OR: BookPartners. 1994. Pp 27.
5. James
Madison, Notes of debates of the Federal Constitution.
(Bicentennial Edition), 1987. At 76.
6. James
Madison, The Federalist Papers, 10.21-10.22.
For more
information on this subject contact Environmental
Perspectives (207) 945-9878 or the Maine Conservation
Rights Institute at (207) 733-5593.

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Last Updated May 30, 1997 by Michael
Coffman
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