A web magazine dedicated to the historical legacy and enduring political discourse of the United States. | Jared Manning, Editor

Saturday, August 11, 2018

From the Editor: Alex Jones and Censorship.



With the recent knee-jerk fervor over talk radio host Alex Jones being de-platformed from multiple mainstream websites across the internet (YouTube, Facebook, Spotify, Apple, and Google just to name a few), I thought it prudent to touch upon the concept of censorship in the modern age. Specifically, how many corporations are acting as de facto agents of left-leaning ideology to control the natural flow of information on the internet.

Silencing your enemy only serves to bolster their claims of oppression and disenfranchisement. Why? Because censoring your opposition reflects a condition of fear. If American history has taught us anything, it is that sound ideas stand the test of time. Ideas will either endure upon their own merits, or they will be forgotten. When one set of ideas are censored in the service of protecting another set of ideas, this only proves that the former are legitimate, substantive, and inspiring. The most effective way to let your adversary fail is by providing them with an open platform to spread their fruitless message. Faulty ideas inherently prove to be their own demise. Obviously, Jones’ message wasn’t so defective after all, thereby making large corporations like Google and Apple fearful of his claims.

For many years, Jones warned his listeners that corporations would seek to silence him permanently and limit his ability to speak freely. By de-platforming him, these very corporations are proving Jones right. The left-leaning globalist agenda is quite real… and corporations will do anything to preserve it. They’re afraid of men like Alex Jones, and they have every right to be.

Our nation was founded upon the principle that citizens have the right to a free and open dialogue with their peers (in fact, the First Amendment protects it). Even if said ideas are inaccurate or potentially offensive, they deserve the same protections under the law as any other speech. Censorship stands in opposition to that very principle set forth by our founders. Accordingly, the concept of censorship is as un-American as socialism; it just doesn’t work in a free republic. All citizens have the same right to express their ideas, even those I personally disagree with. By preserving the right to free speech for your rival, you ultimately preserve your own right to free speech as well.

Monday, August 6, 2018

Why We Need the Electoral College.

With the recent 2016 Presidential election, there's been a great deal of debate about whether or not the Electoral College is necessary for our country, or if its an antiquated political mechanism that should be abolished. Only five candidates in history have won the Presidency despite losing the overall popular vote: John Quincy Adams in 1824, Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876, Benjamin Harrison in 1888, George W. Bush in 2000, and Donald Trump in 2016. Trump won the election despite losing the popular vote by approximately 2 to 3 million votes (not taking into consideration accounting errors or potential fraud).

Is it fair for a candidate to become President without winning the popular vote? I answer with a resounding yes! Here's why.

The Electoral College was purposefully designed by the Founding Fathers to decentralize power between the states and to lessen the likelihood that a rampant bout of corruption in any one specific state could taint the overall election. As such, we the voters indirectly cast our ballots for President when we visit the voting booth. When we vote for a particular candidate, what we're actually voting for are state electors whom promise to vote for the candidate chosen by their fellow residents.

For example, the state of Wisconsin is currently allotted 10 Presidential electors. In the 2016 election, the voters of Wisconsin went for Donald Trump. Accordingly, the 10 selected Presidential electors of Wisconsin followed the will of the state's residents and directly cast their elector votes for Trump. Because she did not win the popular vote in Wisconsin, Hillary Clinton was awarded zero votes.

To win a Presidential election, a candidate has to garner the majority of all available Electoral College votes. Currently, that majority is 270 out of a total 538. Each state awards a different number of Electoral College votes, depending upon the population size of the respective state. California, with approximately 40 million residents, awards 55 electoral votes. New Hampshire has 1.3 million residents and awards 4 votes. Alabama has 4.8 million residents and awards 9 electoral votes. As you can see, each state is different when it comes to their overall relevance to the outcome of the Presidential election. More populous states like California are very important to the eventual outcome. Less populous states like New Hampshire are not as important. States like Alabama with moderately-sized populations are somewhat important.

By creating the Electoral College, the Founders foresaw the power that more populous states would enjoy during elections and established a barrier to such unfairness. Were the President to be elected directly by popular vote, states with smaller populations would be outright ignored by the candidates. Why? Because the larger states would have far more voters. Their wants and needs would be more readily addressed by the potential candidates. States with smaller populations would be avoided altogether; their needs would be wholly disregarded. Under a direct popular vote system, large urban centers like New York City, Philadelphia, Chicago, Seattle, Dallas, Denver, and Los Angeles would ultimately dictate policy to the rest of the entire country. Despite their being different governmental needs between those living in urban and rural settings, those living in large urban areas would have all the say in who was elected President. Farmers in Iowa would be ignored. Real estate agents in Delaware would not be heard. Waitresses in Idaho would be all but forgotten.


2016 Presidential Election Results by County -- Clinton (Blue) | Trump (Red)


The image above shows the breakdown by county of the 2016 Presidential election results. As visible, the number of counties in red that voted for Donald Trump far outweigh the number of counties in blue that voted for Hillary Clinton. This directly illustrates why the Electoral College is still necessary. Without it, the very select high-population areas in blue (cities like LA, New York, and Philadelphia) would dictate how the government operates for the entire rest of the country (often referred to as fly-over country). Remember, our republic is a union of States, not just people. Think of your own state as like a mini-country (which it earnestly is in the eyes of the Founding Fathers).

The Electoral College is absolutely necessary to the liberty of our nation, and will continue to be so for as long as we're privileged enough to grace this planet.

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

What is the Solemn Compact?


In a letter to his law associate William Cushing dated June 9, 1776, John Adams writes:

"It would give me great Pleasure to ride this Eastern Circuit with you, and prate before you at the Bar, as I used to do. But I am destined to another Fate, to Drudgery of the most wasting, exhausting, consuming Kind, that I ever went through in my whole Life. Objects of the most Stupendous Magnitude, Measures in which the Lives and Liberties of Millions, born and unborn are most essentially interested, are now before Us. We are in the very midst of a Revolution, the most compleat, unexpected, and remarkable of any in the History of Nations. A few Matters must be dispatched before I can return. Every Colony must be induced to institute a perfect Government. All the Colonies must confederate together, in some Solemn Compact. The Colonies must be declared free and independent states, and Embassadors, must be Sent abroad to foreign Courts, to solicit their Acknowledgment of Us, as Sovereign States, and to form with them, at least with some of them commercial Treaties of Friendship and Alliance. When these Things shall be once well finished, or in a Way of being so, I shall think that I have answered the End of my Creation, and sing with Pleasure my Nunc Dimittes, or if it should be the Will of Heaven that I should live a little longer, return to my Farm and Family, ride Circuits, plead Law, or judge Causes, just as you please."

Adams wrote this letter from the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was attending the Second Continental Congress as the lead delegate of the Massachusetts Colony. Deeply intertwined with the rapidly developing task of declaring the American Colonies independent from Great Britain, Adams sat at the very center of our blossoming democracy. Just two days prior to writing this letter, Adams had seconded the Lee Resolution, of which he also wrote the preamble to the document. The Lee Resolution is better known as the Resolution for Independence, which would be passed by the Second Continental Congress on July 2, 1776. Two days later on July 4, the Declaration of Independence would announce this resolution to the world over. America was a free nation. Great Britain was no longer in charge.

Most importantly, John Adams was there to make it all happen.


Considered by his fellow Founding Fathers to be the foremost patriot of the era, Adams pushed long and hard to secede from Great Britain. Many of the other delegates would detail Adams' efforts in their personal journals and letters, pinpointing him as the most vocal man leading the charge for independence. His work often came at the expense of his own family; much of this hardship is revealed in the countless letters exchanged between John and his wife Abigail. It was clear to Adams that the Thirteen Colonies were bound to one another by fate. The bond shared by the colonies was practically graced by a divine touch in his estimation, and further strengthened by their mutual resolve for independence and liberty. The only way forward was together, in his sound judgment. The Solemn Compact, as he describes in the letter to Cushing, would be the means to achieving a perfect government. Adams could see the future budding before him – an unbreakable union formed by the colonies; each colony distinct but also equal in prestige.

Adams didn’t know it at the time, but his desire to form a solemn compact would eventually lead to the United States Constitution. Adams would later reuse the term solemn compact while writing the Constitution for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1779, which was later ratified in 1780. Unsurprisingly, the Massachusetts Constitution served as the model for the US Constitution, which was ratified a few years later in 1787. Notably, the Massachusetts Constitution is the oldest functioning written constitution in continuous effect in the entire world. Without question, Adams is responsible for it all.

When John Adams spoke of the Solemn Compact, I believe he fully anticipated the greatest nation to ever exist upon this earth. His visionary planning was unequivocally original in both depth and clairvoyance. I take the Solemn Compact very seriously. It’s a triumphant manifestation of our dear country long before it ever came to exist. It also proves that the bond we share as Americans is irrefutably extraordinary. The aim of this website is simple -- to promote the common good of the United States, to relate the history of our nation, and to debate the way ahead.

I hope we can achieve this mission, for Mr. Adams' sake. We owe that much to him, at least.