How the Constitution Dies

Guest Post by John Wilder

Soldiers heading towards Omaha Beach.

When I was in grade school the teachers spoke of the Constitution with reverence.  As second graders, we listened as the teacher told the story of how it was written and the freedoms it guaranteed us and the responsibilities that it demanded of us.  My grade school teachers were all married women, and they loved America.  It was a small town, and the teachers had grown up in the area.  Some of them had taught their own children and their own grandchildren in the same school where the chalkboard dust, lead paint dust, water from lead-soldered pipes, and asbestos floor tiles soaked into my skin daily.  Even the early reader books were taped together with yellowing cellophane tape at the bindings, and most of the books had been printed decades before.  I got to See Spot Run like legions of boys before me, running my fingers over the same dog-eared pages that had been read for years, young mouths quietly sounding out the words.

And these boys before me, who had sat in the same desks, drew beginning math on the same blackboards, pulling chalk from the same worn, wooden tray that I did, got paddled in the same principal’s office that I did.  They had traveled the world to strange places that their teachers never named when they opened the geography books during the time they spent in second grade.  These were places with foreign names like Guadalcanal.  Bastogne.  Chosin Reservoir.  Da Nang.

One of these boys in particular, a blonde haired young Ranger, was barely eighteen when he was shot climbing the cliffs at Pointe Du Hoc on the sixth of June, 1944.  His sister was a friend of my father.  As a young boy that Ranger sat in that same room, learning the same math decades before I was born.  He sat in that same classroom just a few short years before he was buried in Normandy in late spring at the age of 18.  No member of his family could afford to visit his grave until over fifty years had passed and his sister walked to his grave and touched its cold marble stone and ran her fingers over his name.  Despite that, the young Ranger isn’t lonely – he is surrounded by 9,387 of his comrades who died during the invasion of France.

Rangers climbing Pointe du Hoc.

The teachers, those mothers, in the distant past had taught the children the value of patriotism.  The value of the Constitution.  The belief that freedom was a great gift from both God and our forefathers and was an idea and an ideal worth fighting for was taught to them in school and in church.  Those boys who travelled far wearing Army green, Navy blue, the camouflage of the Marines, and eventually Air Force blue were mainly the sons of farmers, used to hard work that started early in the morning and sometimes went too far into the night when the cows were calving.  The things that they were told that were true were God, freedom, family, and country and that you always had to work hard for these things, and sometimes you had to fight for them.  And sometimes die for them.

Even the cartoons as I was growing up were infused with patriotism:

Corny?  Yes.  

The school was torn down some time ago – I don’t know when.  A bond issue was finally passed, and a new school was built.  There aren’t many more students than when I went there, but there are new classrooms.  These new schools are gleaming with whiteboards and new furniture and new books, and from the pictures you can see that the kids look a lot like the kids from when I went there; but the connection with 100 years of history went when the building was torn down.

Change is inevitable, but the one thing that my teachers taught us was that the Constitution was a rock, something special, something that every American had shared for hundreds of years.  It was important, and it protected us, and protected our freedom.

I believed that, the way the boys that live forever on Pointe du Hoc did.

rangers

Ladders used to scale Pointe du Hoc.

Today, however, the population of the United States is at least 14% foreign born, but I’d bet that number undercounts illegal aliens.  Second generation Americans, people born here of immigrants, account for at least 10% of the population.  A quarter of the population of this country simply has no connection to anything American.  10% were born here, but were raised in a household that had little to no connection to anything American.

I was working in Houston on one particular job, often late into the night.  The cleaning crew came in after 8 PM, and I was often still there.  I’d taken Spanish in school, and would share a sentence or two with the very nice cleaning woman who came by.  She spoke no English.  One day I asked her, in Spanish, “Why don’t you learn English?”  I realized that this nice person would have no chance to move up, no way to take part in the economic miracle that is the United States without English.

“Es muy dificil.”  It’s too difficult.

The cleaning woman is very nice, but has no connection in any meaningful way to the United States.  I’m sure she’s had children by now as 21% of children in the United States have foreign-born mothers.  Her children likewise have had no part in building this country and have no reverence for the principles of its founding, or the sacrifices made along the way to create freedom.  This is similar to me if I moved to say, England, or Denmark.  I love England.  I love Denmark.  I’m ethnically related to those areas and admire both cultures.

If I moved to England I’d always be the Yankee.  Or Amerikansk in Denmark.  My kids, even if I had kids there, wouldn’t be English.  They wouldn’t be Danish.  They’d be the “kids of that American that lives here.”  Maybe if my kids were born there, and then worked hard to assimilate away from the American attitudes and culture of their parents, then they one day the kids they had would be considered English or Danish.  I’m an American, a product of American culture and no citizenship documents will ever change that.

25% of the people in the United States, however, simply aren’t American by any sort of rational criteria.  One out of four – an amazing number and a number that is going to grow based on current trends and census data, perhaps to one in three by 2060.  The United States has never had such high numbers of foreign born in history.

As these numbers grow, the electorate changes to an electorate that has no history of a representative democracy – most people coming to the United States are from places where elections are not free and fair, and in many cases the politicians from those countries are so corrupt to make Illinois look like a Boy Scout® camp.  These are also places where constitutions are meant not for the people, but for the state, and are changed out with stunning regularity, often accompanied by firing squads and atrocity.  They expect better here, but they also are ready-made for the politicians that promise them the world.

The political class, however, is excellent at creating and playing on resentment in new immigrants with no history of good government.  Division is the strength of these politicians.  “Why do these people have a say as to who is an American?”  “Abolish ICE.”  “You deserve free education, free healthcare, free housing, free food.”  “Living wage for all.”  “Common sense gun laws.”  Thankfully, native language broadcasting is available to all of these new residents and new citizens so that they can avoid assimilation into the culture.

These residents also don’t have teachers that teach that the United States is good, that the Constitution is a meaningful document – times have changed and that just isn’t the “woke” take.  They don’t get any of this from their family, either.  Their family simply doesn’t know anything about freedom and the Constitution in most cases, and probably wouldn’t care if they did.  It’s a document that foreigners put together – it is not part of their history at all.

Pointe du Hoc, after it had been taken.

As I said, I had faith in the Constitution.  It was a great wall that both defined and constricted government, but in recent decades “rights” have been made up from layer after layer of interpretation that have nothing to do with the original text.  On the other hand, rights that are written about clearly in plain language are somehow interpreted to be so limited that they hardly exist at all.  But there are still some protections that exist, as long as there’s a majority of five to four.  Change that number?  Watch those liberties evaporate as Justices that admire the constitution of South Africa, the one that’s being interpreted to allow the theft of land, become a majority.

If we have politicians that actively create divisions between Americans with a heritage of limited government and an increasing number of people for whom the history of the United States means nothing, the Constitution won’t mean anything.  It will be a speed bump for those who have no connection to it and who have no love of it.  The Constitution in the hands of those who hate the limitations it puts on them will, in the long run, provide no safety at all as it is interpreted away, as the press revolts against it, and as the newly imported electorate ignores it.

And what meaning will the blonde Ranger of Pointe du Hoc have then?

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19 Comments
anarchyst
anarchyst
March 18, 2019 9:42 am

There used to be a time when just about ANY immigrant who set upon the shores of America was not only grateful, but willing to shed his “old world” ways and support his adopted country. He might have not known the language, and found some American customs and practices “strange”, but he fully embraced the idea that he could be an AMERICAN. He not only embraced the American ideal, but made damn sure that his children fully appreciated the land in which they were born.
Contrast that to today’s immigrant, who is only concerned about one thing–American dollars. Today’s immigrants care not about the founding principles of this country, the Constitutional principles in which our rights are endowed by our Creator, that our “rights” are not granted by government, and that the most important thing about being an American is the sense of freedom that he doesn’t want for himself or his offspring.
Today’s immigrant brings his “old-world” customs and squabbles here, demanding that native-born Americans kowtow to him and change THEIR ways to accommodate his “old-world” ways. His children are not encouraged to become Americans and fully assimilate, but are required to maintain their “old-world” customs and ways, even if they run counter to American customs and mores. These old-world customs and ways quite often are criminal in nature, and do nothing to endear him to native-born Americans. He just does not want to assimilate.
Today’s immigrants do not deserve to be here and should go back to where they came from.

overthecliff
overthecliff
March 18, 2019 9:57 am

We don’t have a constitution anymore because politicians sold it to the highest bidder. It happened slowly over a long period of time. We are fools if we equate capitalism to constitutionality. The robber Barons of yesterday and the digital Elite of today are blood brothers to kings and communists.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
March 18, 2019 10:15 am

Looking at those pictures…those guys were badass. What were they fighting for? Really? I’m told over and over that the military is full of nothing but heroes to be dicksucked over and over. My daughters 41 year old military friend reminds her daily that he is a hero. What an asshole. He and his military friends are doing a pretty fucking shitty job of protecting my freedoms. Wouldn’t you say?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Donkey Balls
March 18, 2019 1:30 pm

The libs have forever changed our military for the worse. Clinton and Obozo in particular.

CCRider
CCRider
March 18, 2019 10:20 am

The constitution, fatally flawed from birth, has long since become worse than a dead letter, i.e. a devise the 1% use for their exclusive purpose. It only worked marginally well when this was a homogeneous nation of white, committed Christians. That’s all but gone now. It’s singular objective was to limit the power and scope of the federal government and it has failed miserably. A society that champions ‘women’s rights’ and ‘animal rights’ has devolved into a society devoid of honor-the cornerstone the constitution was built upon.

Done in Dallas
Done in Dallas
  CCRider
March 18, 2019 11:45 am

The Constitution has failed because the rule of law as failed. No consequences, do as you please. If traitors were held accountable and hung, it would work just fine.

Llpoh
Llpoh
March 18, 2019 10:26 am

The Constitution is a great and wonderous thing.

What is the US? Is it the people? Is it the elected government?

What is oft done in the name of the US is not good. Viet Nam. Iraq. Korea. Afghanistan. Africa. Etc etc etc. Those are not supported by the Constitution.

Perhaps US involvement in WW2 was warranted. Perhaps not. But I do not measure a nation by its preparedness to fight in foreign wars, but rather foremost I measure it in how it treats and defends and secures the freedom of its people at home. If I thought the US was doing that well, I might well still be there.

starfcker
starfcker
  Llpoh
March 18, 2019 11:44 am

First, kill all the lawyers

Rich
Rich
March 18, 2019 10:32 am

I don’t recall signing the constitution. As far as immigration, now I know how the Indians felt.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Rich
March 18, 2019 12:03 pm

When they actually kick you out of your home, and make you walk 1000 miles with little or no food and water, through the dead of winter, get back to us.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
March 18, 2019 1:33 pm

Possession is 9/10ths of the law. Takes guts to protect what is yours, especially when our government has sold us out.

Rich
Rich
  Anonymous
March 20, 2019 8:07 am

They can’t kick me out of my property cuz I mixed my labor with it , just like Johnny Locke says and now it’s no longer communal property but mine as in property rights. But I guess the dirty lowdown fork tongue sons of motherless goats could steal it…..

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
March 18, 2019 10:46 am

The First Amendment should add: “However, anything you say can and will be used against you by TPTB. Nothing that offends TPTB may be disseminated in print, spoken at an approved rally or broadcast electronically.”

flash
flash
March 18, 2019 10:52 am

George -Son of Satan -Bush was right. It’s just a G-dam piece of paper . God given inalienable rights , whether modern Americans have the will to defend them or not, existed before the Constitution and will exist after it’s completely shredded by the two parties of Bolshevik and Zionists .

We get what we allow and deservedly so , but thanks to God, some will not go quietly into the night. This is what a real Christian looks like.

An Open Letter To Our Legislators, Judges And Lawmen

niebo
niebo
March 18, 2019 11:09 am

My old man was a constitutionalist, and he saw coming in the 80’s what we are dealing with now. He explained the difference between a republic and a democracy and stressed that the most important thing to understand was that, regardless of who was supposed to vote for the senators who went to Washington (used to be the state assemblies, NOT the citizens, and a derelict senator was MUCH easier to recall when the state governments elected them, just sayin’), regardless of length of terms and whether there were limits or not, and regardless of “party” affiliation of specific candidates, the MOST important part of the constitution is the Bill of Rights, because the mob could otherwise rule but they were forbidden from taking away those guaranteed, protected rights.

Of course, the constitution was drafted by men who valued independence and the right to live and let live.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  niebo
March 18, 2019 1:34 pm

Then along came traitors like barry sotero.

Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
March 18, 2019 3:06 pm

The constitution, shall not, be respected.

splurge
splurge
  Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
March 18, 2019 3:52 pm

Seems to be the law of the land.

Michael Thomas
Michael Thomas
March 18, 2019 9:11 pm

If the demoKKKrats win the White House in 2020, you can kiss the Constitution goodbye. Bigly.