Friday, July 17, 2009

The Influence of 1773

After posting my 4th of July blog, I wanted to write a follow-up, or an epilogue of sorts, to explain my thought process in writing it.


Believe it or not, the first words written for that entry started over a year ago in Florida. After watching the Dow begin its brutal freefall, taxes being placed on items such as soda in New York and Hurricane Katrina victims still living in FEMA run trailers, I felt that the mind set of this country had started to go down a path that contradicted everything we should believe as Americans.



After writing down the general ideas I wanted to convey, I sat on the outline for some time, waiting on the right moment to post a blog such as that. As a matter of fact, I never really looked at it again and almost forgot about it until the tea parties (TEA - Taxed Enough Already) of this past April.



Unlike the original Boston Tea Party, the protesters of this past April weren’t railing against taxation, but more about the taxing and oppressive nature of a government that is on the verge of running our lives. In the spirit of the original act, today’s tea parties showed a motivating sprit in the original fight for freedom.



While in my hotel room on vacation this past April 15th, I watched and was inspired to finish the original blog I started last year. The tea parties embodied what I wanted to share and pushed me to complete a blog on an emotional high. Seeing Democrats and Republicans, conservatives and liberals protesting against not only taxes, but big government intrusion was inspiring. To me, it showed a grass-roots spirit that is hopefully only beginning.



In turn, I naturally held on to ‘What We Fought For’ till the 4th of July. It only seemed fitting to post a blog about our original fight for freedom on the anniversary of our day of Declaration.



If nothing else, I’m hopeful that we will eventually enter an era of common sense. With big government healthcare and other ultra-liberal projects around the corner, our government has the feel of a power hungry control freak rather than an instrument of promoting liberty.



After all, in Common Sense by Thomas Paine, he said, “Society in every state is a blessing, but government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one; for when we suffer or are exposed to the same miseries by a government, which we might expect in a country without government, our calamity is heightened by reflecting that we furnish the means by which we suffer.”



ER

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