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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MJ who wrote (84426)5/22/2010 11:23:33 AM
From: lorne1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224705
 
Natural Law or nihilism?
May 22, 2010
ELLIS wASHINGTON
wnd.com

Natural law is a [human] participation in the eternal law.
~ St. Thomas Aquinas

Never let a serious crisis to go to waste.

~ Rahm Emanuel (Progressive tactic)

One-hundred fifty years ago, a social Darwinian revolution was unleashed upon civilization and later integrated into every conceivable aspect of society by the progressive movement and modern liberalism. The result, particularly since the 1960s: American law, culture and society have steadily devolved into anarchy and nihilism. Therefore, it has become increasing self-evident to me that civilization's only hope to avert certain societal and constitutional collapse is a return to a Natural Law worldview.

What is Natural Law? Essentially Natural Law is the integration of law and morality. It was the original philosophy of the framers of the Constitution and served as the philosophical basis of all of America's founding documents, including the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Positive Law, or legal positivism, is the separation of legality and morality. It is rooted in social Darwinism and in the totalitarian cult of liberalism and is the origin of many of the most infamous political philosophies and depraved tyrants of the 20th century.

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Dr. Jonathan Dolhenty wrote a fine article on Natural Law titled, "An Overview of Natural Law Theory," stating:

The concept of natural law has taken several forms. The idea began with the ancient Greeks' conception of a universe governed in every particular by an eternal, immutable law and in their distinction between what is just by nature and just by convention. Stoicism provided the most complete classical formulation of natural law. The Stoics argued that the universe is governed by reason, or rational principle; they further argued that all humans have reason within them and can therefore know and obey its law. Because human beings have the faculty of choice (a free will), they will not necessarily obey the law; if they act in accordance with reason, however, they will be "following nature."
Christian philosophers readily adapted Stoic natural law theory, identifying natural law with the law of God. For Thomas Aquinas, natural law is that part of the eternal law of God ("the reason of divine wisdom") which is knowable by human beings by means of their powers of reason. … Like the Stoics, Aquinas believed that a positive law that violates natural law is not true law.

Natural Law can be observed in America's earliest history dating back to the Pilgrims who gave us our first and oldest constitution – The Mayflower Compact (1620) – and the Puritans, whose legacy founded America's oldest and most venerated colleges and universities like Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, Bowdoin, Andover, Middlebury, Amherst, Grinnell and Oberlin.

Natural Law, according to David Adams' book, "Philosophical Problems in the Law," consists of "principles and standards not simply made up by humans but rather part of an objective moral order, present in the universe and accessible to human reason." Thomas Jefferson, in his Declaration of Independence, summarized Natural Law philosophy inherent throughout the Constitution as "… the law of Nature and of Nature's God." The original intent of the Constitution's framers understood that liberty, justice and Veritas (truth) could only be achieved when law and morality were indissolubly and forever integrated as the foundation of the rule of law.

In 2008, I published a book on the world's first international criminal trial titled: "The Nuremberg Trials: Last Tragedy of the Holocaust." This opus is a Natural Law analysis of the legal history, jurisprudence and political philosophy used to judge the Nazi defendants at the Nuremberg Trials (1945-49). My primary efforts focused on the dichotomy between Positive Law (separation of legality and morality) vs. Natural Law (integration of law and morals) jurisprudence and how that fateful choice of Positive Law as the controlling jurisprudence of U.S. law, especially since 1900, has greatly contributed to the existential constitutional crisis plaguing America law, culture and society to this day.

In modern times we see the battle between Natural Law and Positive Law as the Senate Judiciary Committee moves forward in its efforts to confirm President Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Elena Kagan.

What we refer to "liberal" or "activist" judges vs. "conservative" or "originalist" judges simply means those judges or justices on the Supreme Court who put their own personal policy preferences above fidelity to the black-letter text of the Constitution as originally written. To any rational observer, Elena Kagan clearly belongs to the former liberal-activist school of jurisprudence, and Justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia are outstanding examples the originalist, Natural Law school of jurisprudence.

He said he put up with hardships for 20 years as a police officer, “and now I’m at the end of it and I’ve become a target,” he said. “I broke my hand three times. I broke my left ankle. I blew out my knee. In my last two years alone, I made between 350 and 400 arrests, and a lot of those people weren’t volunteering.”

Because he could retire young, he added, it was important to start out with the largest pension possible. In the coming years, inflation will eat away at his benefit. Public pensions in New York City and State have had a cost-of-living adjustment feature since 2000, but it applies only to the first $18,000.

“I concede, I have a very good pension, but what’s that pension going to be worth when I’m 70 years old?” Mr. Tassone said.

Although limited to the first $18,000, the cost-of-living adjustment was the most expensive pension enhancement enacted in recent memory in New York, according to the Independent Budget Office. The cost has, once again, proved higher than expected.

Yonkers still offers full pensions to police after 20 years, but just in theory. For the moment, the city is too broke to send any new cadets to the police academy, and retirees are not being replaced.

Positive Law essentially sought to separate law from morality by replacing the framers' original intent of Natural Law with a social Darwinian worldview. "Substantive due process" was a judge-created doctrine that first appeared in the infamous Dred Scott v. Sanford case of 1857, which held that people of African descent, whether or not they were slaves, were not protected by the Constitution and could never be citizens of the United States. Using substantive due process Dred Scott became precedent as activist judges began reading their own personal policy preferences, prejudices and politics into the Constitution and ignoring or castigating the original intent of the framers.

The solution to America's 150-year constitutional crisis? Return to a Natural Law worldview. Only when Congress, judges, presidents and We the People humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God through Natural Law will civilization witness a true and lasting Renaissance of the mind, soul, spirit, politics and law. Our only other choice is the social anarchy and nihilism the Obama regime is daily unleashing upon America, purposely plunging this once-great nation into societal chaos as a pretext to embezzle more and more of the sacred inalienable rights of We the People.

Remember Rahm's commandment: Never let a serious crisis go to waste!

Thomas Jefferson, one of the great Natural Law philosophers, said it best: In questions of power, then, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him from mischief by the chains of the Constitution!



To: MJ who wrote (84426)5/24/2010 8:53:14 AM
From: Hope Praytochange1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224705
 
Michael Weissenstein, Associated Press Writer, On Sunday May 23, 2010, 4:55 pm EDT
LONDON (AP) -- Six weeks of vacation a year. Retirement at 60. Thousands of euros for having a baby. A good university education for less than the cost of a laptop.

The system known as the European welfare state was built after World War II as the keystone of a shared prosperity meant to prevent future conflict. Generous lifelong benefits have since become a defining feature of modern Europe.

Now the welfare state -- cherished by many Europeans as an alternative to what they see as dog-eat-dog American capitalism -- is coming under its most serious threat in decades: Europe's sovereign debt crisis.

Deep budget cuts are under way across Europe. Although the first round is focused mostly on government payrolls -- the least politically explosive target -- welfare benefits are looking increasingly vulnerable.

"The current welfare state is unaffordable," said Uri Dadush, director of the Carnegie Endowment's International Economics Program. "The crisis has made the day of reckoning closer by several years in virtually all the industrial countries."

Germany will decide next month just how to cut at least 3 billion euros ($3.75 billion) from the budget. The government is suggesting for the first time that it could make fresh cuts to unemployment benefits that include giving Germans under 50 about 60 percent of their last salary before taxes for up to a year. That benefit itself emerged after cuts to an even more generous package about five years ago.

"We have to adjust our social security systems in a way that they motivate people to accept regular work and do not give counterproductive incentives," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told news weekly Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung on Saturday.

The uncertainty over the future of the welfare state is undermining the continent's self-image at a time when other key elements of post-war European identity are fraying.

Large-scale immigration from outside Europe is challenging the continent's assumptions about its dedication to tolerance and liberty as countries move to control individual clothing -- the Islamic veil -- in the name of freedom and equality.

Deeply wary of military conflict, many nations now find themselves nonetheless mired in Afghanistan on behalf of what was supposed to be a North Atlantic alliance, shying away from wholesale pullout while doing their utmost to keep troops from actual combat.

Demographers and economists began warning decades ago that social welfare was doomed by the aging of Europe's baby boomers. Some governments had been trimming and reforming, but now almost all are scrambling to close deficits in order to prevent a wider collapse of confidence in the euro.

"We need to change, to adapt ... for the sake of the protection of our social model," European Union Commissioner Joaquin Almunia of Spain told reporters in Stockholm Thursday.

The move is risky: experts warn the cuts could undermine the growth needed to pull budgets back on a sustainable path.

On Monday, Britain unveils 6 billion pounds ($8.6 billion) in cuts -- mostly to government payrolls and expenses. The government has promised to raise the age at which citizens receive a state pension -- up from 60 to 65 for women, and from 65 to 66 for men. It also plans to toughen the welfare regime, requiring the unemployed to try to find jobs in order to collect benefits.

Britain says it will limit child tax credits and scrap a 250-pound ($360) payment to the families of every newborn. Ministers are reviewing the long-term affordability of the country's generous public sector pensions.

Funding for Britain's nationalized health care service will be protected under the new government, however, and should rise each year to 2015.

France's conservative government is focusing on raising the retirement age. Many workers can now retire at 60 with 50 percent of their average salary. Extra funds are available for retired civil servants, those with three or more children, military veterans and others.

A parliamentary debate is planned for September. Unions in France are organizing a national day of protest marches and strikes on Thursday to demand protection of wages and the retirement age.

In Spain, billions in cuts to state salaries go into effect next month, and the Socialist government has frozen increases in pensions meant to compensate for inflation for at least two years.

"They've hit us really hard," said Federico Carbonero, 92, a retired soldier. He said he was unlikely to live long enough to see the worst of the pension freeze, but had no doubts he would have to start relying on savings to maintain his lifestyle.

Spain is cutting assistance payments for disabled people by 300 million euros ($375 million) and did away with a three-year-old bonus of 2,500 euros ($3,124.25) per new baby. It also has proposed hiking the retirement age for men from 65 to 67.

Countries in northern Europe have done a far better of reforming social welfare and have unemployment systems that focus on re-employing people instead of making their unemployment comfortable, said Gayle Allard, a professor of economic environment and country analysis at the Instituto de Empresa in Madrid.

Denmark and other Nordic countries are known for the world's highest taxes and most generous cradle-to-grave benefits. Denmark has implemented a system known broadly as "flexicurity," which combines flexibility for employers to hire and fire workers with financial security and training to prepare for new jobs.

Denmark had a 7.5 percent unemployment rate in the first quarter of this year, well below the EU average of 9.6 percent. Swedish and Finnish unemployment stood at 8.9 percent. Norway, with some of the world's most generous unemployment benefits fully funded by oil for the forseeable future, has Europe's lowest jobless rate, just 3 percent in April.

Southern European countries that have not moved toward reforming welfare in the same ways are paying a steep price.

After sharp cutbacks imposed as the condition of an international bailout this month, Greeks must now contribute to pension funds for 40 instead of 37 years before retiring, and the age of early retirement is set to 60 at the earliest.

Civil servants with monthly salaries of above 3,000 euros ($3,750) will lose two extra months of salary -- one paid at Christmas, the other split between Easter and summer vacation.

In Portugal, seen as another potential candidate for bailout, the government is focusing on hikes in income, corporate and sales taxes and has avoided drastic changes to welfare entitlements. Unemployment benefits will be cut somewhat and the out-of-work will have to accept any job paying more than 10 percent more than what they would receive in unemployment benefits.

The government is also stepping up checks on welfare claims, freezing public sector pay and slicing public investment.

"There's been a lack of willingness to shift away from welfare as purely social protection towards an approach which has been in much of northern Europe in recent years, which is welfare as social investment," said Iain Begg, a professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science's European Institute.

Otto Fricke, a budget expert for the Free Democrats, the coalition partner of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union, told The Associated Press that no decisions on cuts have been made, but everything is on the table except education, pension funds and financial aid to developing countries. At least one high-ranking CDU member has called for the idea of protecting education to be re-examined, however.

German public education, which was virtually free until 2005, when some of Germany's 16 states started charging tuition fees of 1000 euros ($1,250) a year.

Virtually all Germany's students pay that much or less to attend state-funded universities, including elite institutions. Education isn't as cheap elsewhere in Europe but the 3,290 pounds ($4,720) per year paid by British students at Cambridge is still far less than Americans pay at comparable schools like Harvard, where annual tuition comes in just shy of $35,000.

The idea of cutting education is proving hard to swallow in the face of Germany's promise to contribute up to 147.6 billion euros ($184.5 billion) in loan guarantees to protect Greece and other countries that use the euro from bankruptcy.

"I am worried that this crisis will also affect me on a personal level, for example, that universities in Germany will raise the tuition in order to pay the loan they give to Greece," said Karoline Daederich, a 22-year-old university student from Berlin.

Associated Press writers Juergen Baetz and Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin, Malin Rising and Karl Ritter in Stockholm, David Stringer in London, Veronika Oleksyn in Vienna, Harold Heckle in Madrid, Elaine Ganley in Paris, Elena Becatoros in Athens and Barry Hatton in Lisbon contributed to this report.