We are all republicans
As the political rhetoric heats up between now and November 2012, it is good to remember that behind our partisan divide over budgets and abortion we are all Americans. But we should also give thought to what that means. In Keeping Our Republic, Principles for a Political Reformation, Matthew Parks and David Corbin, political scientists at The King’s College and columnists for WORLDmag.com, remind us that what unites us as Americans—whether we are Democrats or Republicans, liberals or conservatives—and what sets us apart among the nations is our republican form of government. Many countries try to steal moral standing from that noble term by calling themselves republics. The People’s Republic of China, for example. But they are stealing honor from freedom to disguise the shame of their tyranny.
According to Parks and Corbin, we are losing our freedom in America and slipping into government as mastery, the government of lords over subjects. On paper, in our Constitution, we have the same republican institutions we have had since 1789 (with important amendments). But in practice we have been surrendering our liberty to a technocratic, administrative state, or what Angelo Codevilla calls “the ruling class.”
So Parks and Corbin have given their fellow citizens this little volume to school us in a kind of republicanism 101 with the hope of leading a “political reformation.” From the start, they point the finger at the “bipartisan ruling class” that sees itself having “a natural right to command” us, and has been pushing us along “the progressive abandonment of our republican principles.” But the authors lay blame also at the feet of ordinary Americans: “[W]e have lost touch with what it means to be a citizen of a republic.” The remedy for the current American decline, they argue, is “that we relearn how to think and how to act like republicans.”
To help us in our re-education, Parks and Corbin cover our “republican principles” in six chapters that address current political points of division from the standpoint of what ought to be fundamental points of agreement taken from our founding era and founding documents. The titles of most of these chapters come as no surprise—equality, responsibility, justice, lawfulness. But two chapters—honor and prudence—signal the reader that, despite the book’s concise simplicity, this is no mere high school civics primer, though it’s useful in that role.
As the delegates left Independence Hall at the close to the Constitutional Convention in 1787, someone asked Benjamin Franklin, “Well Doctor, what have we got—a republic or a monarchy?” Franklin’s response: “A republic, if you can keep it.” He knew that popular government is a delicate institution that depends on a citizenry understanding the principles of liberty and sacrificing the immediate pleasures of self-indulgence for the noble prospect of self-government. This book is for reconstituting citizens who can in turn reclaim their republic and the dignity of their own liberty.

















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back to top18 Comments to “We are all republicans”
James Dobson mentions the following in one of his books.
“Anthropologist J.D. Unwin conducted an exhaustive study of the 88 civilizations which have existed in the history of the world. Each culture has reflected a similar life cycle, beginning with a strict code of sexual conduct and ending with the demand for complete ‘freedom’ to express individual passion. Unwin reports that every society which extended sexual permissiveness to its people was soon to perish. There have been no exceptions.”
As our country continues to turn away from God we will see more destruction come. The solid foundation of God’s word and will, replaced with the sinking sand of mans over extended freedom and rights.
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But let’s face it — it’s not just America! All the western countries have followed this path, which is why they don’t recognize the danger that is Islam.
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I somehow doubt the Greeks had a strict code of sexual conduct nor the Romans. Nor the Mongols, and even the European empires did not start out with sexual purity.
The problem for most empires and civilization is when the elites (who control the government) no longer identify with the empire/republic/civilization, and thus feel no obligation to pay the necessary taxes to maintain the state. In many cases this is accompanied by almost constant warfare as the empire(or whatever) tries to take what they can no longer purchase or trade.
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You’re right NJLAWER.
Strong families are the building block of society. That, which weakens the family, weakens its nation.
Christ’s love makes us want to. Islam says we have to.
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America is not forever. God’s word is forever. Our ultimate trust is not in a form of government here on earth, but in God’s government of the universe. Preserving the union indefinitely is not the ultimate end, but faith, virtue, and above all God’s glory.
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Yeah, HRW, it’s all about taxes. How old are you?
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taxes are the financial responsibility citizens have to maintain their state, one could expand on the causes of decline to be the lack of responsibility in general. However without the money not much else can be done.
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HRW – those empires no longer exist. Thus, you prove the author’s point.
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“The problem for most empires and civilization is when the elites (who control the government) no longer identify with the empire/republic/civilization, and thus feel no obligation to pay the necessary taxes to maintain the state. In many cases this is accompanied by almost constant warfare as the empire(or whatever) tries to take what they can no longer purchase or trade.”
And how did most start? By war.
Identifying with your populace may help internal stability. But any arrogance that ignores the arrogance of other empires/nations is what has often led to the demise of an empire.
It hardly has anything to do with paying taxes.
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Actually, I’d like to flesh out HRW’s point.
Our elite ruling class, (elected liberals of both parties to the greater extent, and just to be fair, elected conservatives) have stopped identifying with the common man and have forgotten the lessons of America’s founding history.
I intend to read this book.
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Buzzy: Dobosn’s claim is that these societies started with a strict code of sexual morality and then declined as they loosened it.
HRW pointed out that’s not true — at least some of them never had a strict sexual morality code.
That does NOT prove Dobson’s point, it proves Dobson wrong.
Rome is a good example. Rome, as Republic and as Empire, endured for nearly 2,000 years. It took longer to fall than the United States has existed. And yet it’s sexual conduct mores were never anything like what Dobson wants you to think they were.
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I’ll agree with you Conan. Rome wasn’t any better, but all Dobson has really found is that every empire, every nation amongst the 88 examined has poor sexual conduct. Humans are sinners.
Rome is a good example of how the western half became more militarily dependent in order to maintain control and how the eastern half got crushed by a bigger stick later.
The parallels to the US with Rome are pretty interesting.
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Yeah, and therefore, blaming loosening sexual mores for decline and fall of civilizations is wrong; and claiming that history supports the thesis when it doesn’t is dishonest.
Civilizations decline and fall for a lot of different reasons and usually a combination of them.
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Well, in the least you could say that where empires are declining, they also have loose sexual morals.
In some cases it may have been a result of sexual immorality, and in other cases the sexual immorality may have been a consequence.
For the US, increasing sexual immorality is a result of the family breakdown. The family breakdown is associated with a host of problems.
Will that be the cause of the US if it ends or continually declines? Not necessarily, but perhaps we should be wary as looser sexual morals at least accompany such declines.
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I did some looking around on the internet for J.D. Unwin’s book, “Sex and Culture”. It is very rare and only one used was listed on Amazon and it was for over $900.00. It was published in 1934. The reviews were very interesting. I would like to see WM do a review of the book. It looks like it might be able to be read on line.
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Here is an interesting link that says:
THE DESTRUCTION OF MARRIAGE PRECEDES
THE DEATH OF A CULTURE
http://www.traditionalvalues.org/pdf_files/deathofmarriage.pdf
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More links on J.D. Unwin’s book, “Sex and Culture” and there are many more.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/1994/december12/4te080.html
http://www.egionline.org/SexandCulture.html
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I wouldn’t celebrate “our republican form of government” given the historical fact that it both institutionalized slavery and destroyed itself in the Civil War. We should celebrate instead the “new birth of freedom” that was expressed in the postwar Amendments and finally realized in the Civil Rights Act.
Our form of government metamorphosed into a democracy, but we still suffer from vestiges of the old slave republic in the anti-democratic Senate. It’s OK to hate that, as even some of the founders hated it.
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