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Friday, October 14, 2011

Federalist 51 - Controlling the Government


 Paradox
   The paradox that lies in creating a workable government is in creating a power composed of...
"...several constituent parts may, by their mutual relations, be the means of keeping each other in their proper places."
   After this goal is set, one realizes the difficulty in its execution. If one were to suppose, like Madison, that the voice of the people were sufficient to separate these powers and control them, then their position would be weakened by the following predicaments:
  • A panel of Judges being politically motivated and impartial.
  • A Congress so bound to it's majority constituency that it quashes the minority.
   The first is handled well by having Judges be appointed by the executive branch. They should have all the proper merits based on the judgment of the president. These merits can be confirmed or rejected by the senate in their support or refusal of the executive appointment, thus checking the power of the executive branch over the judicial.
   Further guards are established by having a long tenure of office, enabling judges to act correctly without the fear of being displaced by the next election. This tenure also works to further insulate them from the whims of the 4 year executiveor 6 year senator.

   The second predicament is managed by recognizing many division of sects, or rather, classifications of the citizens. Though there may be a majority, does not necessarily embody a greater part of the population when compared to the combined minorities. So long as the people are put into several different groups, no one will rise above the other. Furthermore, the majority may be compelled to support the minority if they wish to maintain their own security when they fall out of favour with the larger part of the population.

Primary Control
   The voice of the people is the first obstacle to a government becoming too strong. Since the government is an extension of the rights of the people, it is reasonable to establish democracy as the ruling power. This enables the most good to be had by the greatest number of people.
    Tow of the three federal branches of government are limited to officials elected by the people. The states are also limited in this same regard, with high level offices being elected, rather than appointed. This fracturing of individual or branch power in government eliminates the danger of one corrupt person or body from ruining the system.
   
Auxiliary Precautions
   Auxiliary precautions are those that lie within the government itself. Independent of the people, these measured ensure further security of the rights of the people. One of these precautions is to divide the state governments from the federal, in essence having a cluster of 'voters' (states) in control of the higher powers by regulating their respective states as they see fit.
   Also included in these safeguards is the separation of federal powers into three branches, each made to operate independently of the others. Beyond this, the legislative branch, the most powerful in a republic, is separated into two powers. This is the solution to it exerting too much power. As stated by James Madison, the answer is:
"...to divide the legislature into different branches; and to render them, by different modes of election and different principles of action, as little connected with each other as the nature of their common functions and their common dependence on the society will admit."
    In conclusion, our constitution established the division and separation of powers. It also establishes the rights of the people, tenures of office, and the splitting of congress into two separate houses. All these things combined with the governing power of the people will create a government that is both controlled by itself, and by the people it governs.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Divine Inspiration - The Constituion

    The longest standing constitution of our day was written be men over two hundred years ago. It stands as the highest law of our country, and the process of adding too, and amending pieces of the constitution has contributed to it's utility though modification. The fundamental principals of it however, remain similar to if not exactly the same as the original document.


Means and Action
   Members of the continental congress were educated, and many knew of and expounded on the principles of John Locke, in that men not only had the right to rebel, but a duty if the situation required it. Samuel Adams took the argument further when he published pamphlets about divinely given or natural rights. 
   He expressed to the colonists that their rights were given to them by God, and not my a Monarch, whether he claimed divine appointment or not. Not fearing the power of the colonial authorities he was offending, Sam Adams inspiration convinced the colonists that they were above the tyrannical law when resisting the acts of the British Parliament. He had the means through his word craft and publishing, and acted on it. 
   Later he was the one to move that meetings of the constitutional convention be started with a prayer. Although the gospel had not been restored yet, God acknowledges the prayers of the righteous, and their offering likely helped them be more sensitive to the spirit while drafting the constitution.


Humble Assembly

   Further contributing to the delegates ability to receive inspiration were the circumstances and situations members had been raised in or exposed to. Delegates from Pennsylvania had been refused protection from state militia because of the inability of the Congress to enforce the protection of its citizens from domestic threats.
  Compounding the frustration of many of the delegates was the lack of funds from their respective states. Many were not reimbursed for travel expenses, and for a time spent money of their own to take part in congressional and constitutional conventions many miles away.


Reference to Inspiration

   George Washington, in expressing his awe of the newly drafter Constitution, stated that:
 “It appears to me, then, little short of a miracle, that the delegates from so many different states (which states you know are also different from each other in their manners, circumstances, and prejudices) should unite in forming a system of national Government, so little liable to well-founded objections.”
   Further adding  to its divine implications, we have God stating its purpose in the Doctrine & Covenants of the Church:
"77 According to the laws and constitution of the people, which I have suffered to be established, and should be maintained for the rights and protection of all flesh, according to just and holy principles;
 78 That every man may act in doctrine and principle pertaining to futurity, according to the moral agency which I have given unto him, that every man may be accountable for his own sins in the day of judgment.
 79 Therefore, it is not right that any man should be in bondage one to another."
   These purposes were protected by the constitution which outlines a system of powers and courts to protect the liberty of the people. One branch would not have enough power to oppress another or the citizens, and citizens rights would only be taken away in fair trials in established courts.