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233 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Freedom Daily
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Loving Your Country and Hating Your Government
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by Jacob G. Hornberger, October 1995
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Several months ago, President Clinton condemned Americans who exposed and
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criticized wrongdoing by the U.S. government. The president said: "There's
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nothing patriotic about hating your government or pretending you can hate your
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government but love your country."
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Let us examine the implications of the president's claim.
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In the 1930s and throughout World War II, there were a small group of German
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citizens who sacrificed their lives resisting the Nazi regime. They believed
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that the true patriot was the person who lived his life according to a certain
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set of moral principles. When one's own government violated those principles,
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it was the duty of the patriot, these Germans believed, to resist.
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Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime, on the other hand, believed that the real
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patriot is the citizen who supports his government, especially in times of
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crisis and war. The traitors, in their eyes, were the Germans who opposed the
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Nazi government, especially after the war had begun.
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The story of the small number of Germans who resisted the Nazi regime is told
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in a recent book-- _An Honourable Defeat_ (1994) by Anton Gill. Gill points out
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that by the end of the war, most of the German resisters had been identified by
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the Gestapo and murdered. Gill points out:
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"That this is the story of a defeat none will doubt. Some will dispute that it
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was an honourable one. It is certainly not the story of a failure. Against
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terrible odds and in appalling circumstances a small group of people kept the
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spirit of German integrity alive, and with it the elusive spirit of humanity.
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We should all be grateful to them for that."
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What would President Clinton say about these resisters? Undoubtedly, he would
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call them troublemaking traitors to the Nazi regime. After all, the president
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would ask, how could these people claim to love their country and, at the same
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time, claim to hate the Nazi government? The real patriot, the president would
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say, was the German citizen who loved his country and, therefore, his
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government. As President Clinton would have said to the German resisters,
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"There's nothing patriotic about hating your government or pretending you can
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hate your government but love your country."
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What about the British colonists living in American in 1776? They certainly had
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no love for their government. When we celebrate the Fourth of July, it is easy
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to forget the real implications of what happened during the fight for
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independence. It is important to remember that George Washington, Thomas
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Jefferson, James Madison, John Adams, John Hancock, and the like were not
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American citizens when they signed the Declaration of Independence. They were
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as British as you and I are Americans. And they hated the philosophy and
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policies of King George--taxation, economic regulation, immigration controls,
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trade restrictions, and so forth.
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The colonists were violent men. They did everything they could to kill the
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soldiers who fought on the side of their own government. On the other hand,
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British soldiers did all they could to bring death to their fellow citizens. As
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we celebrate the Fourth of July each year with our fireworks and picnics, we
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tend to forget that real people with real families were deliberately killed on
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both sides of the conflict.
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Were the colonists patriots? Certainly the British government did not think so.
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Nathan Hale (who regretted that he had but one life to give for _his country_)
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was hung because he was a traitor to _his government_. If the rebellion had
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failed, there is no doubt that the signers of the Declaration of Independence
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would have all been put to death by their own government officials--for
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treason.
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What would be President Clinton's position with respect to the War for
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Independence? On the surface, he would, of course, sing the praises of
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America's Founding Fathers and American Independence Day. But this would only
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mask a deep-seated resentment against the colonists. What gave them the right
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to take up arms against their own government? Clinton would ask. They had no
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right to resist tyranny by force. They should have continued to plead and lobby
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for political representation in the Parliament. William Jefferson Clinton would
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have said to Thomas Jefferson: "There's nothing patriotic about hating your
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government or pretending you can hate your government but love your country."
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A hundred and fifty years ago, a small band of Mexican citizens took up arms
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against its own government. Despite popular misconceptions, Sam Houston, Jim
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Bowie, David Crockett, William Travis, and the other rebels at the Alamo,
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Goliad, and San Jacinto were not Americans. They were not Texans. They were
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Mexican citizens. They had pledged allegiance to the flag of the Republic of
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Mexico. Why did they engage in violent acts against their own government
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officials? Because they hated the regulations and the taxation that the Mexican
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president, Santa Ana, was imposing on them.
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Were the rebels patriots or traitors? Their position was that patriotism meant
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devotion to ideas like liberty and property. They believed that the real
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patriot--the person who loves freedom--resists his own government when his
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government becomes destructive of fundamental rights. Of course, Santa Ana took
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the position that these Mexicans were, instead, traitors to their government
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and their country.
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Unfortunately, President Clinton would share Santa Ana's perspective. By
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becoming Mexican citizens, he would say, the colonists had pledged to support
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their government officials, even when the latter were taxing and regulating
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them. It was wrong, President Clinton would claim, for the Mexican colonists to
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have considered themselves patriots. After all, "There's nothing patriotic
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about hating your government or pretending you can hate your government but
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love your country."
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Actually, the president's mind-set is the same as that held by tyrants
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throughout history. In the mind of the ruler, the government and the country
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are one and the same. The citizen who has the temerity to expose and criticize
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wrongdoing by his own government is, ipso facto, a traitor to his country. The
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citizen who supports his government's conduct, no matter how evil or
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destructive--and who doesn't ask uncomfortable questions--is a real "loyalist."
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Consider the deaths at Ruby Ridge and Waco. At Ruby Ridge, U.S. government
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officials persuaded Randy Weaver to commit a crime--selling them a shotgun that
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was one-fourth inch too short. After a U.S. marshal was killed in a subsequent
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shoot-out at the Weaver home, the FBI put out the following order: Do not
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demand a surrender; do not try to arrest; we do not want a jury trial here;
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instead, take them out; kill them all; shoot them until they are dead; teach
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them that no one kills a federal official, not even in self-defense; but make
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it look good by ensuring that the victims were armed. So, after having shot
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Weaver's 14-year-old son in the back, the feds shot Weaver's wife Vicki in the
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head. Fortunately, they were unsuccessful in killing Weaver and were humiliated
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by the jury at Weaver's trial.
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Was that the end of it? Oh, no. The FBI then engaged in a cover-up of this
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Latin American-style death squad's conduct. FBI officials falsified and
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destroyed documents, perjured themselves, conspired to obstruct justice, and
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refused to obey orders from the U.S. Attorney's Office. In their minds, the FBI
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is an independent, national, patriotic police force (like the Gestapo and the
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KGB) that can punish citizens with impunity, without the time and trouble of a
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trial, and without having to answer to anyone.
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Has any federal official been brought to trial for murder, perjury, conspiracy,
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or obstruction of justice? Of course not. The feds have tried to buy justice by
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paying Weaver and his children $3.1 million. The money, of course, came from
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American taxpayers, not those who committed the crimes. What happens if a
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taxpayer refuses to pay his taxes by claiming that the taxpayer did not commit
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the crimes? They kill him and call it "resisting arrest." All of this is what
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Justice Department employees term "justice."
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Of course, the federal attitude towards what happened at Waco is exactly the
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same. Federal officials secured a search warrant from a federal judge under a
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perjured affidavit. They decided against a low-profile search of the premises
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and against apprehending the Branch Davidian leader--David Koresh-- outside the
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compound. They needed a bigger "splash" for upcoming budget hearings.
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So, the feds planned a high-profile raid that they termed "Showtime." But
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"Showtime" did not quite work out as planned, for several federal officials
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lost their lives in the raid. And the deaths of those officials ultimately
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sealed the fate of the Branch Davidians. No one can ever accuse U.S. government
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officials of playing "softball"--"kill a federal official, and you won't have
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to worry about a trial or anything else."
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The recent movie _Braveheart_ shows that political attitudes toward defiant
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citizenry have not changed much over the centuries. The attitude of King Edward
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and his minions toward the Scottish people many centuries ago was quite similar
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to that of President Clinton and his underlings toward American dissidents.
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King Edward had Scottish people raped, tortured, and hanged for failing to pay
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proper deference to His Royalty; and His Highness never had even one ounce of
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remorse.
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Is President Clinton's and the Democrats' attitude toward American dissidents
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any different? It is true that FBI and BATF officials did not rape Vicki Weaver
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before they killed her--and that they did not rape the Branch Davidian women
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before they gassed and burned them. And we should give credit where credit is
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due. But is there _any remorse whatsoever_ over the political killings of
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innocent people?
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In the recent congressional hearings on Waco, the Democrats, led by Congressman
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Charles Schumer, made a grand spectacle of being concerned about child abuse in
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the Branch Davidian compound. The implication was this: "Our concern for the
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Branch Davidian children is evidenced by our concern about possible child abuse
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in the compound."
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What nonsense. The truth is that the Democrats did not care one bit for the
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Branch Davidian children or for any other individual who was gassed and burned
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alive in the compound. How do we know this? Because, again, _there is not one
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bit of remorse for the loss of life at Waco_. The Democratic attitude is
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instead the same as that held by the FBI and the BATF: These were white-trash,
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weird people, and so it is no big deal that they--and their children--died.
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Moreover, the Democrats feel that since David Koresh might have been engaged in
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child abuse, then federal officials had the right to kill him without a trial
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(despite the fact that he is innocent until proven guilty)--and, in the
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process, to kill the other hundred people who were not even accused of child
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abuse (including the dead children).
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And the Republicans? They are similar to the nobles in _Braveheart_. The nobles
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would pontificate on the virtues of freedom and the importance of principle.
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But as soon as the King offered them money and lands, the nobles would betray
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all of their ideals. Is this not the case with Republicans? Republicans are
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notorious for talking the libertarian talk--even now calling themselves
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libertarians--but they are totally unable to walk the libertarian walk. Offer
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them votes or campaign contributions or a congressional chairmanship, and they
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sell their souls very easily.
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Unfortunately, during the recent hearings on Waco, the Republicans were so
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concerned with upholding their law-and-order image that they treated the FBI
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and BATF with kid gloves. The Republicans think that if they expose police
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murders, conspiracies, perjuries, and cover-ups, this might hamper law
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enforcement in the future. Thus, Republicans did not even try to secure the
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appointment of an independent counsel to investigate and prosecute the FBI and
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BATF death-squad activity. More important, the Republicans failed to gain any
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reasonable assurance that the death squads would not be used again under
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"appropriate" circumstances.
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What was so uplifting about _Braveheart_ was that small band of Scottish men,
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led by William Wallace, who loved their country and hated their government.
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Like many who had come before them--and who have come after them--they refused
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to compromise their principles.
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President Clinton was wrong when he said: "There's nothing patriotic about
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hating your government or pretending you can hate your government but love your
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country." Throughout history, there have been courageous and honorable
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individuals--patriots--who have loved their country and hated their government.
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And, unfortunately, throughout history, there have also been weak and cowardly
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people-- traitors--who have loved and supported the tyranny of their own
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government.
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It is to the patriots--not the traitors--that we owe Magna Charta, the Petition
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of Right, habeas corpus, the presumption of innocence, trial by jury, due
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process of law, private property, and so many other aspects of human freedom.
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It is the patriots--not the traitors--who have remained steadfast for
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principles of right, even when it meant incurring the wrath and retribution of
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their own government officials. And it will be the patriots--not the
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traitors--who ultimately triumph in America and end our government of the
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pestilence that pervades it--so that, once again, American patriots will love
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their country and not hate their government.
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Permission is granted to reprint this article, provided appropriate credit is
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given. Please send two copies of the reprint to The Future of Freedom
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Foundation.
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Jacob G. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom
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Foundation.
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