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Our Constitution Won’t Save A People Who Aren’t Vigilant
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Our Constitution Won’t Save A People Who Aren’t Vigilant

<span style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" data-mce-type="bookmark" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span> What the Founders Feared Most Is Happening Right Now Look, let me ask you a quick question. When was the last time you actually read the Constitution… not a meme, not a quote on social media, not a politician waving a pocket copy… but the real thing? Most Americans talk about it like it’s a security system permanently installed in the walls of the country. As if it hums quietly in the background, automatically blocking corruption, restraining power, and protecting liberty while we go about our business. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: the Constitution was never designed to work that way. The men who framed it feared something far more dangerous than foreign armies. Before they touched the shore, they bound themselves to God: a covenant inked in a storm-tossed cabin that would outlive the waves that rocked the Mayflower. They feared a distracted people. They feared citizens who would grow comfortable, who would trade vigilance for convenience, who would assume someone else was always guarding the gates. In fact, they built the entire system around one hard assumption… that because of sin… power always expands, and that only an alert, morally righteous people can keep it in bounds. And right now? The very condition they warned about… public complacency, drifting standards, and blind trust in centralized authority… is no longer theoretical. It’s here. The parchment hasn’t changed. The ink hasn’t faded. But the watchmen have grown silent. A Document Is Only as Strong as the People Who Defend It We stand today with one foot on solid ground and the other dangling over a cliff, clutching a piece of parchment we call “the Constitution” as if ink alone can save a nation. Yet if we step back and look honestly at our history, we quickly discover something sobering: the real strength of that document was never the document itself, but the people who understood what it meant… and who were willing to guard it at a cost. In other words, a constitution doesn’t live in archives or museums. It lives… or dies… in the habits, beliefs, and courage of the people who claim it. People of the Book, People of a Compact From the very beginning, the American experiment grew out of a people who believed words mattered enough to write them down and bind themselves to them. The Pilgrims and Puritans weren’t just religious idealists chasing a dream. They were “people of the book,” convinced that covenants should be written, solemn, and public. So before they ever set foot on shore, men packed into the creaking hull of the Mayflower drafted a compact. In that cramped cabin, with waves slapping the sides and uncertainty ahead, they pledged to form a “civil body politic” and to live under “just and equal laws” made for the common good. From that rough ship’s cabin to Independence Hall in Philadelphia, this idea of covenant… of binding rulers and people together under agreed terms—shaped our political imagination. The Constitution was never meant to be a foggy mood or a set of evolving feelings. Instead, it was a written compact: a deliberate structure designed to restrain both rulers and ruled, and to be altered only in a clear, orderly way with the consent of the governed. So when we ask, “How should we view the Constitution today?” we’re really asking something deeper. Do we still believe in binding promises at all… or have we traded covenant for convenience? A Nation Ruled by “Shadow Rights” Over time, the America that began with a plain-spoken covenant has drifted into something else entirely: a nation where courts can “find” new rights and powers in the shadows between the words. At one time, no ordinary citizen could have imagined a day when judges would discover sweeping new rights hidden between constitutional lines, or declare long-standing laws void based on interpretations the Founders themselves would scarcely recognize. Yet here we are, watching decisions handed down that would likely have baffled the very men whose signatures sit beneath the document now being cited. Consequently, the Constitution has often been treated less like a fixed compact and more like a wad of legal putty. The language stays the same on paper, but the meaning stretches and shrinks depending on who sits on the bench and what storms are raging in the culture. Meanwhile, citizens comfort themselves with the phrase “rule of law,” without always noticing that we’ve quietly drifted into rule by interpreters—for whom the text can feel more like a suggestion than a boundary. If the Constitution seems mysterious and elastic to us now, it’s partly because we’ve allowed others to tell us what it means while we’ve stopped reading and wrestling with it ourselves. Historians, Myths, and the Founders’ Motives At the same time, another quiet shift has taken place in classrooms and University lecture halls. Many influential historians no longer present the Constitution as a remarkable attempt to balance liberty and order under God. Instead, they portray it as a clever power grab by a scheming upper class. Through that leftist lens, the Founders then weren’t trying to restrain human sin on all sides. They were simply protecting their wealth and status from the “wrong sorts of people.” Washington becomes just a stiff monument, Hamilton an elitist conniver, and the entire founding era little more than a class struggle in powdered wigs. Of course, the Founders were flawed men… sometimes ambitious, sometimes proud. But that’s not the real question. The question is whether they were consciously trying to shackle the nation to a permanent aristocracy, or whether they were attempting to keep any man or group from holding unchecked power. If we swallow the caricature that the Constitution is nothing more than a selfish class document, we won’t see any reason to defend it when it stands in the way of the latest ideological wave. Why the Founders Distrusted “Pure Democracy” If we read the Founders in their own words, we discover something modern slogans rarely admit: they were not champions of unchecked “pure democracy.” They had read their history… Greece, Rome, and especially England. They knew what happened when mobs, factions, or kings were left without restraint. To them, being devoured by one lion or slowly nibbled to death by a hundred mice came to the same end. So they built a system designed to divide and slow power down. They created an executive strong enough to govern but checked by elections and law. They established a House reflecting the people and a Senate originally representing the states as corporate bodies. Above all, they assumed that no earthly office… no king, no Congress, no court… should hold ultimate sovereignty. That authority, they believed, belonged to God alone. Any human attempt to seize it invited tyranny and judgment. So when modern critics complain that the Constitution wasn’t purely democratic, they’re accidentally pointing to its greatest strength: it was built on a realistic view of human nature, including the dangers of majority rule without restraint. The Rise of the “Least Dangerous” Branch Even the best design, however, can be warped over time. Early statesmen like Hamilton and Jefferson understood that courts had to measure laws against the Constitution. But they insisted the judiciary should never become the supreme ruler. In Federalist No. 78, Hamilton described the courts as having “neither force nor will, but merely judgment.” Over the decades, that modest role expanded. The Supreme Court began not only to strike down laws clearly violating the text but also to read into the text rights and powers no plain reading would reveal. Today, we accept almost without question that nine unelected justices can decide issues touching life, death, marriage, education, and religion for hundreds of millions of people… and that their word is final. If Hamilton could see what his “least dangerous branch” has become, he might scarcely recognize it. Emergencies and the Elastic Constitution Courts aren’t the only ones who stretch constitutional limits. Presidents and Congresses have done the same whenever crises made restraint feel inconvenient. During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus and allowed civilians to face military tribunals. During Reconstruction, Congress pushed its authority to the brink. In the twentieth century, sweeping amendments and federal expansions reshaped the balance between citizen and state. Step by step, often in the name of security or progress, Americans accepted changes that shifted the system away from its original design… without ever formally declaring that the old design was being abandoned. The parchment stayed the same. The structure beneath it did not. The Quiet Birth of a Fourth Branch Then came another transformation few people noticed as it unfolded. Beginning in the Progressive Era and accelerating afterward, Congress and the presidency created a vast network of regulatory agencies. These bureaucratic bodies now write rules, enforce them, and judge disputes about them… all within the same structure. On paper, they don’t “make law.” In practice, their regulations carry the force of law, backed by fines and penalties. So while we still teach children that our government has three branches, everyday life is shaped by a fourth: a sprawling administrative state touching everything from agriculture to education. And all of it emerged without a single amendment openly acknowledging that a new centralized layer of power had been created. Parchment Barriers and Sleeping Citizens James Madison once warned that “parchment barriers” alone could never restrain ambitious rulers or overbearing majorities. A constitution written on paper cannot save a people unwilling to guard their own liberties. Yet many Americans treat the Constitution like a civic talisman. If it sits under glass, if politicians swear oaths to it, if we quote it now and then, surely it must still be intact. But a document cannot enforce itself. A covenant cannot renew itself. A structure cannot defend itself against the slow erosion of neglect. Only a watchful, morally grounded people can do that. How Should We View the Constitution Today? So how should we view the Constitution in our own moment? First, we should stop treating it like a flawless idol and start honoring it as a fragile, hard-won gift… one we are capable of losing. Despite all the ways it has been bent or bypassed, it still contains the bones of a remarkably wise structure: divided powers, checks and balances, and the assumption that no human authority is ultimate. Second, we should recognize that the deeper crisis isn’t in the text but in us. Systems don’t drift into centralization and overreach unless the people themselves grow distracted, comfortable, or afraid. Finally, we should see the Constitution as a covenant that needs renewing… not by reinventing it into something unrecognizable, but by recovering the worldview that gave it life. The generation that framed it believed in a sovereign God, a fallen humanity, and limited government. They knew law can’t save souls, but it can restrain evil and protect space for faith and family to flourish. We still have a Constitution. But we also face a choice: to keep drifting on the comforting myth that it protects us automatically, or to confront where we stand and work… carefully, soberly, and under God… for genuine constitutional restoration.

Beware! The False Flag Is Coming…
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Beware! The False Flag Is Coming…

On The Angry Prepper, we are going to talk about The False Flag Is Coming… We seem to be getting warnings in subtle ways, so we should pay attention to them. We need to be ready for them as well.

This Is An Insane Statement To Make
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This Is An Insane Statement To Make

On The Angry Truth Channel, we are going to talk about how This Is An Insane Statement To Make to another country. This is an act of entitlement if I have ever seen any.

Harbor Freight ITEMS that SAVE LIVES!
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Harbor Freight ITEMS that SAVE LIVES!

Learn what budget tools can help you in an SHTF scenario. An Affordable set of tools from Harbor Freight can be a game changer when you least expect it. #harborfrieght #shtf #budgettools