The Power to Do Good Is the Power to Do Evil
That's why we can never depend on government power to protect our liberty.
The post The Power to Do Good Is the Power to Do Evil first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
That's why we can never depend on government power to protect our liberty.
The post The Power to Do Good Is the Power to Do Evil first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Personnel changes from administration to administration. And policy can shift as well. But government power once given never goes away.
The post They Never Give Power Back first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
That means you can't rely on government to protect you. The only winning strategy is to resist government.
The post Government is Your Enemy first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Thomes Paine and Patrick Henry agreed that government is always a choice between evils.
The post Choose Wisely? first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Washington D.C. is drunk on power. The only way to sober it up is to take the power away.
The post Hey, D.C.! You’re Drunk! first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Fear is the foundation of government power. That's why governments are always coming up with new emergencies to save us from.
The post Fear Not! first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Cato warned us that centralizing the United States into one government would create a situation where people with a thirst for power and aggrandizement would "oppress and grind" us.
The post Ground Up and Spit Out first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
You can't protect the Constitution and your liberty by picking the lesser of two evils. You have to follow the wisdom of Gouverneur Morris and so many others in the founding generation: Draw a line in the sand.
The post Draw a Line in the Sand first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
A lot of people think we can solve our problems by electing the right people. But the problem isn't the people. The problem is power.
The post The Problem With Power first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
A lot of people view violations of the Constitution as an abstraction - politics or just a bunch of legal jargon. But federal overreach has real-life consequences and impacts the lives of regular folks.
The post Violating the Constitution Has Real-World Consequences first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.