레이블이 James Madison StatesRights인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 James Madison StatesRights인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 23일 토요일

About 'james madison state'|...Packet Wednesday, January 30, 1788 [James Madison] To the People of the State of New York: HAVING...; but briefly stated as they are here, they...







About 'james madison state'|...Packet Wednesday, January 30, 1788 [James Madison] To the People of the State of New York: HAVING...; but briefly stated as they are here, they...








The               ignorance               of               Americans               on               their               own               history               and               constitution               has               never               been               clearer,               than               on               the               issue               of               separation               of               church               and               state.

The               phrase               originally               cited               in               a               letter               from               Thomas               Jefferson               to               the               Danberry               Connecticut               Baptists,               soon               after               Jefferson               had               become               president               on               March               4th               1801.

Many               Americans               believe               that               this               nation               was               founded               a               strictly               secular               state.

Many               actually               believe               they               are               patriotically               upholding               the               founder's               vision               by               making               sure               religion               is               completely               removed               from               all               public               life.

Groups               such               as               the               ACLU               and               Americans               United               for               The               Separation               of               Church               and               State               routinely               file               suits               in               court               to               intimidate               and               silence               any               religious               voice               in               American               public               life.

Cases               are               promoted               to               prevent               nativity               scenes,               the               Ten               Commandments,               Crosses               from               being               displayed               in               public               areas.

Other               cases               promote               denying               the               Boy               Scouts               use               of               government               facilities,               removal               of               ("In               God               We               Trust")               on               currency,               censoring               of               school               graduation               and               athletic               event               prayers,               firing               schoolteachers               for               leaving               bibles               on               their               desk.
               At               the               same               time,               these               groups               turn               a               blind               eye               to               the               promotion               of               other               religions,               such               as               providing               prayer               rooms               for               Muslim               students               in               public               schools               or               school               sponsored               field               trips               to               mosques,               soliciting               students               to               participate               in               Muslim               religious               rites               as               an               educational               experience.

Public               schools               also               promote               new               age               religious               ideas               and               forms               of               witchcraft               as               enlightened               ideas,               while               Christianity               is               presented               as               part               of               our               past               ignorance,               intolerance               and               bigotry.
               Many               who               use               the               term               "Separation               of               Church               and               State"               would               be               surprised               to               discover               that               it's               nowhere               to               be               found               in               the               Constitution.

The               phrase               was               taken               from               a               political               letter               written               by               Jefferson               to               the               Connecticut               Baptists               assuring               them               of               their               concerns               about               religious               liberty.

The               Baptists               in               Connecticut               had               long               been               a               minority               in               an               area               dominated               by               Federalist               Congregationalists,               and               Jefferson               wanted               to               assure               them               that               the               federal               government               would               not               interfere               in               showing               preference               to               any               Christian               denomination               above               another.

England               and               most               of               Europe               had               oppressed               Christian               minorities               for               hundreds               of               years,               by               mandating               a               single               state               Christian               denomination.

In               England               the               Anglican               Church               was               the               state               mandated               church,               all               other               Christian               sects               or               denominations               were               prohibited.
               Years               after               writing               the               Letter               to               the               Danbury               Baptists,               Jefferson               himself               regularly               attended               worship               services               conducted               in               the               Capital               building               with               government               paid               chaplains.

He               also               arranged               for               similar               services               to               be               conducted               in               the               War               Office               and               Treasury               building               both               belonging               to               the               executive               branch               of               government.

In               1803               Jefferson               used               federal               funds               to               erect               churches               and               promote               Christianity               among               the               Indians               and               provided               government               support               for               Christian               schools.

The               evidence               for               the               Christian               foundation               for               America's               society               and               government               is               so               overwhelming               that               it's               difficult               to               comprehend               how               this               could               be               misunderstood               by               so               many.
               George               Washington,               in               his               Farewell               address               to               the               nation               said               this               "It               is               impossible               to               govern               the               world               without               God               and               the               Bible.

Of               all               the               dispositions               and               habits               that               lead               to               political               prosperity,               our               religion               and               morality               are               the               indispensable               supporters.

Let               us               with               caution               indulge               the               supposition               that               morality               can               be               maintained               without               religion.

Reason               and               experience               both               forbid               us               to               expect               that               our               national               morality               can               prevail               in               exclusion               of               religious               principle."
               Thomas               Jefferson               said               this,               "The               practice               of               morality               being               necessary               for               the               well               being               of               society,               He               (God)               has               taken               care               to               impress               its               precepts               so               indelibly               on               our               hearts               that               they               shall               not               be               effaced               by               the               subtleties               of               our               brain.

We               all               agree               in               the               obligation               of               the               moral               principles               of               Jesus               and               nowhere               will               they               be               found               delivered               in               greater               purity               than               in               His               discourses."
               James               Madison,               the               4th               US               president,               father               of               the               bill               of               rights,               said               this               "I               have               sometimes               thought               there               could               not               be               a               stronger               testimony               in               favor               of               religion               or               against               temporal               enjoyments,               even               the               most               rational               and               manly,               than               for               men               who               occupy               the               most               honorable               and               gainful               departments               and               [who]               are               rising               in               reputation               and               wealth,               publicly               to               declare               their               unsatisfactoriness               by               becoming               fervent               advocates               in               the               cause               of               Christ;               and               I               wish               you               may               give               in               your               evidence               in               this               way."
               John               Jay               America's               first               chief               justice               of               the               Supreme               Court               said               this               in               1797,               two               years               after               serving               his               term,               "Providence               has               given               to               our               people               the               choice               of               their               rulers,               and               it               is               the               duty               as               well               as               the               privilege               and               interest               of               our               Christian               nation,               to               select               and               prefer               Christians               for               their               rulers."
               Jefferson's               Wall               of               separation               of               church               and               state               only               placed               limits               on               the               power               of               the               federal               government               to               interfere               in               matters               of               religion.

The               wall               was               intended               to               separate               the               institutions               of               church               and               state               at               the               federal               level               not               to               separate               religion               from               the               civil               government.

Matters               of               religion               were               to               rest               with               individual               State               and               local               governments               and               the               people.
               During               the               time               period               of               the               ratification               of               the               first               amendment,               all               state               constitutions               with               the               exception               of               Rhode               Island,               had               a               state               sponsored               religion.

The               states               would               never               ratified               the               first               amendment               if               they               believed               it               would               override               the               states               right               to               sponsor               their               own               Christian               denomination.

The               First               Amendment               was               only               proposed               to               place               limitations               on               the               government               and               not               on               religion.

The               freedom               of               the               press,               guaranteed               in               the               first               amendment,               only               places               restrictions               of               the               government               to               control               the               media               not               to               protect               the               government               from               the               press.

In               this               way               the               press               would               be               free               and               independent               of               the               government.

The               same               was               purposed               for               the               freedom               of               religion,               government               was               never               to               be               protected               from               religious               influence,               churches               and               individuals               were               to               be               protected               from               the               federal               governments               imposition               of               a               national               Christian               denomination.
               Jefferson               affirmed               on               many               occasions               that               the               federal               government               had               no               power               over               religious               rights               or               the               free               exercise               of               religion.

Jefferson               said               this               at               his               second               inaugural               address               in               1805,"In               matters               of               religion,               I               have               considered               that               its               free               exercise               is               placed               by               the               Constitution               independent               of               the               powers               of               the               general               (federal)               government."
               So               where               did               this               distorted               idea               of               separating               religion               from               public               originate?

In               the               1830's               and               40's               a               new               influx               of               Catholic               immigrants               caused               much               concern               to               the               established               Protestant               majority.

Groups               such               as               the               Know               Nothings               and               later               the               Ku               Klux               Klan               advocated               separatism               to               prevent               Catholic               influence               in               public               life.
               In               the               late               1940's               and               beyond               many               felt               Catholic               parochial               schools               posed               a               threat               to               public               schools,               protestant               majorities               and               democratic               principles               says               Professor               Daniel               L.Dreisbach               in               his               Article               "The               Mythical               Wall               of               Separation:               How               a               Misused               Metaphor               Changed               Church-State               Law,               Policy,               and               Discourse".

Dreisbach               further               stated,               that               the               ACLU,               anti-Catholics               elites               such               as               Hugo               Black,               Protestants               and               others               for               the               separation               of               church               and               state,               prevailed               upon               the               courts               to               secularize               the               state.

The               1947               case               of               Everson               v.

Board               of               Education               extended               the               exclusion               of               aid               to               religion               to               federal               and               state               governments.

No               previous               court               had               interpreted               Jefferson's               phrase               to               imply               that               the               state               was               to               be               free               any               religious               influence.
               In               the               1930's               Hitler               recognized               that               the               only               institution               that               stood               in               the               way               his               plans               was               the               church.

So               Hitler               promoted               his               propaganda               with               slogans               such               as               "Politics               do               not               belong               in               the               Church."               And               "The               Church               must               be               separate               from               the               State",               says               Bryan               Fischer               in               his               article               "Separation               of               Church               and               State:               Straight               from               the               Mind               of               Hitler"               quoting               Professor               John               Conway's               book               "The               Nazi               persecution               of               the               Churches               1933-45".

The               former               Soviet               Union               also               enforced               a               strict               separation               of               church               and               state               only               allowing               the               influence               of               the               church               to               remain               within               its               four               walls.

These               phrases               are               virtually               identical               to               those               promoted               by               the               ACLU               and               Americans               United               for               the               Separation               of               Church               and               State.

In               December               1934,               Hitler               said               this               in               a               campaign               speech,               "But               we               will               ensure               the               purging               from               our               public               life               of               all               those               priests               who               have               mistaken               their               profession               and               who               ought               to               have               been               politicians               and               not               pastors",               noted               Bryan               Fischer               in               his               above               mentioned               article.

Hitler's               objectives               here               are               virtually               identical               with               those               of               the               ACLU.
               The               idea               of               separating               religion               from               all               civil               government               would               have               alarmed               Jefferson               and               the               founding               fathers               that               clearly               understood               that               the               general               principles               of               Christianity               must               have               the               encouragement               and               support               of               the               state.

They               knew               that               without               a               Christian               foundation               and               people,               their               republic               would               not               survive.

They               understood               that               the               source               of               our               inalienable               rights               and               freedom               came               Jesus               himself               and               that               Christianity               was               at               the               foundation               of               our               American               government               and               society.






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    4. politicalpistachio.blogspot.com/   08/25/2010
      ...As a result, New York was seen as one of the States that may not ratify the new Constitution. James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay worked passionately to make...
    5. raymondpronk.wordpress.com/   06/12/2010
      Glenn Beck On James Madison–The Father Of The United States Constitution–Videos....” ~James Madison Background Articles...
    6. ibloga.blogspot.com/   07/17/2009
      ...Packet Wednesday, January 30, 1788 [James Madison] To the People of the State of New York: HAVING...; but briefly stated as they are here, they...
    7. voice-of-deseret.blogspot.com/   12/06/2008
      ... Villanova team 31-27. At 12-1, James Madison will be no pushover for Montana. Not ... is controversial Weber State player Bryant Eteuati. After getting into...
    8. icestationtango.blogspot.com/   10/01/2006
      ... and Other Writings of James Madison , Volume IV, page 491). Pretty inspirational, take... of fraud, growing out of a state of war, and in the degeneracy of manner and...
    9. jerrystwocentsofreason.blogspot.com/   05/08/2006
      ... fathers that support the separation of church and state as it is in the Constitution, James Madison is after all the man who authored the first amendment...
    10. judicialmisconduct.blogspot.com/   09/10/2007
      ...accident. It is part of a constitutional plan to make the exercise of state power more difficult. "Ambition," as James Madison said, "must be made to counteract ambition." This design has...
    11. James Madison State - Blog Homepage Results

      ...voluntary associations, and . . . the State should be abolished." —Benjamin Tucker...in the next place oblige it to control itself." —James Madison "Fat chance." —Sheldon Richman
      ...newspaper, the Daily Advertiser, the article was signed Publius, a pseudonym for James Madison. The essay began "To the People of the State of New York" and discusses the impact of factions. The essay…
      Gleaves Whitney, a presidential historian, is the director of the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University.



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    2013년 11월 22일 금요일

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    James               Madison               was               a               young               man               in               his               twenties               when               The               American               Revolutionary               War               was               fought.

    He               had               made               his               reputation               serving               as               Thomas               Jefferson's               protege               in               Virginia.

    He               was               neither               a               military               man               nor               even               famous               as               a               speaker,               but               he               earned               solid               respect               as               a               writer.

    He               was               credited               for               much               of               the               work               in               the               drafting               of               the               Constitution               and               helped               to               get               it               ratified               in               a               series               of               newspaper               articles               called               "The               Federalist               Papers".

    It               was               as               Jefferson's               Secretary               of               State               that               James               achieved               his               biggest               success               by               negotiating               the               "Louisiana               Purchase"               which               doubled               the               size               of               the               country               overnight               with               a               simple               real               estate               deal.

    Madison               is               often               given               credit               as               being               the               "Father               of               the               Bill               of               Rights",               which               was               partially               true.

    Madison               had               ideas               for               17               amendments               which               were               intended               to               provide               the               Constitution               with               more               backbone               than               the               failed               "Articles               of               Confederation"               that               had               come               earlier.

    His               list               of               the               Bill               of               Rights               was               whittled               down               and               an               important               addition               made               with               the               Ninth               Amendment.

    Madison               was               a               promoter               of               a               strong               Federal               government               that               had               a               higher               authority               than               the               states               rights.

    The               Ninth               Amendment               seems               to               reserve               any               rights               that               were               not               specified               in               the               Constitution               and               the               other               amendments               as               being               part               of               a               reservoir               of               God               given               rights               that               were               reserved               to               the               people.

    This               was               not               a               belief               that               Madison               shared               since               he               was               against               "an               excess               of               democracy"               and               believed               that               big               government               was               better               able               to               make               laws               for               the               good               of               the               population               beyond               their               meager               layman               understanding               of               broader               issues.
                   After               the               revolution,               George               Washington               had               worked               hard               to               establish               good               trade               relations               with               Great               Britain.

    He               had               a               hard               won               understanding               of               the               power               of               the               Empire               from               suffering               beside               his               troops.

    He               sought               to               protect               his               fledgling               country               by               pursuing               peaceful               commerce               and               tried               to               stay               out               of               conflicts               between               Britain               and               the               other               powers               of               Europe.

    James               Madison               had               a               poor               understanding               of               this               balance               and               a               misplaced               evaluation               led               him               into               a               bad               choice               when               he               finally               got               his               chance               to               be               President.
                   Napoleon               was               on               a               full               scale               plan               of               conquest               which               drew               the               Americans               into               the               conflict.

    The               British               navy               boarded               US               ships               to               round               up               recruits               and               "impress"               them               into               the               fight               against               Napoleon.

    Also               the               strategy               of               the               British               to               incite               the               native               American               tribes               to               resist               US               expansion               was               a               thorny               issue.The               hawks               of               Congress               helped               convince               Madison               that               a               war               with               Great               Britain               was               inevitable               which               led               America               to               declare               war               in               1812.

    When               Napoleon               was               at               last               defeated,               the               battle               hardened               troops               were               sent               to               teach               the               former               colonists               a               lesson.
                   In               1814,               British               troops               routed               the               American               militia               at               the               Battle               of               Bladensberg               and               took               over               Washington               DC.

    They               proceeded               to               begin               burning               public               buildings               and               even               dined               at               a               White               House               buffet               that               had               been               left               by               fleeing               residents.

    This               was               not               James               Madison's               finest               hour               since               he               is               recorded               as               riding               through               town               urging               citizens               to               flee               for               their               lives.

    Only               his               wife               got               some               credit               for               saving               a               famous               painting               of               George               Washington.

    That               story               was               later               revised               to               give               the               honors               to               her               servants.

    Washington               DC               might               have               burned               to               the               ground               except               for               the               "divine               "               intervention               of               a               great               storm               with               tornadoes               that               swept               through               the               city               driving               the               British               back               to               their               ships               after               only               a               day               of               occupation.

    It               was               a               humiliating               time               for               the               President               and               for               the               country               which               was               partially               redeemed               by               Andrew               Jackson's               victory               in               New               Orleans.









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    11. James Madison State - Blog Homepage Results

      ...voluntary associations, and . . . the State should be abolished." —Benjamin Tucker...in the next place oblige it to control itself." —James Madison "Fat chance." —Sheldon Richman
      Gleaves Whitney, a presidential historian, is the director of the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University.
      "If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy." ~ James Madison, while a United States Congressman



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    Yolande Vescio 's blog ::... expense is the military. James Madison, Father of the U.S. Constitution, said... which are to remain in the State governments are numerous...







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    Often               referred               to               as               the               Father               of               the               Constitution,               James               Madison,               the               United               States               4th               president,               was               born               on               03/16/1751               to               parents               James               Madison               (1723-1801)               and               Eleanor,               or               "Nelly,"               Rose               Conway               (1731-1849)               in               Port               Conway,               Virginia.

    Madison's               political               career               preceding               his               election               to               the               presidency               was               nothing               short               of               impressive.

    He               was               a               Member               of               the               Virginia               Constitutional               Convention;               a               Continental               Congress               member;               a               member               of               the               Virginia               legislature;               a               member               of               the               Constitutional               Convention;               a               US               representative;               and               the               Secretary               of               State.

    He               also               wielded               the               most               fluent               pens               drafting               the               United               States               Constitution               and               the               Bill               of               Rights               and               took               part               in               writing               29               of               the               85               Federalist               Papers.

    But               2               things               would               forever               change               the               dynamic               of               his               otherwise               spotless               political               achievements.
                   Despite               Madison's               designations               of               official               political               status,               the               2               aforementioned               things               the               would               greatly               taint               his               presidency               were               France               and               England.
                   In               1807,               when               still               he               was               still               Secretary               of               State,               Madison               and               then-president               Thomas               Jefferson               pushed               to               end               all               American               trade               activity               in               what               became               known               as               the               Embargo               of               1807.

    The               embargo               was               implemented               to               instill               tribulation               in               the               economies               of               France               and               England,               but               it               resulted               in               an               outcome               opposite               to               the               desired               effect,               and               the               American               economy               suffered               greatly               instead.

    In               order               to               repair               the               situation,               Jefferson,               would               repeal               the               terms               of               the               embargo               in               1809.
                   After               winning               the               presidential               election               of               1808,               Madison               was               sworn               into               on               March               4,1809.

    In               1810               --               in               order               to               escape               the               inadequate               functioning               of               the               congressional               Nonintercourse               Act               passed               during               the               Jefferson               era,               which               allowed               trade               with               neither               France               nor               England               --               made               an               agreement               with               France's               emperor               Napoleon               Bonaparte               not               to               engage               in               trade               with               England               as               long               as               the               French               upheld               neutrality               toward               American               ships               Napoleon               acquiesced               with               this,               but               the               consequence               of               his               doing               so               would               be               major               for               Madison.
                   On               June               12,               1812,               The               War               Hawks               representing               the               western               and               southern               states               in               Congress,               and               whose               wish               it               was               to               go               to               war               with               England               in               order               to               acquire               Canada               anyway,               were               asked               for               a               declaration               of               war               by               President               Madison.

    The               declaration,               albeit               challenged               by               the               northeastern               states,               was               granted.

    This               would               eventually               lead               to               the               War               of               1812,               in               which,               on               August               24,               1814,               British               troops               stormed               Washington               and               proceeded               to               burn               down               the               capitol,               the               President's               House               and               various               other               building               structures               residing               in               the               city.
                   Madison               died               on               June               28,               1836               at               Montpelier,               Virginia.

    Although               his               presidency               is               overshadowed               by               his               losing               the               War               of               1812,               he               is               otherwise               fondly               remembered               today               as               the               Father               of               the               Constitution,               as               well               as               for               his               other               numerous               contributions               to               the               formation               of               America,               and               is               widely               considered               to               be               one               of               the               most               important               of               its               founders.









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    7. icestationtango.blogspot.com/   10/01/2006
      ... and Other Writings of James Madison , Volume IV, page 491). Pretty inspirational, take... of fraud, growing out of a state of war, and in the degeneracy of manner and...
    8. jerrystwocentsofreason.blogspot.com/   05/08/2006
      ... fathers that support the separation of church and state as it is in the Constitution, James Madison is after all the man who authored the first amendment...
    9. judicialmisconduct.blogspot.com/   09/10/2007
      ...accident. It is part of a constitutional plan to make the exercise of state power more difficult. "Ambition," as James Madison said, "must be made to counteract ambition." This design has...
    10. christiangunslinger.blogspot.com/   07/16/2011
      ... expense is the military. James Madison, Father of the U.S. Constitution, said... which are to remain in the State governments are numerous...
    11. James Madison State - Blog Homepage Results

      ...voluntary associations, and . . . the State should be abolished." —Benjamin Tucker...in the next place oblige it to control itself." —James Madison "Fat chance." —Sheldon Richman
      Gleaves Whitney, a presidential historian, is the director of the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University.
      "If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy." ~ James Madison, while a United States Congressman



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