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One Earth, One United States of America, One Hope

The Last Best Hope of Planet Earth


"My dream is of a place and a time where America will be seen as the last best hope of earth." ~ Abraham Lincoln


''The struggle continues today. Terrorists and dictators hate the United States for its founding principles. They prefer to rob people of liberty, subjugate women, and spread their power by the sword.''


'I have never had a feeling politically that did not spring from the sentiments embodied in the Declaration of Independence." This statement from Abraham Lincoln in Philadelphia in 1861 was no staff-manufactured line. It was an expression from a man filled with deep emotion at finding himself standing in the hall where a courageous band of rebels pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to a high and dangerous purpose -- American independence. We celebrate them on July Fourth.
Lincoln revered the Declaration and its ideals of liberty and equality. In an 1858 speech in Chicago, he said it was "the father of all moral principle" in the American republic, and its spirit "the electric cord . . . that links the hearts of patriotic and liberty-loving men together."
He spent much time pondering the hardships endured by those who had fought for independence. In that speech he called them "iron men." As a boy, he read accounts of the patriots' battlefield struggles in Parson Weems's "Life of Washington" and thought, as he told the New Jersey state Senate in 1861, that "there must have been something more than common that those men struggled for."
Yet in Lincoln's time, the Declaration and its spirit was under attack. Proponents of slavery insisted that the Founders did not intend for the God-given right to liberty in the Declaration to apply to all people. The notion that "all men are created equal" was belittled by John C. Calhoun in 1848 as "the most false and dangerous of all political error."
The Declaration had its detractors abroad as well. Across Europe, members of privileged classes sneered at the thought of people ruling themselves. Many a nobleman viewed the Civil War as proof that the American democratic experiment would fail.
British statesman John Bright took them to task: "Privilege thinks it has a great interest in this contest, and every morning, with blatant voice, it . . . curses the American Republic. Privilege has beheld an afflicting spectacle for many years past. It has beheld thirty millions of men, happy and prosperous, without emperor, without king . . . Privilege has shuddered at what might happen to old Europe if this grand experiment should succeed."
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Patriots, live free or die


Ready to lay the last egg?

America is full of these patriots – many who have trouble walking but still stand at attention and salute Old Glory as it passes by; however, I fear when my generation leaves this old earth there will be no one to carry on with the tradition and it saddens me deeply. I mentioned other patriots in my July 7, 2003 article:
Can One Person Make a Difference. Marilyn M. Barnewall echoes this sentiment in her “The Story of a Remnant.”

Our country is no longer the virtuous nation that Ben Franklin mentioned in his 1787 address to the Constitutional Convention [2] He gave a discourse on the need to fix the course of American public service so that it would attract men of public virtue and repel scoundrels scrambling for a soft job. He said: Sir, there are two passions which have a powerful influence in the affairs of men. These are ambition and avarice; the love of power and the love of money. Separately, each of these had great force in prompting men to action; but when united a view of the same object, they have in many minds the most violent effects. Place before the eyes of such men a post of honor, that shall at the same time be a place of profit and they will move heaven and earth to obtain it.

In the 60s a new world began to emerge through drugs, “free sex,” Marxist socialism and communism and schools and universities became brain laundries. That 60s generation of adults is now running our country reminding me of the statement by Vladimir Lenin, “Give me just one generation of youth and I will transform the entire world.” How dare our misleaders of America end their speeches with “God Bless America” when they are far from Him? What arrogance!
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Issue: Is America a Christian Nation?

 


I Say: No, America is not a theocracy. Yes, most Americans are self-professed Christians some 85%. Was American founded mainly on Christian principles - yes.


Even Benjamin Franklin who wasn't known as the most religious of the Founding Fathers, nonetheless looked to God as the only hope for our America. Franklin stood up and called the assembly of delegates to prayer, ''Scripture teaches us that if a sparrow can't fall to the ground without God's notice, is it likely that an empire will rise without his aid?' And if we don't first go to prayer, he said, 'We'll be no more successful then the builders of Babel.'"


YOU Say:________________________?
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