by Harry Browne
September 17, 2008
This day isn't important.
There are far more significant days in the year:
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Labor Day, when we pretend to care about other people's jobs while frolicking at the beach.
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Election Day, when we pretend we're making a difference by voting.
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Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and Susan B. Anthony Day, when we pretend to be politically correct.
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Memorial Day, when we pretend that we live in a free country because of all the people who were killed in the government's senseless wars.
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Flag Day, when we pretend the government is America.
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Veterans Day (formerly Armistice Day, when we pretended that World War I made the world safe for democracy).
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National Teachers Day, when we pretend our children are getting an education.
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Earth Day, when we pretend that making the government more powerful will make the environment cleaner.
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United Nations Day, when we pretend to believe all those inane statements about world peace.
Today doesn't seem to come anywhere near those days in importance.
You see, today is supposed to be Constitution Day. And no one really cares about the Constitution anymore.
What It Was
The Constitution was supposed to spell out what government can do and what it can't do. The government's few legal functions are listed in Article 1, Section 8. It was a revolutionary document, in that no government in history had ever had its duties and restrictions so carefully defined.
Despite frequent violations of the Constitution by the government, the document did its job reasonably well for the first hundred years - making America the freest country in history.
As late as 1887, when Congress passed a bill providing federal relief to drought-stricken Texas farmers, Grover Cleveland vetoed it, saying, "I can find no warrant for such an appropriation in the Constitution.
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But that was about the last gasp for limited, Constitutional government. Because the Constitution wasn't self-enforcing, it depended on the good intentions of politicians - something Thomas Jefferson specifically warned against in 1798 when he said, "In questions of power, then, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.
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Michael Cloud put it more succinctly in recent years: "The problem isn't the abuse of power, it's the power to abuse." So long as the politicians have the power, they'll abuse it. And the Constitution was intended to prevent the politicians from getting the power to abuse.
The Transformation
But by the end of the 1800s, too many Americans had lost their fear of government and politicians. The introduction of government schools had made it almost certain that most children would never learn the impor