LIES THE GOVERNMENT TOLD YOU
Myth, Power, and Deception in American History
By Andrew P. Napolitano
Thomas Nelson
Copyright © 2010
Andrew P. Napolitano
All right reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-59555-266-2
Contents
Foreword by Congressman Ron Paul.........................................................................................................ix
Introduction.............................................................................................................................xiii
Lie #1: "All Men Are Created Equal"......................................................................................................1
Lie #2: "All Men ... Are Endowed by Their Creator with Certain Inalienable Rights".......................................................19
Lie #3: "Judges Are Like Umpires"........................................................................................................35
Lie #4: "Every Vote Counts..............................................................................................................." 55
Lie #5: "Congress Shall Make No Law ... Abridging the Freedom of Speech".................................................................77
Lie #6: "The Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms Shall Not Be Infringed"...........................................................94
Lie #7: "Your Body Is Your Temple".......................................................................................................120
Lie #8: "The Federal Reserve Shall Be Controlled by Congress"............................................................................136
Lie #9: "It's Only a Temporary Government Program".......................................................................................162
Lie #10: "I'm from the Government, and I'm Here to Help".................................................................................177
Lie #11: "We Are Winning the War on Drugs"...............................................................................................191
Lie #12: "Everyone Is Innocent Until Proven Guilty"......................................................................................203
Lie #13: "The Constitution Applies in Good Times and in Bad Times".......................................................................228
Lie #14: "Your Boys Are Not Going to Be Sent into Any Foreign Wars"......................................................................244
Lie #15: "We Don't Torture"..............................................................................................................262
Lie #16: "The Right of the People to Be Secure in Their Persons, Houses, Papers, and Effects, Shall Not Be Violated".....................281
Lie #17: "America Has a Free Market".....................................................................................................299
Conclusion...............................................................................................................................313
Acknowledgments..........................................................................................................................317
Notes....................................................................................................................................319
About the Author.........................................................................................................................343
Index....................................................................................................................................345
Chapter One
Lie #1
"All Men Are Created Equal"
On July 4th 1776, the thirteen United States of America declared
independence from Great Britain and its tyrannical king, George
III. The Continental Congress, in the Declaration of Independence,
stated that "all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain unalienable1 Rights, that among these are
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness." The delegates to the
Continental Congress who signed the Declaration believed that government
power is fueled by the consent of the governed, and that
its primary purposes are to ensure the people's freedom to pursue
happiness and to protect their inalienable rights. King George III
had never embraced this philosophy, and the bulk of the Declaration
listed the ways in which he had abused his power: Great Britain
taxed the colonies without granting them representation, prohibited
them from trading with the rest of the world, and broke its
own laws to exploit them. According to Congress, the King left the
United States no alternative but to sever ties with Great Britain and
form a new nation with its own government, one that would keep
secure its people's natural rights.
The government that emerged from the American victory in
the Revolutionary War, however, did not treat all men equally. The
United States Constitution, for example, contained provisions that
implicitly and explicitly recognized slavery's legitimacy, protected
it as an institution, and insulated it from regulation or interference
by the federal government. In fact, the government permitted slavery
for almost one hundred years after Thomas Jefferson wrote the
immortal "all Men are created equal" language. It was not until
recently that the government's behavior matched these words and
African-Americans truly became equal under the law.
President Barack Obama stated that it is an American tradition
that "all men are created equal under the law and ... no one is above
it." The implication in that statement is false. It may be true that
no one is above the law, but for much of American history, African-Americans
were below it. The Founding Fathers, as brilliant and
courageous as they were, lied to us. Abraham Lincoln, the so-called
"Great Emancipator," lied to us. The Supreme Court of the United
States, in upholding Jim Crow laws, lied to us. Thankfully, one of
the great things about this country is that over time, Americans
get smarter. We recognize our transgressions and work to correct
them. Some of the greatest advances in human rights have come
after some of the greatest assaults on them. After 230 years of
exceptional indignity, lawlessness, and bloodshed, we can now say
that "all Men are created equal," and mean it. But that was not the
case in 1776.
Founding Slave Owners
Upon the signing of the Declaration of Independence, 20 percent
of America's population was enslaved. Most of the approximately
five hundred thousand slaves living in the United States in 1776 were
concentrated in the five southernmost states, where they represented
40 percent of the population. The Founding Fathers owned
slaves. In fact, four of the first five American Presidents, including
the still-beloved George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James
Madison, owned slaves.
Thomas Jefferson condemned slavery and vehemently opposed
its expansion. In his first term in the Virginia House of Burgesses,
Jefferson proposed a law to free Virginia's slaves. In 1774, Jefferson
urged the Virginia delegates to the First Continental Congress to
abolish the slave trade. According to Jefferson, "[t]he abolition of
domestic slavery is the great object of desire in those colonies where
it was unhappily introduced...." Furthermore, Jefferson wrote a
draft constitution for the State of Virginia that forbade the importation
of slaves. Also, in a draft of the Declaration of Independence,
Jefferson complained of Britain's introduction of slavery and the
slave trade to the colonies.
Jefferson also played an integral role in enacting the Northwest
Ordinance of 1787, which quickened the westward expansion of
the United States, while also providing that "[t]here shall be neither
slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory ..." Later,
in 1808, President Jefferson signed a statute prohibiting the Atlantic
slave trade.
Jefferson should be admired for instilling in America the democratic
and egalitarian principles that we hold so sacred today. The
fact remains, however, that Jefferson owned slaves. At the time he
wrote that "all Men are created equal," he owned about two hundred
slaves, and slavery played an integral role in his life. Slaves
constructed his majestic home and even his personal coffin.
According to Jefferson, African-Americans may not have been
inferior to whites, but they certainly were different. In his book,
Notes
on the State of Virginia, Jefferson recounted his observations of the
physical differences between blacks and whites and wrote negatively
and positively about African-American behavior. For example,
Jefferson noticed that as compared to whites, blacks required less
sleep, but were more adventurous than whites. In analyzing their
mental capacity, Jefferson observed that blacks had better memories
than whites, but could not reason nearly as well as their white counterparts.
From his observations, Jefferson concluded that by nature,
African-Americans were not as intelligent as whites. However, with
respect to moral capacity (the "heart," as Jefferson called it), Jefferson
believed that God did create all men equal. Furthermore, Jefferson
wrote that "nothing is more certainly written in the book of fate than
that [slaves] are to be free," and he believed that African-Americans
had "a natural right" to pursue freedom.
Moreover, according to the historian John C. Miller, in the
Declaration of Independence, Jefferson may have intentionally left
"property" off the list of inalienable rights to pave the road for
placing slaves' human rights above the property rights of their
slave owners. Alexander Hamilton, a Founding Father who once
owned slaves in New York, and the first United States Secretary of
the Treasury, wrote in
The Federalist, No. 1, written for the People
of New York, and more broadly, the citizens of the United States,
that signing the Constitution "is the safest course for your liberty,
your dignity, and your
happiness" (emphasis added). However, the
Fifth Amendment to the Constitution states, in part, that "[n]o person
shall be ... deprived of life, liberty, or
property without due
process of law" (emphasis added). In ratifying the Constitution, did
Congress abandon Jefferson's intent? Did it become less sympathetic
to human rights? Did the Founders find no shame in condoning
slavery as a property right protected by due process?
Regardless of his ideas on the equality of men, Jefferson believed
that blacks and whites could not coexist as equals. He feared that
if whites did not treat blacks paternalistically, there would be a race
war resulting in the black race overtaking the white. Jefferson
stated, "We have the wolf by the ears and we can neither hold him,
nor safely let him go. Justice in one scale, and self-preservation in
the other." Nevertheless, Thomas Jefferson freed five of his slaves
in his will, and even though Virginia law mandated that freed slaves
leave the state within a year of their emancipation, Jefferson petitioned
the Virginia assembly to permit his freed slaves to remain
"where their families and connections are." The Virginia assembly
honored Jefferson's request.
George Washington, known throughout the ages as the "Father"
of his country, was a Southern planter who owned and relied on
slaves. Washington punished his slaves by whipping or selling them,
divided their families so they would work more efficiently, and provided
them with as little means as tolerable. He also raffled off
the slaves of those bankrupt slaveholders who owed him money.
Washington's most gruesome act as a slave owner came in 1784, five
years before he became President of the United States. In that year,
Washington hired a dentist to extract nine teeth from the mouths of
his slaves, and implant them into his own mouth.
During his presidency (1789 to 1797), Washington lived at the
President's House in Philadelphia. In 1780, Pennsylvania had passed
"An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery," which prohibited nonresidents
from holding slaves in the state longer than six months. In
an attempt to circumvent this law, Washington and his wife, Martha
Dandridge Custis Washington, neither a permanent resident of
Pennsylvania, rotated their slaves in and out of Pennsylvania so that
none of them established continuous residency for six months. This
practice violated the Pennsylvania Act, but the Washingtons were
never prosecuted under it.
During the Revolutionary War, however, Washington's attitude
toward African-Americans was markedly different. Washington
recruited free blacks into the Continental Army, and by the time of
the Battle of Yorktown, African-Americans constituted 25 percent of
the Army. By 1786, Washington promised never to buy another slave.
By the time of his death, Washington found slavery morally wrong,
and freed his slaves in his will, upon the death of his wife, Martha.
He even expressed a desire to have his freed slaves educated.
Like Jefferson, however, Washington, did not seek to abolish
slavery swiftly, or with any type of urgency. Despite not purchasing
a slave after 1786, and eventually freeing his slaves, Washington
believed slavery would be abolished by "slow, sure and imperceptible
degrees."
A Less Perfect Union
The Founding Fathers overtly defended slavery and racism in the
United States Constitution. Protecting the institution of slavery was
necessary to gain the South's support for a new, centralized federal
government. It is important to realize that our Constitution legitimized
the ownership of some human beings by other human beings.
This was, of course, directly opposed to the Natural Law values of
the Declaration of Independence, which asserted that the rights of
"all Men" come from our "Creator" and are thus "unalienable," absent
due process. The Constitution contained express provisions recognizing
slavery's existence, protecting it as a legal institution, and insulating
it from regulation or interference by the federal government.
Three provisions of the Constitution implicitly recognize the
existence of slavery: the Fugitive Slave Clause (Article IV, Section
2, Clause 3), the Importation Clause (Article I, Section 9, Clause
1), and the Three-Fifths Clause (Article I, Section 2, Clause 3). The
Fugitive Slave Clause provides that "[n]o Person held to Service of
Labour in one State" shall be discharged from such labor if he or
she escapes into another State. This clause essentially required the
States to return fugitive slaves who escaped into their territory. The
courts interpreted this clause as providing slaveholders with a right
to their slave property that no state where slavery was prohibited
could qualify, control, or undo.
The Importation Clause in the Constitution forbade Congress
from outlawing the "importation of such Persons as any of the
States now existing shall think proper" until 1808. This clause permitted
the international slave trade until at least 1808. The United
States discontinued the international slave trade in that year when
President Jefferson signed legislation prohibiting it.
The "Three-Fifths Compromise" was the clearest example of
the delegates who wrote the Constitution abandoning ethical and
moral standards, and even core values, in order to construct a new
federal government. The Northerners wanted apportionment for
the House of Representatives to be based solely on the population
of free persons living in each state, whereas the Southerners wanted
their slaves to count as whole persons, thus increasing Southern representation
in Congress. The infamous and despicable Three-Fifths
Clause emerged from the debate. It provides that apportionment be
determined by the "whole number of free Persons" in each state,
minus the number of "Indians not taxed," plus "three fifths of all
other Persons." Therefore, the Constitution counted slaves ("other
Persons") only as 60 percent of free, white persons.
In Their Defense ...
Regardless of their faults, many of the Founding Fathers did not
own slaves and recognized slavery's inherent immorality. Benjamin
Franklin, for example, called slavery "a source of serious evils" and
"an atrocious debasement of human nature." In 1774, two years
before signing the Declaration of Independence, Franklin and his
fellow Founding Father, Benjamin Rush, formed the Pennsylvania
Society for Promoting Abolition of Slavery. John Jay, an author of
The Federalist Papers and President of a comparable society in New
York, as well as the first Chief Justice of the United States, declared
that "[t]he honour of the states, as well as justice and humanity ...
loudly call upon them to emancipate these unhappy people. To
contend for our own liberty, and to deny that blessing to others,
involves an inconsistency not to be excused."
James Madison owned slaves, yet deemed slavery "the most
oppressive dominion ever exercised by man over man." Madison
noted that the delegates to the Constitutional Convention "thought
it wrong to admit in the Constitution the idea that there could be
property in men." In
The Federalist, No. 54, Madison stated that
"we must deny the fact, that slaves are considered merely as property,
and in no respect whatever persons."
The Founders seemed to believe that slavery would meet its natural
demise in the United States. At the Constitutional Convention,
a Connecticut delegate, Roger Sherman, stated, "The abolition of
slavery seemed to be going on in the United States.... The good
sense of the several states would probably by degrees complete
it." George Washington, in a draft of his first inaugural address,
expressed the desire for the country to "reverse the absurd position
that the many were made for the few." Just before his death,
Thomas Jefferson, referring to slavery, asserted that "[a]ll eyes are
opened, or opening, to the rights of man."
(Continues...)
Excerpted from LIES THE GOVERNMENT TOLD YOU
by Andrew P. Napolitano
Copyright © 2010 by Andrew P. Napolitano.
Excerpted by permission.
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