I never thought much about the Constitution in my younger
years. Yes, it was important (yawn); but it seemed complicated and, frankly, less
than important. Why worry about an aged document when the American government seemed
to be fine and I was sure it would continue to be so without my attention.
There was so much to do--leave all that to politicians and old men. I trusted
their judgments, whatever they were.
Then I heard some in the media mock the Founding Fathers and
my feelings started to change. That was going too far. It didn’t make sense—if
the Constitution was a good thing, how could the men who wrote it be bad?
Doesn’t good fruit come from a good tree?
I began to study their lives and times. My more enlightened
friends worried about government policies and patriots were protesting our lack
of freedom. I couldn’t see any freedoms I’d lost until I noticed the interference
from bureaucrats and pesky regulations in my father’s produce company in the Southwest.
A friend’s father got fined for not wearing his seatbelt and a woman at church
had her children temporarily taken from her because her home was messy when authorities
responded to an emergency call. I wasn’t
opposed to seatbelts nor did I like messy homes; I just didn’t believe the
authorities should make those decisions.
My tipping point came because of vitamins. I believed in
them; the federal government apparently didn’t. A national organization
informed me the federal government was threatening to cut off access to
vitamins. How dare they--no one had the right to make that decision for me; that
was my choice! I wrote my congressmen and representatives. They responded, the
measure was defeated (though surely not just because of me), and I saw the
power of representation. My voice mattered. I’ve never looked back.
Today, I study the Constitution. To me it is political
scripture—it has simplicity, depth, the ring of truth. I pray to understand our
political system and the document that gave it birth. I study the issues, make
informed decisions, and express my opinion to elected officials. I no longer assume
that all lawmakers automatically have my best interests at heart—I let them
prove it.
I know the issues that matter most to me—the loss of tiny
lives through abortion, the God-given right to own personal property, the right
of self-protection. I vett organizations that speak wisely for these issues and
“put my money where my mouth is” with contributions.
With my greater attention has come greater patriotism,
greater exasperation with elected officials, greater thirst for freedom. I
speak out now to friends and associates; I challenge standard assumptions and
the status quo.
My process culminated in a book: Promises of the Constitution: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow. My heart is in it. I hope you’ll join me through
its pages.
- Pam
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