The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns enemies of the U.S. Constitution. This year America celebrates 250 years since the time that patriots first declared independence from Great Britain. It may be time for us to declare independence once again.
In his article published in The Daily Signal, Tyler O’Neil reported on a speech given by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. The talk was part of celebrating America’s 250th anniversary, and it exposed “the greatest threat to the Declaration of Independence today – the ideology of Progressivism.”
“Progressivism
was the first mainstream American political movement – with the possible
exception of the pro-slavery reactionaries on the eve of the Civil War – to openly
oppose the principles of the declaration,” the justice said in a speech at the
University of Texas at Austin Wednesday. “Progressives strove to undo the
Declaration’s commitment to equality and natural rights, both of which they
denied were self-evident.”
With
his characteristic brilliance, Thomas cut through the Orwellian masquerade of
Progressivism to reveal what it truly is – a fundamentally backward movement.
By rejecting the solid footing of the declaration, Progressivism opened America
to central planning and administrative rule.
While
the declaration bases governmental authority on the consent of the governed and
God creating human beings with inalienable rights, under Progressivism, “liberty
no longer preceded the government as a gift from God but was to be enjoyed at
the grace of the government.”
Explaining Progressivism
Thomas
noted that President Woodrow “Wilson and the progressives candidly admitted
that they took it from Otto von Bismarck’s Germany, whose state-centric society
they admired.
Progressives
like Wilson argued that America need[s] to leave behind the principles of the
founding and catch up with the more advanced and sophisticated system of
relatively unimpeded state power.”
Yet
Thomas also quoted President Calvin Coolidge, who delivered a powerful address
on the 150th anniversary of the declaration.
“If
all men are created equal, that is final,” Coolidge said. “If they are endowed
with unalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers
from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress, can
be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or
their soundness, the only direction in which they can proceed historically is
not forward but backward.”
The Rotten Fruit of Progressivism
Thomas
laid out exactly how backward Progressivism would take America.
“Progressives
believed that Darwinian science, the idea of ever-advancing progress written
into biology itself, had proven the inherent superiority and inferiority of the
races,” he noted.
“It
was only a small step for Wilson to re-segregate the federal workforce. It was
only another step for the government to launch sterilization programs on those
deemed by the experts of the day to be unfit to reproduce, upheld by my court
in Buck v. Bell.”
The
declaration’s central claims trace back to thinkers like John Locke, and Thomas
noted that “European thinkers have long criticized America for remaining
trapped in a Lockean world with its weak, decentralized government and strong
individual rights.”
“But
we were fortunate not to trade our Lockean bonds for the supposedly enlightened
world of [Georg Wilhelm Friedrich] Hegel, [Karl] Marx, and their followers,”
Thomas said.
“Fascism
– which, after all, was national socialism – triggered wars in Europe and Asia
that killed tens of millions,” he noted. “The socialism of the Soviet Union and
the People’s Republic of China proceeded to kill more tens of millions of their
own people. This is what happens when natural rights give way to the higher
good notions of history, progress, or as Thomas Sowell has written, the visions
of the anointed.”
(Sowell’s
1995 book “The Vision of the Anointed” exposes the hubris of America’s
intellectual and political elite and the mentality behind their destructive policies
on education, crime, and family life.)
“None
of this, of course, was an improvement on the principles of the declaration,”
Thomas added, wryly.
Why the Speech Matters
Thomas’s
speech comes as President Donald Trump has attempted to root out much of the
Progressivist “woke” ideology out of the federal government and other parts of
American society.
Progressivism’s
preference for technocratic government today travels alongside other ideas,
such as critical race theory (the notion that America is systemically racist
and requires a fundamental overhaul), transgender ideology (the idea that a man
can become a woman and vice versa), and climate alarmism (the idea that the
world is ending due to human use of fossil fuels).
These
issues converge into a worldview I describe as “woke,” and that worldview forms
the basis of the Left’s infrastructure – which heavily influenced federal
policy under President Joe Biden.
Trump
has put woke ideology on the back foot, but the Left is not rejecting these
ideas. America is strangely fortunate at the 250th anniversary to
have a president who takes pride in its founding, rather than one who rejects
the founding as racist, backward, or “transphobic” – but that does not mean the
threat is over.
Americans
must heed Clarence Thomas’ warning. The battle between the Declaration of
Independence and Progressivism isn’t a matter of disagreeing on means to
achieving the same ends – such as asking whether raising or lowering taxes will
better handle the deficit.
Unfortunately,
the battle often boils down to whether America remains faithful to its founding
ideals or rejects them in favor of the Left’s latest justification to grasp
unlimited power.
Thomas
rightly explained that woke Progressivism is actually extremely backward – and America
must reject it, not just on the 250th anniversary of the
declaration, but yesterday, today, and forever.