The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns the similarities between the American decline and the decline of the Roman Republic. Victor Davis Hanson quoted the ancient historian Livy (59 B.C. – 17 A.D.) of saying about “the long decline of the Roman national character”: “We can bear neither our diseases nor their remedies.”
Hanson
then declared, “America is nearing such an impasse.” He added, “We know that no
state can long exist after opening its borders to over 7 million illegal
aliens, requiring neither background checks nor legality.”
So this generation apparently feels that
it can endure the collateral damage of daily assaults on American citizens, the
near bankruptcy of our cities, and 100,000 fentanyl deaths per year – but certainly
not the idea that it is somehow not politically correct or compassionate. The
same is true of the $35 trillion debt, now costing more than $1 trillion a year
in interest payments – and growing. We all know it is unsustainable. Americans
understand it will eventually lead either to destructive hyperinflation,
suicidal renunciation of federal debt, or confiscation of private savings.
Yet we ignore the reckless spending and
keep borrowing well over $1 trillion a year. Apparently, our generation prefers
being praised as “virtuous” and “caring.” So it leaves the next generation to
be smeared as “cruel” and “unfair” when it is forced to cut federal
entitlements and bloated government or face civilizational collapse.
The crime epidemic is also similar.
Everyone accepts that no society can long endure quasi-legalized shoplifting or
green-lighting smash-and-grabbers and carjackers to be released without bail.
But we assume that such a civilizational
implosion will never reach our own sanctuary neighborhoods or safe places of
work – at least not yet.
We also know that restoring deterrence by
arresting, convicting, and jailing repeat felons will return safety to our streets.
Hanson
continued in his article to mention other areas that are contributing to the
decline of America: the homeless who are living on the streets of America
instead of receiving help for their mental illness; the weaponization of our
legal system which looks a whole lot like what happens in third-world
countries; America’s paralysis when dealing with foreign policy.
Hanson
concluded his article with the following declaration:
Societies do not always collapse from a
lack of wealth, invasion, or natural catastrophes.
More often, they know what is destroying
them. But they are so paralyzed by their fear that the road to salvation
becomes too painful to even contemplate.
So they implode gradually, then suddenly.
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