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Name: Jim Hunt
Location: Alpharetta, GA
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Dear President Obama


An open letter to the new President of the United States of America: 

Dear Mr. President:

Congratulations on becoming the 44th President of the United States. I wish you the best of success in that most difficult office. As you familiarize yourself with the White House I hope that you will take the time to read (re-read I hope) the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution to remind yourself of the full burden that you are about to undertake.

Mr. President, these documents, which you spoke of so highly in your inaugural address today, deserve and require more than lip service. Much of what you spoke of in your speech is diametrically opposed to the ideals set forth in those documents. Freedom is not provided by government. It is not the government’s responsibility to help people find jobs or homes or medical care. It is the job of the government to stay out of the way, and to make sure that others stay out of the way, of each individual’s God-given freedom to make their own way in the world, powered by their own innate skills and abilities.

Mr. President, God has given us conscience and the desire to help those who cannot help themselves. Government has taken that desire away and impersonalized it, removed it from the American psyche so that now we view a homeless person and see it as a government problem, not a problem for us to deal with as individuals.

Mr. President, when we look at the world and see countries where the citizens are trapped in poverty and opportunity is denied, we cannot help them by simply sending money to their captors or extending an open hand hoping that they will unclench their fists. We must help them by opening free trade and opportunity, showing the people and their governments that the strength of any nation comes from the individuals that make up its citizenry. Those individuals, each pursuing his or her own brand of success and satisfaction, are the people that truly benefit the “common good” for as each one achieves more, they also share more, either via their purchases, their gifts, or their good works.

Mr. President, when you penalize the most successful in our country, the pain will be felt most by the least among us; for they are the ones whose jobs will be lost; they are the ones who will no longer be building homes, yachts, cars, or anything else.

Mr. President, the Declaration and the Constitution lay out these values clearly and precisely. The Constitution places sharp restrictions on the authority of the government. Although these restrictions have been honored mostly in the breach over the past 76 years, they are critically important. If you follow those restrictions and move government out of the way by reducing spending and reducing ALL taxes you will be amazed at what this country can do.

Mr. President, I pray for your success in office, I pray for the future of our nation. Please bring your capabilities and strengths to bear to ensure that our nation is more free in 2012 than it is today, that my daughter will grow up in a country founded on and still based upon individual freedom and responsibility.

God Bless you and God Bless America,

James W. Hunt

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"That a man can stand up."

Patriots’ Day, April 19, is a state holiday in Maine and Massachusetts to commemorate the Battle of Lexington and Concord and the “Shot Heard ‘Round the World”. Why did those Minutemen take up arms that early spring morning in 1775? Was it to free Boston from those “infernal redcoats”? No. Had any occupied city ever had better treatment than Boston? Had a single newspaper been stopped? Had a single opposition leader been hung or even arrested? No. 

It is true soldiers were quartered in Boston and the city was occupied and slowly being crushed by the closing of the port. But food was getting in. John Hancock, John and Samuel Adams, Joseph Warren, Paul Revere and many others all traveled freely to and from the city. Great public meetings were held to protest the occupation and delegates were sent to the 1st Continental Congress meeting in Philadelphia. The British did not interfere with any of these things. Virtually all of the taxes that had caused so much trouble had been repealed even prior to the Boston Tea Party some 15 months earlier. So why on that early morning of April 19, 1775 did a war break out, a war that lasted six years (and another two before England accepted the end result)?

The answer, as is often the case, is both simple and complex. The proximate cause was the reason the British were marching to Lexington and Concord: to seize the stockpiles of arms and ammunition that the colonists had stored in Concord. The British planned to remove the ability of the citizens to stand up against the King’s Army. But why were the colonists ready to fight? Were they fighting to create a new nation? Were they fighting to cut their taxes? No. I believe that the great author Esther Forbes put it best. She wrote that they were fighting “so that a man can stand up.” Throughout history up until that point, individuals had few rights but those permitted to them by their rulers. Whether it was the peasants of France, the serfs of Russia, or the colonists in America; the concepts of human rights that we know today did not then exist. But here in America we had spawned a new breed, more independent, more self-sufficient, proud and arrogant and ready to stand on our own two feet. All we asked was to be given the full rights of Englishmen. But King George and parliament had other ideas.

The Declaration of Independence made a bold claim. It set forth that our rights come not from any King or government but from God. It further said that these rights are inalienable, meaning that they cannot be taken away or even given up. They are our absolute rights, and this fact is so obvious that it needs no explanation. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that ALL men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these Rights are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.” These men did not consider this to be a subject for debate; these truths are “self-evident.” The Declaration and, 11 years later, the Constitution were written entirely based upon these truths. That one sentence, 36 simple words, defines precisely what my Great Great Great Great Grandfather, Captain Isaac Davis, died for that April morning. That is why 233 years later I am writing this blog. We need to remember these words every day. We need to stand up for what they mean and make every day Patriots’ Day.

God Bless America

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