The Daily Signal - Robert Reilly's Defense of America's Founding
Episode Date: August 11, 2020It’s not just statues and American history that are under attack. The most essential ideas from America’s founding are under siege and on trial. Robert R. Reilly, the director of the Westminster I...nstitute and widely published author, joined “The Right Side of History” podcast to discuss his new book “America on Trial: A Defense of the Founding.” Reilly discusses the deeper origins of the American Revolution—rooted in Western thought, philosophy, and religion—and explains why America’s current success and survival depends on embracing those ideas rather than abandoning them. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Tuesday, August 11th.
I'm Virginia Allen.
And I'm Kate Trinco.
Today, we're going to share an interview from our Daily Signal colleagues,
Fred Lucas and Jarrett Stetman, who hosts the Right Side of History, a great podcast that you should subscribe to.
Fred and Jared interview Robert Riley, author of America on trial, a defense of the founding.
We are now one week into our Daily Signal podcast survey, and I'd like to ask you to
take just a few minutes to complete the survey. You can find it at daily signal.com
slash survey. Again, that's daily signal.com slash survey. It should only take you five minutes,
and we greatly appreciate hearing your feedback. Now, under our top news.
In the early morning hours Monday, Chicago faced looting. According to Fox News,
13 police officers were hurt, and over 100 people have been arrested. Here's Chicago, May,
Lori Lightfoot, a Democrat, at a press conference Monday via Fox business.
We are waking up in shock this morning.
In early morning hours of today, dozens of individuals came to our loop, Magmile, River
North, and Gold Coast neighborhoods, as well as our commercial district around North and Clybourne.
These individuals engaged when it can only be described as brazen and extensive criminal looting and destruction,
And to be clear, this had nothing to do with legitimate, protected First Amendment expression.
Lightfoot also said this.
And to those who engaged in his criminal behavior, let's be clear.
We are coming for you.
We are already at work in finding you, and we intend to hold you accountable for your actions.
I don't care.
I do not care.
Whatever justification was given for this.
There is no justification for criminal behavior ever.
You have no right, no right, to take and destroy the property of others.
Our residents deserve to be safe.
Our businesses deserve to understand and enjoy safety and security of their property and their employees.
and our police officers deserve to be able to do their job
without having to worry about shots being fired,
projectiles being thrown, and being maced.
This is not anywhere near acceptable.
According to the Chicago Tribune,
city officials said a motivation was police shooting
of a 20-year-old Sunday.
Allegedly, that man was being chased by the police
and fired shots.
himself. He has received medical care and is expected to survive. After more than 70 nights of riots
in Portland, President Trump says the National Guard should be called in to stop the violence.
On Monday, Trump tweeted, Portland, which is out of control, should finally, after almost three months,
bring in the National Guard. The mayor and governor are putting people's lives at risk.
They will be held responsible. The guard will be held responsible. The guard will.
is ready to act immediately, the courthouse is secured by homeland. Last week, local police in
Portland declared several gatherings of violent protesters to be riots and fired tear gas at rioters
for the first time in about a month. Portland police arrested 25 people over the weekend for
carrying out acts of violence. President Donald Trump is sparring with Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of
Nebraska. Sass criticized Trump for suspending the payroll tax for employees in an executive order,
saying the pen and phone theory of executive lawmaking is unconstitutional slop. President Obama
did not have the power to unilaterally rewrite immigration law with DACA, and President Trump
does not have the power to unilaterally rewrite the payroll tax law. Trump tweeted Monday,
Rino Ben Sass, who needed my support and endorsement in order to get the Republican nomination for Senate from the great state of Nebraska, has, now that he's got it, thank you, President T, gone rogue again.
This foolishness plays right into the hands of the radical left Dems.
Attorney General William Barr says radical political ideas have become a, quote, substitute for religion.
Barr sat down for an interview on Fox News with Mark Levin that aired on Sunday night
and explained that the rise of the radical progressive left stems from politics becoming
all-consuming in America.
Barr explained that when he was Attorney General 30 years ago, it was common to be friends
with people across the aisle.
Not so today.
America is so divided because, for the extreme left, politics has become their religion,
Barr explained.
Nowadays you have, I think the left has essentially withdrawn from this model and really represents a Russoian revolutionary party that believes in tearing down the system.
That what's wrong about America today all has to do with the institutions we have and we have to tear them down.
And they're interested in complete political victory.
They're not interested in compromise.
They're not interested in dialectic exchange of views.
They're interested in total victory.
And it's a secular religion.
It's a substitute for a religion.
They view their political opponents as evil
because we stand in the way of their progressive utopia
that they're trying to reach.
And that's what gives the intention,
to the partisan feelings that people feel today, because for them, this pilgrimage we're
all on is a political pilgrimage. Everything is reduced to politics. For people who don't have
that perspective, politics is important, but it's not the whole purpose of life.
As Beirut continues to reel from a massive explosion last week, Prime Minister Hassan Diab and his
cabinet have resigned, blaming the explosion, which reported
originated from a fire hitting a stockpile of ammonium nitrate on corruption, Diab said,
per USA Today, I have discovered that corruption is bigger than the state and that the state is paralyzed
by this ruling click and cannot confront it or get rid of it. There have been protests in Lebanon,
and according to USA Today, the damage caused by the explosion is estimated to cost 10 to 15 billion
and 300,000 people are now homeless.
Jimmy Lye, the chairman and majority owner of Hong Kong's pro-democratic newspaper, Apple Daily,
and its publishing company, Next Digital, was arrested on Monday.
Lai was arrested on charges of colluding with foreign forces, a violation of the national security law.
The sons of the well-known media entrepreneur were also arrested, along with several other Apple Daily executives.
Beijing implemented a national security law in Hong Kong at the end of June.
The law makes collusion with foreign agents illegal and criminalizes things like terrorism.
Violators of the national security law can face life in prison or even extradition to mainland China.
About 200 police rated Apple Daily's newsroom at the time of lives arrest and look through papers on the deaths of journalists.
Mark Simon, a senior executive at Next Digital Talk.
MPR that the arrests are due to a combination of charges. Most are being arrested on some type of
conspiracy to commit fraud charges, but really, it's just an effort to decapitate the management
as they took out the top senior management with those charges. Stock shares for Next Digital grew
by over 300% on Monday as pro-democracy advocates rallied to support Lye and the media company.
It's a critical time in our nation's history.
Now more than ever at the Daily Signal, we're committed to equipping you with the best information and insight we possibly can.
And to do that, we need your help.
By sharing your thoughts and suggestions through our five-minute online survey, you can help the Daily Signal improve our reporting and reach more Americans with the message of freedom.
Find the five-minute survey at daily signal.com slash survey.
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Next up, we'll have Jared and Fred's interview with Robert Riley,
and they'll discuss America's founding.
Do you have an opinion that you'd like to share?
Leave us a voicemail at 202-608-6205,
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We are now joined by Robert R. Riley,
The director of the Westminster Institute and a widely published author who has a new book,
America on Trial, A Defense of the Founding.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Delighted to be with you.
So obviously your book is quite timely right now.
As we've seen so many attacks, I think, on America and what it stands for really coming from seemingly all sides.
We've had a summer of attacks on statues and a lot of, I think, inability from especially
America's elite to really defend what this country is all about. You really break down your book
in such a great job what has made the United States good, great, and successful, and a large part
because of its connection to a larger Western tradition. And you kind of define this Western
tradition based on three cities, Jerusalem, Athens, and Rome, which I thought was very interesting.
Can you kind of explain what exactly that means?
Yeah, sure. I tried to examine what were the necessary presuppositions for there to be such a thing as the American founding. In other words, what was the lineage of the ideas that made such a thing conceivable in the first place? And that lineage took me back to ancient Athens, ancient Israel, and the dawn of Christianity, because each of them,
contributed something indispensable.
Judaic monotheism was a startlingly unique revelation
amidst the sea of polytheism and pantheism,
simply extraordinary,
that the Jews said that their God was one,
startling enough right there,
number two, that their God was transcendent,
that is outside the world,
though through his providence he could act in the world.
Second of all, that he was all good, that everything he made was good.
And the one thing he made especially well was man who, as Genesis says, was made in God's image and likeness.
Well, that was quite a revelation, again unique in the ancient Middle East.
and it imbued man with a certain dignity and an inviolability, which is quite extraordinary.
In fact, I think you could say any claim to human rights today, in some sense or another,
is owing to that revelation in Genesis that people are made in God's image and likeness.
from ancient Athens you have philosophy, reason, the gift of the Greeks, and that they thought that reason is capable of apprehending reality and its essence, of knowing what it really is.
As distinct from simply having opinions about things, you could know the truth of them.
And this truth was not, let's say, contingent. This is you could come to know what's true everywhere.
at all times for all people. And one of those most important things you could come to know is what is
good and what is bad, what is just and what is unjust. How could you come to know these things?
Because you could apprehend the nature of man and what virtue is as opposed to vice. And how
the end of man is in the perfection of his nature, which is rational.
and therefore his apprehension of the good and of the ultimate good, which is God,
defines the end of that nature.
That was, again, a startling contribution that sort of broke the grip of tribal man on his conception of things.
If you want to know what tribal man looks like, look at what the United States is devolving in today
with all of the identity politics that it's based on race or it's based on gender.
It's based on anything, but the common apprehension that we all are human beings and share the same nature
and also have within us the image and likeness of God, which is the source of the respect, which we owe each other.
Anyway, that's jumping ahead.
And then Christianity enters the picture, universalizes the truths of the Jewish religion,
because Judaism, let's say, had a universal God, but in a still a tribal religion.
Christianity has a universal God and is a universal religion.
Anyone can be a Christian.
It enhanced that understanding of the sanctity of man due to the image and likeness of God in him,
makes him the object of God's infinite love and dates the ultimate end of man,
which is to share in God's life, is reached outside of the political order,
that the political order does not contribute to man's salvation.
Each person has an individual relationship with this transcendent God,
and is to reach his destiny through his faith in him and the gift of God's grace.
The state is forever devalued after the advent of Christianity.
The state can no longer subsume the total man.
This, to say the least, was revolutionary.
The Our Father was a revolutionary prayer.
For Christ to say, my kingdom is not of this world, was revolution.
revolutionary. To say that
give to Caesar what is Caesar and what to God
what is God's
was also shocking.
It said the people who heard Christ say this were amazed
by it and well they might have been because
no one had said it before.
And it too, once again it meant there was a secular realm
and there was a sacred realm.
And it was on the basis of this teaching
that eventually within the West, the notion of dual sovereignty grew up,
or what was called the two swords, the secular sword and the spiritual sword.
And you had the same individual under these dual sovereignties.
And this is what first created the space for the development of constitutional rule.
That's probably too long an answer.
but it's such a profound subject.
All of these ingredients had to be there
for the development
of democratic constitutional government
and all of the principles without which it won't develop.
And that, of course, begins with the equality of mankind.
The understanding that sovereignty is invested in the people
that God doesn't directly appoint a king
or a ruler of some kind.
Rather, it is that that ruler is consented to by the people if the ruler is to be legitimate.
Therefore, the requirement of consent is a natural development from the apprehension of the equality of all people and the notion of popular sovereignty.
out of the other things that what touches all must be approved by all.
They must have the opportunity to consent in all the things which affect them.
This turns into the right to vote, the right to representation.
And also, by the way, something that was universally accepted by the time of the Middle Ages was the right to revolution.
should the ruler turn into a tyrant?
And you find then in the, say, you know, 12th century, early 13th century,
the development of ecclesiastical corporations, church organizations, which are ruled by these principles,
the religious orders like the Dominicans, church councils,
and the early development of parliaments, not only in England, but on the continent.
That was great.
I think what's very interesting is how these ideas were coming together very much in the Middle Ages,
that you actually had a degree of liberty and limitation on the power of secular authorities, so to speak,
because you do have that kind of dual sovereignty.
But something that I think is very interesting that you bring up is the kind of rise
of absolutism starting really in the 16th century, how a lot of monarchies and governments started
to become unmoored in a sense, even from the law, and how that influenced the mind and thought
of the founding fathers when, of course, the United States was created. Can you explain that
transition and how that influenced the founders? Yeah, I think that there was, of course, a very
profound transformation that began in the late Middle Ages,
with a, let's call it a distorted theology, which led to a distorted metaphysics,
which inevitably affected political order.
Now, let's just quickly take that at the theological level.
Thomas Aquinas voiced what was the general opinion in the understanding of God,
that in him the will follows upon the intellect.
In other words, reason rules.
God is, above all things, Lagos, which means reason.
So reason rules and the will executes what the reason has conceived.
Now, William of Arkham famously flipped that relationship and said, no, no, the will rules.
and reason follows.
So the traditional notion, the notion at the heart of the Middle Ages, was the intellect.
The intellect directs the will.
The will then acts in accord with reason.
When you get this down to the human level, it means that rational laws are first conceived and then enforced.
Now, when you flip that relationship as,
and say, no, God is pure will and power, unbound by anything, certainly unbound by any rational
notion that man may have, that he is not really understandable because God can will anything.
The result of this when it's demoted to the human level is that this is called, by the way,
the technical name and theology is volunteerism.
So you have a voluntarist God.
In imitation of a voluntarist God, man's reason then becomes the servant of the will rather than its director.
So the will rules, the primacy of will, not the primacy of reason.
Now, that becomes the foundation for absolutism in the political realm.
First of all, in the divine right of kings, as expressed by Robert Filmer and James I in England,
was that the sovereign is absolute, receives his powers from God alone.
God directly appoints him.
There is no popular sovereignty or consent of the people.
The ruler is accountable to no one except God.
The ruler is above the laws he makes for his people.
He is unaccountable. He cannot be held to account.
There is no right to revolution.
Of course, there's no right to consent or representation.
And therefore, the ruler can rule arbitrarily according to his will.
He is not held to reason.
Law is no longer reason.
It is simply the expression of the ruler's will.
Now, this development was aided by the fracture of Christendom when Martin Luther, who was under the profound influence of William Avakum, decided to dissolve all the church corporations and left man at that time no longer under the dual sovereignty of both church and state.
the church was dissolved as an effective organization, so the prince became the head of the church.
Understandably so, this considerably enhanced the power of the ruler.
It is to the prince that Luther turned for the reform of the church.
Luther posited that the ruler was directly appointed by God.
There was no right to revolution against the ruler, at least for a good deal of what Luther
Luther's teachings. He later changed his mind. But one can see how the rule of absolutism was
enhanced by this. You then have a secular form of absolutism proposed by Thomas Hobbes in England,
who sort of dispensed with the religious side of it, except insofar as he made the head of the state,
the head of the church also. He also made the ruler,
absolute on secular grounds, with his conception of the state of nature of man, a war of all
against all. And the only way this war could be stopped is by having an absolute sovereign with
absolute powers, who also would rule without the consent of his subjects. Now, these notions
together were repugnant to the American colonists. When they became,
subject to rule without their consent. At that time in the 18th century, starting in the 1760s,
the British Parliament asserted in the declaratory act that they could rule the colonies
in all matters whatsoever, unconstrained, and without the consent of the colonists. Those colonists
understood themselves as possessing the rights of Englishmen, number one, and through their royal
charters, they had such rights. But when there was no appeal on the grounds of English
constitutionalism to some remedy to the absolute rule under which they were placed by Parliament
and George III, they saw that they had to make a higher appeal. And that higher appeal was to the
rights of man based upon natural law. And that ruling them without their consent, it was offense
against justice. And it defined tyrannical rule against which they had the right to revolution,
which they then exercised. So to understand the colonists and the way they talked and the things to
which they appealed, you have to see as they were reconnecting themselves with that ancient lineage,
with that ancient heritage, and restoring the primacy of reason, restoring the rule of reason,
and the understanding of man is a rational creature whose consent in his rule was required by his
very nature. And therefore, you find the magnificent articulation in the preamble of the Declaration
of Independence that lays out those principles under the laws of nature and of nature's God
and that man is endowed by his creator with certain inalienable rights. That's very powerfully
a natural law document. So the American founding was a restoration. It required a revolution. It required a
revolution for that restoration to take place. And then they gained themselves the opportunity
of, for the first time in history, through reflection and choice, founding a regime based
upon those principles. That's the uniqueness of the American founding. It was also unique in
its constitutional makeup of the dual sovereignty of federalism, of the rule of the federal government,
met in the autonomy of the states in certain matters.
Following up on that, I wanted to ask about, you talked about how the principle of constitutional
rule sort of emerged in the Middle Ages was rejected for a long time up until the founding.
There were several times throughout the existence of the United States that there were factions
who in some way rejected it, be that, I guess, maybe the Confederacy, maybe an emergence of the
Communist Party, even in the 20th century. I wonder if you could maybe reflect on how what we're
seeing today, not just with these massive demonstrations and rejection of history, but even this
rejection of having a free flow of debate. How, what we're seeing today is, is it unique from
previous rejections of constitutional rule? Well, you know, yes and no. I'm
Obviously, the principles of the United States is articulated in the Declaration and instantiated, for the most part, in the Constitution were controversial from the beginning.
That's why there was a war.
They were generally accepted within the United States, but of course within the United States, there was that sort of original sin, slavery.
We make sure to say, however, that slavery existed everywhere.
Slavery was the norm in human history.
For millennia, there was slavery.
So the existence of slavery, what was not unique, what was unique was the articulation of principles
which led to the elimination of slavery, first and foremost, the statement that all men are created equal,
which, by the way, there is an ancient principle.
It's not a new one.
So it was hoped that evil institution would slowly die out within the new United States.
It was eliminated rather immediately in the 10 years between the declaration and the Constitution.
all of the states north of the Mason-Dixon line and north of the Ohio River either eliminated slavery outright or put in place measures that led to its elimination.
And, of course, the Northwest Ordinance, which set forth how the new territories would be ruled that constituted a large part of the Midwest.
the Upper Midwest, forever forbade slavery.
And the Constitution provided for the opportunity to pass a law in 1808, I think 7 or 1808,
that would forbid the foreign slave trade.
And indeed, at that time, the United States Congress passed a law banning that trade,
and 12 years later, they made it a capital offense.
So there was a general understanding.
Certainly it was understood at the time of the founding that slavery was an evil by almost everyone.
The point was how to get, you know, how, what to do.
This is a, slavery was an institution that existed from time immemorial.
How is it that we do get rid of it?
Unfortunately, that, of course, was a problem that was only finally resolved with a brutal civil war in which the founding principles of the United States were defended and finally applied universally.
So, again, that took considerable time through the civil rights movements and other things that black Americans could finally assume all of the rights.
rights, which men by their nature have.
So that, but let's get, that's not the only source of contestation over the principles.
Certainly in the 20th century, we know rather dramatically that the equality of all men
was explicitly rejected by Nazi Germany, which was based upon a race theory of
history and the superiority of the Aryan race and the necessity to eliminate Jews and enslaved Slavs and
gypsies and so forth. It couldn't have been a more direct denial of the principle of equality.
And the other expression of that, which turned out to be far more damaging because it lasted
so much longer was that of the Soviet Union
and the communist assertion of a class theory
of history. So all people were not created equal
in the Soviet Union. The proletariat was
superior and of course the vanguard of the proletariat
which was the party exercised
absolute power and the Kulaks and the Bouchozy
were physically eliminated. Clergy,
was physically eliminated, et cetera.
Excuse me.
By the way, you see an early premonition of these things in the French Revolution,
which I, in one chapter of the book, compare to the American Revolution to show how
different they were.
The French Revolution was the manifestation of the radical enlightenment principles
that man could be perfected through his own means.
means, and usually those means required the absolute power of the state, and the elimination of Christianity.
The French Revolution undertook a brutal de-Christianization campaign in France through the confiscation of church properties, the exile of priests and nuns, the execution of priests and nuns.
the elimination of crosses in graveyards on church steeples, etc.
The idea being that man, of course, was alienated from his own self by this religion,
which made him a slave, you see, as Rousseau said,
and therefore he'd be liberated if you could get rid of it.
And get rid of it, they tried to do.
you invite the tremendous contrast between the American and French Revolution
by simply asking would such a de-Christianization campaign have been conceivable
in the American colonies at the time?
And the answer is, of course not.
It was inconceivable.
In fact, from most of the pulpits, the revolution,
was preached.
There was a tremendous
compatibility, as
de Tocqueville later observed,
between reason and
faith in the United
States, as they were
opponents in the French Revolution.
The American Revolution
was not
on the basis of a project
to reach
man's perfection.
It was a revolution
made by almost a
unanimously Christian population that knew that man was not perfectable through his own powers,
that man is a sinner, that man must engage in contrition, that he must turn to God for forgiveness.
He doesn't obtain any of these things through the state.
Rather, the state must be kept on its own reservation to allow man's religiously
life to be conducted freely. So it wasn't a project of self-perfection. Therefore, it didn't make itself
the enemy of Christianity or any other religion. Therefore, you can look at such a simple thing
as the dates on the American founding documents. 1789 for the Constitution. 1776 for the Declaration,
not true in Revolutionary France.
they started with the year zero.
You see, they were restarting history,
or history was truly beginning
with their secular project for man's divinization.
Nothing could be more alien to the American Revolution,
but you see in the French Revolution
a foretaste of what would come later
in the National Socialist and the International Socialist Revolutions,
which were in their different ways, also secular projects for man's perfection,
but at least as man as they conceived him as the class man or the classless man,
classless society, or the supremacy and universal rule of the Aryan race.
Why do you think it is that the American Revolution was just a real exception among revolutions?
most revolutions ended in some sort of despotism the way the French Revolution did.
Well, I think that's because of the principles on which it was founded,
which were anti-dispotic, which did not allow for despotism.
You know, the French Revolution, its principles more or less inevitably ended in despotism.
It required despotism for its success.
That was completely opposite to that of the United States.
And, of course, you could point to the same thing in the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany or Paul Potts, Cambodia, or the communist revolution in China.
You know, the first thing they have to do is get rid of religion.
The enemy is religion.
Anything that points man to a transcendent, which means to a standard higher than that standard set by the state, is the enemy of the state, and the state's project cannot be reached or executed without the elimination of religion.
again, the United States was quite the opposite.
It was a founding by a Christian, largely Christian people who wanted a state that was compatible
with how they conceived their spiritual life to be.
In fact, they wanted a state that was constitutionally reigned in in terms of,
of their free exercise of religion.
And today, the United States is being transformed into a lebiathan,
which is the name Thomas Hobbs gave to this absolute sovereign that he proposed.
And that can be seen in the attempted restrictions on the exercise of religion in the United States
by certain sectors of the American government, whether federal or state,
they think that the suppression of religion, or at least its restriction, is necessary for their progressivist view of the uses of government,
because they're more in tune with the French Revolution than the American one,
and they think the state should be the vehicle for the transformation of man into whatever
view of man they have. Just to give you a little taste of it, I live in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
And the COVID virus has been an interesting experience in what it has revealed about the character
of certain of our rulers and how they use the close to absolute power they have assumed for
themselves in light of this virus. And here I'm not speaking.
against any sensible precautions taken to deal with this virus.
But the governor in this Commonwealth assumed upon himself the power to say what was an essential
activity that would be allowed to continue and what were non-essential activities that
wouldn't be allowed to continue, at least for a period of time.
And quite surprisingly, the exercise of one's religion was found non-essential.
So close the churches, closed the synagogues.
However, abortion was found to be an essential service.
That must be permitted, but the exercise of your religion wasn't.
I think that reveals something special in the character of certain points.
political rulers in the United States.
And what Leviathan will look more and more like the more powers that are assumed by the
government?
Absolutely.
And that kind of leads to my final question here, which is, you know, America really is on trial
in many ways right now, maybe even Western civilization in general.
It seems that the ideas that you've written about in this book really have few defenders
in this country's leading intellectual and academic institutions.
I think many cases quite shamefully, the American left appears to be going almost completely in this kind of 1619 project route.
Defining America is fundamentally racist and rotten and going really full bore into the identity politics, really the kind of almost tribal ideas that you define in your book that's very pre-modern in a lot of ways.
But it also seems that there are some on the right even who have kind of gone after the,
the founding. I think notably Patrick Danine at Notre Dame, criticizing the founding as being the kind of
basis for you see the modern radicalism today and maybe the individualism and liberalism in
modern America. Can you kind of address that and talk about, is there any validity to this?
And explain also why you say that ultimately the founding is where we need to get back to,
not a rebuke of the founding.
Yes, I think you hit the nail on the head there that the problem we are facing today in identity politics is the retribalization of people.
And retribalization means they no longer accept the principle that all people are created equal.
It's precisely a rejection of that.
And they need to take a good, hard look at what tribal life was like.
The 1619 project is so suffused with ignorance that it is interesting, and just for that fact.
The claim that the English brought slavery to the United States is true insofar as they restrict it to black slavery.
True enough, they brought black slaves, which they obtained in Africa from other black tribes that had first in
enslaved the people whom they bought to bring to the American colonies. But there was already
slavery here, widely practiced amongst the Native Americans. They led tribal lives.
And as was the practice in tribal life everywhere. It didn't have to be on the American
continent. You could find it in the ancient world. You can find it today.
In the Middle East, in remote parts of Africa and South America, where there's tribal life, there's almost always slavery.
And wars with the opposing tribes, the victor takes the members of the other tribes as slaves.
And the American Indians practice slavery.
So slavery was already here.
Quite amusingly, you know, the Supreme Court made this recent decision.
that the eastern part of Oklahoma ought to be given back to the tribes of that area.
According to some ancient treaty, the other side of the question was that at the time of the Civil War,
those tribal areas sided with the Confederacy.
Why?
Because the tribes, they had slaves.
and they wanted to keep them.
So keep in mind that tribalism almost is always accompanied with slavery.
Why? Because the tribal mentality has no means through which to apprehend that all people are created equal.
So for them, slavery is a perfectly natural development.
So as these people in the United States embrace tribal identities, whether it's based,
on race, or it's based on some kind of transgenderism or whatever particular identity they think
trumps everything else. They're descending into tribal life. Now, the fact is there's very
little opposition to this from the intelligency of the United States, whether it's in the media,
or the academy, or at the upper reaches of the business world,
because all of these people's minds have been corrupted for several generations of
miseducation in which theories supporting this kind of thing and denying the principles of the
American founding have been taught.
Progressivism itself, from John Dewey,
from President Wilson.
They're all denials of the principles and the preamble of the Declaration of Independence.
They get in the way.
So they must be got rid of, you see.
One thing I could quote, and if you've looked at the book, you'll see the instances of the
number of times the American founders said the principles on which we are basing our enterprise
of a transcendent source, and they are immutable.
Human nature is immutable.
Therefore, these truths apply at all times to all people everywhere.
Now, if you believe that, if you accept that, you get to keep the republic,
which the American founders gave us.
If you deny those principles, you don't get to keep it.
because it can't possibly survive in the absence of them.
And that's exactly, those principles are denied in American progressivism.
Obviously, they are denied in any form of moral relativism, of cultural relativism, and so forth.
You know, I can just give one example that kind of helps make the whole thing clear.
From President Barack Obama's book, The Audacity of Hope, let me read you this sentence.
Quote, implicit in the Constitution's structure and the very idea of ordered liberty was a rejection of absolute truth,
the infallibility of any idea or ideology or theology or ism, and any tyrannical consistency that might lock
future generations into a single unalterable course, period, close quotes.
So the truth does not set you free.
The truth enslaves you.
So you must deny this truth.
There are no transcendent immutable truths.
That's exactly what President Obama is saying.
So the rejection of absolute truth.
I mean, it's stunning to see it sort of a naked type,
a statement so antithetical.
to the founding principles of the United States.
So when it reaches the highest office of the land,
you know that we're in trouble.
Absolutely.
Well, Robert, thank you so much for joining us
on the right side of history.
It's incredibly enlightening,
and I think also incredibly important for Americans now
who believe it's very strongly
in what this country stands for,
but are faced with an incredible challenge
that comes from some of those powerful institutions
in this country, it seems that you've done a great service to the many Americans who right now are
looking for information, for better understanding when they see and hear these attacks
occurring so often.
Really, I do recommend to listeners in our audience to pick this book up and grapple with the
philosophy and the ideas that have been passed down to them by the founding generation that
we have inherited and to better be able to articulate to our friends, our neighbors,
our colleagues, what makes this special.
So again, thank you very much, Robert, for joining us and talking about these things.
You're very welcome.
You know, as dire as the situation is, as bleak as it looks, we do have a path forward.
And that is to return to the founding principles of the United States, to recapture these immutable transcendent,
truths by which we ought to conduct our lives. So thanks very much for the opportunity.
You're quite welcome. And again, the name of the book is America on trial,
a defense of the founding. Thank you so much. Thank you. God bless you.
And that'll do it for today's episode. Thanks for listening to the Daily Signal podcast.
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