Last week the President hosted an interview with Terry Moran of ABC News in his newly gilded Oval Office. Trump drew Moran’s attention to a wall-mounted copy of the Declaration of Independence. Moran prompted the President to state his understanding of the significance of the Declaration. Trump disconcerted Moran by saying that the document stood for “unity, love and respect.”
Amidst Trump’s deliberate and incessant saturation of the news cycle, this ignorant assertion should not be overlooked or forgotten. Indeed, it should stimulate Americans to take a fresh look at the Declaration. (Those who bought the $ 60 God Bless the USA Bible that Trump grifted before his re-election will find a copy of the Declaration included within.) Although the President has stated that the Bible is his “favorite book,” it is apparent that he failed to read the Declaration when packaging it with the Bible.
Most are familiar with the Declaration’s eloquent preamble that “all men are created equal” and are endowed with rights of “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness….” Many, however, may not realize that the great bulk of the Declaration comprises a litany of ways in which King George III was despotically and tyrannically interfering with the rights of Englishmen resident in the American colonies. These were rights underpinned by an evolving, unwritten but sturdy British constitution. Even with the passage of 250 years many of the Declaration’s bill of particulars still resonate today.
Some examples will illustrate. Thomas Jefferson and other drafters accused the King of:
- Preventing growth of population of the Colonies by obstructing laws of naturalization and limiting immigration;
- Obstructing administration of justice;
- Making Judges dependent “on his Will alone;”
- Erecting a “multitude of New Offices” (think DOGE);
- “Cutting off Trade with all parts of the world”;
- Depriving many of the benefits of Trial by Jury (analogy to lack of respect for Due Process);
- Suspending our own Legislatures and declaring power to legislate in all cases ( analogy to Trump Administration’s program and budget cuts without approval of Congress); and
- Exciting “domestic insurrections.”
Not mincing words, Jefferson et. al. concluded that George III “whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.”
President Trump could profit greatly from reading the Declaration on his office wall and modulating his behavior in office accordingly. Certainly, he won’t find it a testament to “unity, love and respect,” but rather an admonition against despotism.
J.T. Smith II
Easton
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