Essential Liberty vs Temporary Safety

Benjamin Franklin is often misquoted as having said something like

"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both."

According to one source, the original statement is:

"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."

Is the quote - in and of itself - relevant today? I don't think so. Here's why:

Freedom has always been the abstract notion upon which this country was founded. To be exact, religious freedom was the impetus, with all of the other freedoms just lining up behind it like little ducklings. To wit:

Of course, other freedoms followed (during the creation of state constitutions and the Constitution of the United States), but those were the big three.

Security, on the other hand, is based implicitly on the idea that a sovereign nation would wish to remain autonomous and would take steps to ensure their sovereignty. The Constitution of the United States makes this clear in various places:

Because security was not a major factor in the formulation of the United States of America, it cannot, therefore, be linked arm-in-arm with the notion of freedom.

It is contentious to presume that a sovereign nation is undeserving of the freedoms for which it has empowered itself to defend. If it becomes necessary to enact legislation to facilitate this defense, what society sacrifices is not freedom in the sense of Constitutional Rights, but convenience in the sense of prerogative.

The real issue is that our President does not have the right to unilaterally legislate, adjudicate and execute activities under the authority of commander-in-chief.

Please read Edward Lazarus' article: Warrantless Wiretapping: Why It Seriously Imperils the Separation of Powers, And Continues the Executive's Sapping of Power From Congress and the Courts

Mitchell Allen is an advocate for cross-networking: synergistically linking multiple social networks in order to increase membership exposure.

He writes for fun and profit at WritingUp.com

He maintains The Vertical Blog Tunnel Network at the social network, http://www.Ryze.com