--- "Revolutionary Majorities" continued

The Pit - or Revolution

Only one thing seems capable of closing the yawning mouth of the pit, and that is the formation of a new Revolutionary Majority coupled with resurrection of The Spirit of '76. Anything short of this seems certain to pass on to today's children an increasingly difficult task of freeing themselves from transistorized chains of governmental control. Such a legacy is the bequeathal of cowa~ds, not free men.

The first American revolutionists accused those who ruled them of excessive taxation, interference with property rights, illegal search -and seizure, not protecting the citizens from incursions by several thousand Indians, policies destructive of the general welfare, and Nalt.riDg fUDd.­ .entally the forD of our government,Mll among other things.

Today, the federal government taxes its subjects for forty percent of their income instead of the three percent (less than $1.20 a year) tax of the king; 12 interferes with the ownership and use of virtually every description of property; authorizes everything from game wardens to I.R.S. agents to search, arrest, or seize property without warrant. Allows fifteen million aliens to illegally cross its borders in less than a ten-year period, conducts a policy of systematic extermination of its young men through no-win wars, and subjects the founder's children to enforced equality. Each of these acts individually amounts to altering fundamentally the form and purpose for which the federal government was created. Taken as a whole, they are a cry - nay - a demand for a new campaign of terror conducted against the government and its friends in the great American tradition of 1776.

Bring Back the King

An examination of the depth and magnitude of policies fostered by federal rulers detrimental to the people of present-day America make the abuses of the English king's government pale into insignificance. One thing is clear: comparison of criminal acts of the two governments makes those who value their liberty and freedom long for the bitter days of English despotism.

While there are many similarities between the first American Revolution and the second <coming soon at a place near you>, there are also significant differences.

The first and paramount dissimilarity is that, while our heroic forefathers fought to overthrow their legally constituted government and were thus revolutionaries in the truest sense of the word, those who seek to break the quickly tightening bands of servitude today war against an illegal government that imposes itself upon the people under the color of law. By the Washington regime's disobedience to and violation of the bounds of the Constitution, established by the founders of this country, it has made of itself an unlawful body with no more right to govern the American people than has the present Queen of England. That the government survives despite the crimes it has committed is explainable only because the atrocities it systematically imposes are papered over with a veneer of legality. Propaganda that numbs the mind keeps people from rising against those who abuse them.

No Law, Only Power

There is no law in this country - only power - the majority of which currently rests with the pirates of the Potomac, who pose as our lawful government while using overpowering force to quell those who resist their destructive policies. The Constitutional Revolutionist of today is actually fighting for a transfer of power from those who can make no legitimate claim to it, to those who inherently hold it as a natural right - the lawful citizens of this country.

Another salient difference between the first American Revolution and the second is the contrast between the quality of the people of then and now. Our ancestors were strong men, who stated often that they were "resolved to die as free men rather than live as slaves. II They were conditioned to doing their own thinking while at the same time ever holding before themselves the

guiding lights of honor and duty.

Today, raised in the lap of

luxury, many people gladly exchange their

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