The Founders Knew Latin
by Larry L. Beane II
by Larry L. Beane II
The founders
of the American Republic knew their Latin.
That is why
they carefully chose the word "federal." In
James Madison's original draft of a proposed new Constitution (the
"Virginia Plan"), the word "national" was used to describe the
proposed new Union. However, this word was explicitly rejected by
the Constitutional Convention, specifically because the founders
did not see the United States as a "nation" but rather as a "federation."
Their vision was for the United States to be a union of sovereign
states as opposed to a consolidation of the states into "one nation,
indivisible" – and this reality is embedded in the very word "federal."
Convention
delegate Gouverneur
Morris addressed this distinction in the debates
on May 30, 1787.
The Latin motto
"e pluribus unum" also captures the plural nature of the Union.
It was never meant to be collapsed and rolled into into "one nation."
This is even evident in common grammatical usage, for while the
architects of the Union were still living, the singular verb "is"
was not paired up with the plural subject "United States."
But within
decades, the federal government became increasingly heavy-handed
with the states.
The struggle
between the forces of centralization and decentralization intensified
between 1830 and 1861, when political compromises failed, and the
Union fell into disunion. Seven states of the deep south had seceded
and formed a new federation, acting on what is often called the
"compact theory" of the American union of 1789. This approach to
the Constitution holds that the states are sovereign, and that the
Union is a "compact" between them. The compact theory holds that
unless power is delegated to the federal government, that power
remains reserved to the states or to the people – a concept written
directly into the Constitution itself as the Tenth
Amendment. A clear and concise overview of the compact theory
and its historical implications, past and present, can be found
in chapters three and four of Thomas Woods's Politically
Incorrect Guide to American History.
In spite of
the Tenth Amendment and the intent of the founders, by the 1860s,
those who opposed secession and who ultimately annexed the seceded
states by raw military force were denying the compact theory, and
offered instead its diametric opposite: the "nationalist
theory." Though this theory had been around for decades, it
was a minority view without teeth until Lincoln and his associates
put it into force by force. This alternative view saw the Union
as "one nation" that gave birth to the states and not vice versa
– though one will hunt in vain for the words "nation" and "national"
used to describe the Union in the Constitution
itself.
After the conclusion
of the War to Suppress Southern Independence, the compact theory
was largely discredited (if not derided as treason) and cast aside
in favor of the highly-centralized and seemingly invincible "nationalist"
model. Even those who defend this radical shift in federal-state
relations describe it as nothing short of a "revolution."
We all know
which side won the War of 1861–1865. But as President Jefferson
Davis of the Confederate States of America pointed
out: "A question settled by violence, or in disregard of law,
must remain unsettled forever." In other words, might does not make
right – might only suppresses discussion. I believe most Americans
today simply accept the outcome of the war to be a legal and salutary
affirmation of our republic as a "nation," as though the Constitution
can be legally amended at bayonet point. Furthermore, it is now
common, and even expected, to make the grammatical error of mixing
the plural subject "United States" with the singular verb "is."
And while
Lincoln
apologists who love Big Government and central planning use
every sort of historical revisionism, appeals to emotion, patriotism,
and pure sophistry to deny the compact theory of constitutionally
limited government and states' rights, they can't change the reality
of the word "federal." For while the English language is continuously
being twisted and turned, strained and spat out again by politically
correct propagandists and thought-police, Latin is thankfully for
the most part a "dead language." It is not subject to political
mutation and manipulation. It means what it says.
The word "federal"
comes into English from the Latin word foedus (genitive: foederis).
And in this light, there is no ambiguity whatsoever when it comes
to what the founders meant by rejecting the word "nation" and replacing
it with the word "federal." When one understands this, all the clever
and pompous pronouncements from academicians and government bureaucrats
(who want Washington, DC to plan and manage every aspect of our
lives) fall by the wayside. For the word "foedus, foederis" means:
"a league, treaty, charter, compact."
Thus, federal
governance is, by very definition, a compact. The Constitution is
a compact. The Union is a compact – not a nation. The founders knew
their Latin even as most of our modern-day "educators" and bureaucrats
do not. Coincidentally, Jefferson Davis's middle name was "Finis,"
Latin for "end" or "boundary." His generation's passing marked the
end of education that emphasized Latin and history and classical
ideals, and the beginning of Big Government's brand of "public schools."
Today, very
few people are in a position to even know that the Federal government
is, by definition, a compact. Most give it no thought at all.
To show how
language has been perverted to the detriment of truth since the
time of the American Republic's founding, a standard
modern collegiate dictionary today defines "federal" as involving
"surrender [of] their individual sovereignty to a central authority
but retain[ing] limited residuary powers of government" (compare
this to the text of the Tenth Amendment!) and marks the definition
"of or relating to a compact or treaty" as "archaic."
Thus
the "living" language of English covers the sins of the advocates
of the "living" document theory of the Constitution. This is "change"
we have been brainwashed to believe in. Federal is national, just
as war
is peace, freedom is slavery, and ignorance is strength.
However, perhaps
Jeff Davis was wrong about one thing. Maybe this question of the
nature of our federal government that was "settled by violence"
won't remain unanswered "for ever." Even as Latin and classical
education are making a comeback, and as people are once more looking
to the Constitution for guidance and to history for lessons about
government and liberty, it seems that the states and the people,
increasingly alarmed at federal intrusions into their affairs, are
once again finding their voice in the form of a renewed
interest in the Tenth Amendment and even a resurgent
nullification movement.
Deo gratias
that the founders knew their Latin. And even more so, thank God
they knew the danger of centralized power, leading them to establish
a federation and to reject a nation. And hopefully We The People,
Deo vindice, will once more see the Union as a federation in light
of the compact written to limit government and defend our God-given
rights, instead of continuing in our ignorance to be bullied, tricked,
and manipulated into accepting the great lie of the expansive and
boundless "one nation, indivisible" that must be worshiped and obeyed
as a god.
Maybe we are
ready to join the founders and say unambiguously, "Satis est!"
May
21, 2009
Rev.
Larry Beane [send him mail]
serves as pastor and teaches junior high Latin and Religion classes
at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church and School in Gretna, LA. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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