In the name of education, welfare, taxation, safety, health, the environment, and other laudable ends, the new despotism confronts us at every turn
"The greatest single revolution of the last century in the political sphere has been the transfer of effective power over human lives from the constitutionally visible offices of government, the nominally sovereign offices, to the vast network that has been brought into being in the name of protection of the people from their exploiters"
by Robert A. Nisbet
When the modern
political community was being shaped at the end of the 18th century, its
founders thought that the consequences of republican or representative
institutions in government would be the reduction of political power in individual
lives.
Nothing seems to
have mattered more to such minds as Montesquieu, Turgot, and Burke in Europe
and to Adams, Jefferson, and Franklin in the United States than the expansion
of freedom in the day-to-day existence of human beings, irrespective of class,
occupation, or belief.
Hence the
elaborate, carefully contrived provisions of constitution or law whereby formal
government would be checked, limited, and given root in the smallest possible
assemblies of the people.
The kind of
arbitrary power Burke so detested and referred to almost constantly in his
attacks upon the British government in its relation to the American colonists
and the people of India and Ireland, and upon the French government during the
revolution, was foremost in the minds of all the architects of the political
community, and they thought it could be eliminated, or reduced to
insignificance, by ample use of legislative and judicial machinery.

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