Paul McKeever reflects on American Independence Day
The ideas implicit in the Revolution and the Declaration
Paul McKeever - July 4, 2008
At least three important ideas facilitated the American Revolution and the Declaration of Independence. The first was that man has a rational faculty which he must choose to use if he is to obtain the knowledge upon which his survival depends. The second was that man’s highest purpose in life is to achieve his own happiness. The third was that it is ethically right to pursue one's own happiness by acting in accordance with the rational conclusions of one's own mind.
These three ideas were implicit in the actions of those who fought for American independence with the pen or sword. No man lacking a belief that he could rely upon his own mind for his own survival would have sought self-government. No man lacking a belief that the pursuit of his own happiness is his highest purpose in life would have a reason to complain about the misery caused by taxation and tyranny. No man lacking the belief that it is ethically right rationally to pursue one's own happiness would long have entertained the thought of advocating or fighting for a government that acts only to defend, physically, every individual's control over his own life, liberty and property. Such a thought would have been devoured by feelings of guilt and shame.
But for the fact that the rational self-esteem of the American revolutionaries has survived among true Americans to this day, there would be no Independence Day today. To those Americans, I bid you fondly a Happy Independence Day.
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Paul McKeever is the leader of the Freedom Party of Ontario.

