Author Topic: Change in America  (Read 152 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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Change in America
« on: March 25, 2024, 02:03:55 pm »
March 25, 2024
Change in America
By Clark Wren

There are two types of change. There is systemic change: change that occurs because of the political pressures within the system. Then there is anti-systemic change: change that occurs in opposition to the system in power, in other words pushback. An example of this would be when King Geoge III wanted to tax retail exchanges by means of the Stamp Act. This was only one of the taxes he tried imperiously to impose upon us to pay for our protection during the French and Indian war. This was seen by many revolutionaries in America back then as what we would call in our modern times, protection money.

Systemic change almost always occurs in the same way. I remember a long time ago in middle school part of a film, Future Shock, was shown to my eighth-grade class. In the film, two men kissed in a marriage ceremony. The entire class laughed boisterously at the absurdity and the impossibility of this event ever occurring. Now, as we know, Mitt Romney, a Republican, and the Congress of the United States have codified marriage equity into law, forever changing the relationships between men and women. How this happened was through constant pressure, over time, from a power source that finally wore down the American people and forced us to accept this change. This change was almost certain to occur because power was behind it; hence, what the book Future Shock was all about.

But what was the power that caused that change and virtually every other change in America? Permanent institutions and the elites they create. Permanent power -- or so we are supposed to believe. Yet the Founders of this nation did not believe that the British Empire and King George III were so powerful they could not be defeated in a revolutionary war. The Founders believed the people should have some say in how their lives were governed: No taxation without representation.

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https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/03/change_in_america.html
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