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The Patriot Post - Alexander's Essay – August 13, 2009
From The Federalist Patriot
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____________________________ I am pleased to report that we all returned home intact, with the exception of a couple of ribs.
As with our previous trips around the nation, we were heartened to find strong contingents of Patriots everywhere we went -- yes, even in San Francisco. However, my concern about our country's heritage of liberty being squandered by future generations was certainly reaffirmed.
The urban centers of America, and to a lesser extent the rural areas, are littered with young people who are, genuinely, adrift. Many seem to be seeking a mooring they didn't receive during childhood, and they're finding it in destructive personal habits and contemporaneous identity movements, including political movements that are an affront to liberty.
This sad state of affairs, for so many young people, can be attributed to the failure of three institutions -- marriage, church and government education.
There is no question that the most significant contributing factor undermining the social stability of our nation is the dissolution of marriages and consequently, traditional family structure.
The malignant culture of divorce is, in my opinion, the greatest national security threat that we face, and it places in peril the legacy of Liberty, bequeathed to us by our Founders and purchased by them with their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor. Indeed, the effluent of divorce is manifest in the election of politicians like Barack Obama and the cult-like minions who worship him.
The failure of our religious and academic institutions, however, is also a dire threat.
Like millions of young people across the nation, our children, our legacy, will be returning to school this month. Sadly, though most of those young people will return to institutions that are mere shadows of what they are intended to be, especially since God has been expelled from the academy.
As I reflect on John Adam's observation about "wisdom and knowledge ... being necessary for the preservation of their rights and liberties," I am reminded that there was no erroneous "separation of church and state" doctrine in his time.
The nation's oldest academic institution, Harvard University, was established in 1636 and named for Puritan minister John Harvard. The university claims that it was "never formally affiliated with a specific religious denomination," though all its presidents were Puritan ministers until 1708. A 1643 college brochure identified Harvard's purpose: "To advance Learning and perpetuate it to Posterity; dreading to leave an illiterate Ministry to the Churches." The university's Charter of 1650 calls for "the education of the English and Indian youth of this Country in knowledge and godliness."