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		<title>Was Trump’s Iran Strike UNCONSTITUTIONAL?</title>
		<link>https://treeoflibertysociety.com/was-trumps-iran-strike-unconstitutional/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ben McClintock]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 23:00:36 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Constitution]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[john birch society]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Was Trump’s strike on Iran unconstitutional? Did the President bypass Congress to launch Operation Midnight Hammer? In this hard-hitting interview, [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://treeoflibertysociety.com/was-trumps-iran-strike-unconstitutional/">Was Trump’s Iran Strike UNCONSTITUTIONAL?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://treeoflibertysociety.com">Tree of Liberty Society</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Was Trump’s strike on Iran unconstitutional? Did the President bypass Congress to launch Operation Midnight Hammer?</p>
<p>In this hard-hitting interview, Gary Benoit and Steve Bonta from The New American break down the real questions:</p>
<p>&#8211; Did Iran already move its enriched uranium before the strikes?<br />
&#8211; How hard is it REALLY to build a nuclear weapon?<br />
&#8211; Why target Iran but not Russia or China?<br />
&#8211; And most importantly: Is this another unconstitutional war?</p>
<p>Get this issue of The New American here <a href="https://thenewamerican.com/product/the-new-american-magazine-april-2026/">https://thenewamerican.com/product/the-new-american-magazine-april-2026/</a><br />
The John Birch Society affiliate, The New American Magazine.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">18263</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>By Compact, Not Command: The Constitution They Erased</title>
		<link>https://treeoflibertysociety.com/by-compact-not-command-the-constitution-they-erased/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ben McClintock]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2025 12:00:26 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Constitution]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://treeoflibertysociety.com/?p=17807</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>In this compelling interview, constitutional scholar Dr. Joe Wolverton of the John Birch Society and Western Islands Publishing discusses the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://treeoflibertysociety.com/by-compact-not-command-the-constitution-they-erased/">By Compact, Not Command: The Constitution They Erased</a> appeared first on <a href="https://treeoflibertysociety.com">Tree of Liberty Society</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this compelling interview, constitutional scholar <a href="https://thenewamerican.com/author/joe-wolverton-ii-j-d/"><strong data-start="221" data-end="242">Dr. Joe Wolverton</strong></a> of the <a href="https://jbs.org/"><strong data-start="250" data-end="272">John Birch Society</strong></a> and <a href="https://westernislandspublishing.com"><strong data-start="277" data-end="307">Western Islands Publishing</strong></a> discusses the inspiration behind his newest works—<a href="https://amzn.to/4nynXMP"><em data-start="358" data-end="407">The Miraculous Life and Legacy of James Madison</em></a> and <a href="https://amzn.to/4oIVHYI"><em data-start="412" data-end="437">By Compact, Not Command</em></a>. Wolverton reveals forgotten truths about Madison’s faith, his original understanding of the Constitution as a compact among sovereign states, and the deliberate erasure of those ideas from modern education. With engaging stories—from Madison’s college entrance exams in Latin and Greek to the “no atom of ill will” campaign with Monroe—Dr. Wolverton illustrates how America’s founding principles were grounded in faith, humility, and knowledge. His message is clear: liberty requires learning, and reclaiming the founders’ wisdom is essential to restoring constitutional government today.</p>
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<p>TRANSCRIPT</p>
<p>We have Dr. Joe Wolverton, the John Birch Society&#8217;s constitutional scholar, as well as the president of Western Islands<br />
publishing. And they just have some fantastic new things coming out. I&#8217;ve just<br />
noticing at Western Islands the other day, the price that you guys have on books.<br />
I&#8217;m like, was that even that cheap when it was brand new? Some of these reprints<br />
that you guys have going on. If somebody wants to build their Liberty Library, they<br />
need to go check out Western Islands right now. So I&#8217;m just really pleased to have<br />
you. Thank you, Dr. Wolverton, for joining us. I wanted to &#8211; I appreciate it. I<br />
wanted to draw people&#8217;s attention to your two newest books that you put together.<br />
I&#8217;m going to show them right now on the screen. We have your biography on James<br />
Madison, which I think is really important because it seems like when we talk about<br />
the founding fathers, he&#8217;s almost, even though he&#8217;s considered and referred to often<br />
as the father of the Constitution, we tend to focus on Jefferson, Adams, and<br />
Washington. And even though it was Madison&#8217;s letters in the Federalist Papers that<br />
really offered a lot of the boost towards actually getting the Constitution ratified.<br />
And then I want to get into what you have in by compact, not command. This is a<br />
compilation that you put together and have a forward to on some really important<br />
constitutional documents. And so what I&#8217;ve noticed is that this isn&#8217;t an insult.<br />
I&#8217;m not insulting people in the Liberty Movement, people that consider themselves<br />
constitutionalists, but these perspectives are not perspectives that you get from any<br />
of, you know, most of the different<br />
constitutional classes that are out there or books put out by like American Heritage.<br />
Those types of things, they are from more of a modernist perspective where I believe<br />
you go back to an actual originalist perspective by, and this is a saying that you<br />
say a lot that I just love is going to the source and not drinking downstream. And<br />
so this book by compact and not command is an important book for those that want<br />
to drink from the source and not to get the muddied water downstream. So,<br />
yeah, I completely agree. That was the whole goal of it to,<br />
and people would tell me this as I would go and give presentations about state<br />
sovereignty and about the, how the, you know, the union came about the how the you<br />
know the union came about and how the constitution was a contract among the<br />
sovereign states to create an agent called the federal government everybody would say<br />
yeah there&#8217;s no way to there&#8217;s no accessible way to read those things and I thought<br />
well we can make now that I&#8217;m in charge of a publishing publishing company, you<br />
know, and that&#8217;s the thing. Like when Wayne Murrow took over as CEO of the John<br />
Bird Society, he called me and he&#8217;s like, I want you to take control of the<br />
publishing because he&#8217;s like, I want there to be no impediment between you and your<br />
mind and what you can publish for us and, you know, what you think we need.<br />
And so<br />
instantly it turns to okay we&#8217;ve got to first of all resurrect western islands<br />
because when i when i joined the john berg society in 1988 uh i was a freshman at<br />
b yu and i joined the john burst because they had a presentation and um i just<br />
bought i mean i was very obviously poor college student, but I bought the books I<br />
could afford. I think there were like three or four of them that I bought and just<br />
devoured them. And I thought this, you know, and Wayne, our CEO has a saying that<br />
he has, which is, you know, leaders are readers. And so I agree with that<br />
completely. And so I&#8217;m like, how can we get, you know, these things that people,<br />
people say to me all the time they&#8217;d be like well i&#8217;ve never heard of abel upshire<br />
or i&#8217;ve never heard of the danger not over or yeah i&#8217;ve heard of um the virginia<br />
resolution i have no idea what it is and so i&#8217;m like how can we have all of this<br />
great learning john taylor of caroline you know how can we have this great learning<br />
and somehow make it accessible and so like you said i mean i just said i told<br />
wayne i&#8217;m like we&#8217;re not going to get rich off these books but i want everybody<br />
who wants these books to be able to have these books so we take whatever it costs<br />
us to print them and we just shave the margin right down and we make it i mean<br />
the people over it over at western island<br />
not command just founding era documents on federalism and liberty with i wrote a<br />
little introduction to it and all you got to do is just i you know little<br />
biographies of the guys and jump in there man jump in and say what did what was<br />
jefferson&#8217;s understanding of the relationship between the states and the feds well<br />
right there it is what was you know, Abel Upshurst&#8217;s understanding. What was John<br />
Taylor of Caroline&#8217;s understanding? And the funny thing is been that I was really<br />
shocked by how many people just didn&#8217;t even know the basics of this stuff.<br />
Right. Like, I mean, we&#8217;re talking people that are constitutionalists or,<br />
you know, MAGA, America first kind of people, but who genuinely are bereft of any<br />
sort of basic understanding of how the Constitution came to be and what it is meant<br />
to be as far as a contract among<br />
sovereign republics. And it&#8217;s terrifying. And so I&#8217;m hopeful that, Man,<br />
I wish we could, you know, have one of those things where some wealthy person would<br />
take up this book and just, you know, buy thousands of them to send to schools so<br />
that, you know, kids could read these things and really go about changing our<br />
situation, our political situation. You know what I mean? Oh, absolutely. Yeah. Well,<br />
Before we get into that, I wanted to start off with your biography of Madison. I&#8217;m<br />
going to show that real quick, my copy of it. I always get the hardbacks. If you<br />
guys have hardbacks, that&#8217;s what I buy first. I always get the hard backs and,<br />
you know, sent to me. I think they&#8217;re slick. They&#8217;re really nice. I&#8217;m a book snob.<br />
It&#8217;s like if it&#8217;s got a cloth cover or a leather back, like I&#8217;m just like, the<br />
better than that. That&#8217;s absolutely right. in that one I just going over so I&#8217;ve<br />
got your other one too you&#8217;re out of print one that the the real James Madison<br />
hard to find took me forever to get it but I&#8217;m so glad you have this one what<br />
are some things that you feel that just kind of bullet I don&#8217;t want of good bullet<br />
points because I this is where we have the time to really get into it but what is<br />
something that people that are constitutionalists should know but probably don&#8217;t know<br />
about James Madison, some weird fact that would it really help maybe change, you<br />
know, do a real paradigm shift? Yeah, well, I think one of the, there&#8217;s two things.<br />
And one of the things that makes this biography so much better than the one the<br />
real James Madison was, and I probably told you that story, so I won&#8217;t bug you.<br />
But the real james madison the first one i wrote it uh the publisher wanted me and<br />
and i ultimately did remove most of the references to mr madison&#8217;s faith they were<br />
afraid at this time when i published so the the first edition you know the the<br />
real james and that biography sold out in 24 hours so it was gone and I had I<br />
had one box that the publisher the printer had given me and that was it the rest<br />
of them were sold and gone yeah and it was so bizarre because I went over to the<br />
publisher to the house or not house but warehouse because he wanted to show me that<br />
the order had taken place and he&#8217;s like they&#8217;re all gone and I just had one little<br />
box but but unfortunately for me and that was my that&#8217;s my first book and when<br />
they said you know after I wrote the manuscript and they&#8217;re like well we&#8217;d prefer<br />
you take out the the the frequent references to his faith I did so much much to<br />
my much to my shame right I did<br />
miraculous life and legacy of James Madison that I just wrote. And I get a little<br />
choked up because Madison is, you know, such an important person to me. But I<br />
restored the prominence of his faith to him. He, you know,<br />
one such example, I&#8217;ll give you very quickly is his best friend, Billy Bradford.<br />
They graduated from what we call Princeton. They called the College of New Jersey,<br />
but it&#8217;s the same place. They graduated from Princeton.<br />
And William Bradford said to James, you know, you can be anything in the world.<br />
You&#8217;re the smartest man in the room. No matter what room you&#8217;re in, you could be a<br />
preacher, you could be a lawyer, you could be a professor. You could literally do<br />
any, you could be a legislator, what do you want to do? And Madison famously as a,<br />
you know, a 21 year old responds to him and says, it doesn&#8217;t really matter what I<br />
do as long as my name is recorded in the annals of heaven. And as long as I<br />
don&#8217;t get erased from the Lamb&#8217;s Book of Life, then that it doesn&#8217;t really matter<br />
what I do. And he comes from a very strong believing background.<br />
And so restoring the preeminence of his,<br />
of his faith was important to me. So I&#8217;d say that was the first thing. And the<br />
second thing that I think people would be surprised by is I put,<br />
I restored what they call his Republican letters. So in most biographies of James<br />
Madison, the biographers who are mostly neocons,<br />
they leave out the Republican, so -called Republican letters of the early 1790s<br />
because it paints James Madison as kind of a proto -libertarian,<br />
and they don&#8217;t like that. And so they leave that out. But I restore it.<br />
And so he has an essay on property, an essay on immigration,<br />
for example. And I put those, at least I put substantial selections from those in<br />
here because,<br />
I mean, I think, for example, if you&#8217;re going to talk about immigration, which is<br />
something we talk about all the time, why not look and see what Mr.<br />
Madison thought about who should we let in and when and why and how many and what<br />
should be the qualifications for immigrants and all of this sort of thing and I<br />
thought that was important and so put that in the book here and most biographies<br />
you won&#8217;t find that I mean the biographies that are written in the early 1800s you<br />
do find it but like the I just opened a random page the Pacificus Pelvidius debates<br />
there&#8217;s no reason that should be memorized by every school kit because I mean Ben<br />
we&#8217;re talking about this is the decision of does I mean you talk about something is<br />
more Timely and timeless. This is the question, does the president?<br />
Now, you think about what just happened a couple of days ago and what has happened<br />
so many times recently. Does the president have unilateral authority to blow up<br />
Venezuelan boats? But I mean, that&#8217;s all Pacificus Helviteus is about.<br />
Hamilton&#8217;s saying, yes, he does, and Madison&#8217;s saying, no, he doesn&#8217;t. Now, you say,<br />
but does he? Well, why don&#8217;t you read the argument of Ham, and I&#8217;m not saying you<br />
have to side with Madison, side with Hamilton if you want to, but do it from an<br />
educated point of view. Take this book, read my account of it,<br />
And then go and go on the Google machine and read the actual Helvidius Pacificus<br />
papers that Madison and Hamilton, you know, fought in the newspapers and see what<br />
you think. Because then, boy, you&#8217;re suddenly, you&#8217;re self -identifying as a leader<br />
because you can quote chapter and verse that other people,<br />
even professors of American history, are shaky on with regard to Helviteus Pacific<br />
is. But can you imagine being able to say, well, in Helvite is number two, Madison<br />
says, XYZ and people will just be caught flat -footed and not be able to answer<br />
you. And that&#8217;s a good thing. Most of them haven&#8217;t heard of that, right? Right.<br />
That&#8217;s the point. And that&#8217;s a good thing. Or When, you know, if someone asked you,<br />
like they just did, I just, I just ended another show, right before I jumped on<br />
with you. And the guy asked me what might take on the immigration and what might<br />
take on the fentanyl boats and all this kind of stuff. And it&#8217;s so easy to sit<br />
here and hide behind the skirts of James Madison. I mean, honestly, and I don&#8217;t<br />
feel any, I don&#8217;t feel embarrassed because of that. I&#8217;m like, this is a great man<br />
and I have no problem standing behind great men. And Madison having his arguments<br />
that I happen to agree with. Now, there are things Madison might say that I don&#8217;t<br />
agree with it. And I point that out in the book. But when it comes to anything,<br />
there is authority in antiquity. there is authority in your ability to quote the<br />
words of the great men of the past. And it doesn&#8217;t, it comes across as being<br />
educated as opposed to being opinionated. Right. Right. If I say James Madison wrote,<br />
that sounds really persuasive. If I say, well, I think, well, who cares what I<br />
think? I mean, really, honestly, you know what I&#8217;m saying? It&#8217;s like, who cares?<br />
That doesn&#8217;t make any, nobody cares. But if I say James Madison said, everybody&#8217;s<br />
like, blink, okay, that guy has got legit juice. I want to listen to what Madison<br />
said. Yeah. And so I would anybody, anybody, no, anybody that is interested in a<br />
fuller picture of the life and legacy of Madison because ultimately that&#8217;s the kind<br />
of I guess where I wrap it all up at the end is there is no Madison monument in<br />
D .C. But why is there no Madison monument in D .C.?<br />
And if you go to, and you probably have been, I imagine and many of your viewers<br />
slash listeners have been to, you know, see Monticello and you see that Jefferson<br />
left instructions for how his tomb was to, you know,<br />
what was to be etched on his tomb? I don&#8217;t know if you&#8217;ve ever noticed that. It&#8217;s<br />
like author of the Declaration of Independence, author of the Virginia Declaration of<br />
Rights, author of, you know, literally it&#8217;s like a whole resume on dude&#8217;s tomb i&#8217;m<br />
not joking and he jefferson himself in his will says this is what will be written<br />
on my on my tomb do you know what&#8217;s written on james madison&#8217;s tomb one word<br />
madison<br />
that&#8217;s it madison&#8217;s almost criminal and so But that gets you into the mind of who<br />
Thomas Jefferson was versus who James Madison.<br />
Precisely. So Madison would not be upset that there&#8217;s no Madison monument in D .C.<br />
to him. To him, I think, if we&#8217;re able to keep the union together peacefully,<br />
that will be all the monument he requires. Yeah. Not, yeah.<br />
Well, and going back to what you said about his faith, you know, one of the things<br />
that I open a lot of my presentations with is what are the two things that you&#8217;re<br />
not supposed to talk about in mixed company, right? Religion and politics.<br />
Right. And I say, well, I&#8217;m going to throw that right in. I&#8217;m, I cannot separate<br />
those things from my actions. And so even though, like,<br />
in one of our last videos we did was about Lincoln. And I talked about what<br />
Brigham Young said about Lincoln. And, you know, you have people that don&#8217;t have the<br />
same opinions of Lincoln, I mean, of Brigham Young that I do. And so they were<br />
like, well, I don&#8217;t want to get into the religious aspects. Well, to me, like, that<br />
is vital. Like, it&#8217;s not just, I don&#8217;t want this to just be one faiths podcast,<br />
but I want everybody involved in it to be able to say, this is where I pull from.<br />
We have William F. Jasper on. I want him to share, you know, I want him to not<br />
leave out his faith as a part of what he&#8217;s sharing. And so I think that&#8217;s<br />
fantastic. No, and I, as a matter of fact, you know, one of the things, the<br />
December issue of the New American,<br />
The editor, the managing editor, he asked if I could write,<br />
knowing that I&#8217;m a Latter -day Saint. He&#8217;s like, can you write, well,<br />
an evangelical article written by through a Latter -day Saint prism?<br />
And I&#8217;m like, oh, heck yeah, I can do that. Because, you know half my family my<br />
father&#8217;s side of my family is not members of the church of jesus christ of latter<br />
-day saints they&#8217;re they&#8217;re pentecostal and holiness and etc and i really that<br />
resonates with my soul although you know my mom&#8217;s side of the family are saints<br />
since the beginning and so it&#8217;s like I love that opportunity to be,<br />
I don&#8217;t want to say ecumenical in the worst sense of that, but to be inclusive in<br />
the sense that we, like you were talking about with Bill, I love that Bill Jasper.<br />
And for example, I was up in Spokane speaking with Bill,<br />
not too long ago a couple weeks ago i guess and uh he was dropping me back off<br />
at the hotel and and we had a prayer together and we do that every time that<br />
we&#8217;re together we end up praying together and of course he he is a traditional<br />
roman catholic and but i enjoy that fellowship and so the The notion that one<br />
should separate one&#8217;s faith from one&#8217;s politics, I think is fatal because I think<br />
that you end up getting lost in some sort of secularism where you will be blown<br />
about by every wind of doctrine and you will end up not having that attachment to<br />
truth that you certainly are going to need as our society becomes more and more<br />
wicked, you know. And so I think it serves the enemy of all righteousness to trick<br />
us into divorcing our politics from our, from our faith. Yeah.<br />
And it&#8217;s, I think you kind of, you said, the worst part of the Ecumenicalism,<br />
right? It&#8217;s this balance of we don&#8217;t want to be Unitarian, of sorts. But at the<br />
same time, if Bill Jasper has a perspective that&#8217;s guided by his faith,<br />
I shouldn&#8217;t just ignore it just because it&#8217;s not of my faith. That&#8217;s ridiculous. And<br />
I would hope that others don&#8217;t reject mine just because of my faith. Yeah, bring<br />
all truth unto Zion. Let us let the light of truth, you know, be shown on every<br />
point of doctrine and in every point of dogma and and let us decide for ourselves<br />
you know and at the end of the day i think that&#8217;s what it comes down to it comes<br />
down to you know james madison himself and another thing i include in the book or<br />
at least i include excerpts from it is his memorial and remonstrance uh his uh<br />
essay on religious freedom he even refuses to use the word religious toleration he&#8217;s<br />
like where do i get the right to tolerate your religion you know i i don&#8217;t<br />
tolerate your religion you know you don&#8217;t that&#8217;s not the right word you have the<br />
right to practice according to the dictates of your conscience and i don&#8217;t have the<br />
authority to tolerate or not and so you know he is a great example of that you<br />
believe what you want to believe i&#8217;ll believe what i and someday we will know the<br />
truth of all things and it&#8217;s my belief that you know christ has made us free and<br />
that we will someday all be equally under uh you know through the blood of the<br />
blood and merits of jesus alone you know and uh so i think that it only helps us<br />
all to share because like you said man if i can learn from from my catholic<br />
brothers brother bring it on i want to learn if they can learn from me i should<br />
hope they and i know that many of them do feel the same way you know i know that<br />
that uh friends that don&#8217;t that we&#8217;re not co -religionist so to speak that uh that&#8217;s<br />
a joke that i i think that word sounds so funny but people use it like co<br />
-religionist you know letter day saints it&#8217;s like uh but i think that and i know<br />
for sure that i&#8217;ve learned from you know my father&#8217;s family who who are Pentecostal,<br />
I&#8217;ve learned from them how to be a richer, fuller saint.<br />
And I would hope that they&#8217;ve done likewise. They even call me preacher in my dad&#8217;s<br />
family because, yeah, they&#8217;re just like, when we get together and it&#8217;s time for<br />
prayer, then Joey, it&#8217;s time for Joey to say the prayer. And they,<br />
you know, love that, that we do that, even though, you know, I&#8217;m not Pentecostal or<br />
holiness, but they recognize that there&#8217;s just, you know, one Christ.<br />
And I talk and preach of the same Christ. Yeah.<br />
So another thing I wanted to get into with this biography of Madison is its<br />
relevance to today, because too often people think, well, what they maybe avoid<br />
history thinking that it has no relevance to them today. And I, I just love how<br />
you brought out things like Germania and you have Livy, you know, history of Rome<br />
and and even McAvelli&#8217;s review of that history. And as you go through those,<br />
to me, I would say that those are just as relevant today as they were when they<br />
were written. It&#8217;s almost like you&#8217;re reading it from a different, what&#8217;s going on<br />
today from a different perspective. So I wanted to get maybe some key things that<br />
are happening today that you would say, James Madison answers the question, you know,<br />
whether it&#8217;s the president sending troops to Chicago or L .A. or Portland or some of<br />
the current event. What would you say is the relevance to current events that we<br />
can find in learning about Madison through your biography? Yeah, I would say the<br />
biggest thing. Well, two things, I think. If I sit here and ponder it for a second<br />
without just answering, giving a TikTok answer, I think the first thing is we&#8217;ve<br />
already discussed it, the Havidia&#8217;s Pacificus debate, because they literally are on<br />
the topic of how much authority the president has over war,<br />
the execution of war, the blowing up of boats, how much authority does the president<br />
have to send in troops to Chicago or Memphis or whatever?<br />
Yeah. How much is there? And so if you, and you can get that on, you know, the<br />
Helvidius pacificus debates i would say that&#8217;s the first thing and the second thing<br />
i would say is and this is going to sound odd but just follow along with me here<br />
it&#8217;s kind of maybe a bit torturous but if you follow along it&#8217;ll make sense so<br />
after the constitution was ratified uh it wasn&#8217;t at all clear that Madison was going<br />
to be elected to Congress from his own district because one of his friends was<br />
actually running James Monroe. And so now James Monroe is a couple years younger<br />
than Madison, but he was running against Madison. And so Madison&#8217;s friends send him<br />
notes, you know, letters, and we have the letters, and they send him letters saying,<br />
hey, you&#8217;re being opposed over here in Orange County,<br />
Virginia, by Mr. Monroe. What are you going to do? And he&#8217;s like, we need you to<br />
come out here and sling some whiskey and shake some hands and stuff.<br />
And Madison&#8217;s, no I&#8217;m not going to do that and so and and his friends were<br />
perplexed and like James if you don&#8217;t do that you&#8217;re not fixing to be in Congress<br />
and he&#8217;s like well if people don&#8217;t think that I&#8217;m worthy of their vote I don&#8217;t I<br />
don&#8217;t see how retail politicking does anybody any good.<br />
Basically, he had an aversion to campaigning. And he said, I&#8217;m not going to campaign<br />
if they think I&#8217;m the best guy. Because back then,<br />
there were no, you know, like you can imagine today and you&#8217;ve all voted,<br />
it&#8217;ll say, you know, Trump or Madison, whatever, I don&#8217;t know.<br />
You know, so you get your, you get your ballot and you, you, you.<br />
Jay Madison and stuck it in the box, or Jay Monroe and stuck it in the box,<br />
or, or, you know, Mickey Mouse or whatever, you just stuck it in the box.<br />
There were no printed ballots that you, you know, would have names and you would<br />
put a mark next to a name or anything like that. And so Madison&#8217;s idea was,<br />
well, if they think I&#8217;m the best for for the job, they&#8217;ll write my name in. If<br />
they don&#8217;t, then they don&#8217;t. And that&#8217;s as simple as that. And so James Monroe,<br />
to his credit, and I put this in the book, James Monroe says to Madison,<br />
well, how about if we do this? How about if we campaign together? How about if the<br />
two opponents, if we do the circuit together and we don&#8217;t insult each other.<br />
We simply sit on stage and present our own,<br />
you know, little version of what we think is right. And that way there will be<br />
what did Madison call it, no atom of ill will, A -T -O -M, not an atom of ill will<br />
between the competitors. And so he and Mr.<br />
Monroe traveled throughout Virginia that winter together in a stagecoach making<br />
campaign stops together. I mean, it would be honestly like Trump and Kamala Harris<br />
riding together in a car, getting out not insulting each other getting back in the<br />
car after making their little speeches going back round together and that sort of<br />
understanding of qualification for office then is what i wish we could get back to<br />
that i don&#8217;t have to spend a billion dollars right to get my name on a ballot,<br />
man, that I don&#8217;t have to. I mean, even in state politics,<br />
you know, talking about over here in Tennessee and wanting to run for the state<br />
Senate, it&#8217;s spending, man. You know, you&#8217;re looking at hundreds of thousands of<br />
dollars just for the name recognition to be there so that you can have a shot at<br />
being even considered a candidate, a viable candidate.<br />
Yeah, they equate money to seriousness. You&#8217;re not a serious candidate because you<br />
don&#8217;t have money. Yeah. And so it&#8217;s crazy. And I wish, you know,<br />
we could go back to the days where we say,<br />
do you know what? If the people in my district think I&#8217;m the best state senator,<br />
then they&#8217;ll vote for but that, but when you read about it in, you know, that<br />
this, the account that I put in the book,<br />
you, you realize what,<br />
you know, what we&#8217;ve sacrificed by making everything for sale.<br />
You know, we&#8217;ve, Madison, his thing was, I won&#8217;t buy whiskey and hand it out.<br />
I won&#8217;t go around glad handing and begging for a vote. If I&#8217;m the best guy,<br />
write my name down. If I&#8217;m not write James Monroe&#8217;s name down or somebody else, but<br />
I&#8217;m not going to, I&#8217;m not going to retail politics, you know, and just,<br />
I&#8217;m not going to wrap politics up in a like a candy bar you know yeah that&#8217;s<br />
awesome so yeah so i you know those two things the halvidius pacific is because it<br />
would really give context to much of what&#8217;s going on right now and then the the no<br />
atom of ill will if we could get back to that place where We could disagree<br />
without being disagreeable. Okay,<br />
I want to get into your next book, The By Compact Not Command. And this book is<br />
really important. There&#8217;s some articles that recently came out that talk about the<br />
two constitutions where we have the original constitution that&#8217;s by compact. And we<br />
have basically the post -Lincoln constitution where it&#8217;s by compulsion where you see<br />
every single state post the war between the states has in their state constitution a<br />
requirement that says that or an article that says that you are that they are a<br />
permanent indivisible indivisible from the union which was totally different prior to<br />
that time period because we were like it&#8217;s like your book says by compact not<br />
command so tell us about the title why you pick that title and we and i&#8217;ve got<br />
some things that i want to bring out and then ask you some questions as well but<br />
kind of talk about that basically just that you you&#8217;ve summed it perfectly because<br />
compact meaning the you know the 18th century word for contract these you know the<br />
states all<br />
individually voted whether or not to enter into the union uh it&#8217;s very clear in the<br />
constitution and in the convention of 1787 and in the ratifying conventions that if<br />
a state had decided not to join the union and they were left as an independent<br />
sovereign republic federalist 39 makes that very clear as well that there&#8217;s no<br />
compulsion here it goes back to you know sydney&#8217;s whole thing of there you know<br />
there&#8217;s only one legitimate you know form of motive of government and that&#8217;s by<br />
consent of the governed otherwise it&#8217;s force and force is not legitimate because it&#8217;s<br />
not consistent with liberty and so here you have the 13 states saying okay let&#8217;s<br />
weigh it see if it&#8217;s in our favor to compound some of our interests together.<br />
If it is, then we&#8217;ll enter into a contract with each other. And in this contract,<br />
we&#8217;ll create an agent who, I mean, if you know even the most basics of agency law,<br />
principle and agency law in England and America, you know that it is a maximum of<br />
Anglo -American law that the agent for its acts to be legitimate must act on behalf<br />
of the best interest of the principle and any act that is against the best interest<br />
of the principle the principles are at or have the authority to refuse to ratify<br />
that Act. And so you apply that to the Constitution. And it suddenly becomes very<br />
easy to understand, Ben. And I think that&#8217;s the problem. The problem is once it<br />
becomes the Constitution is a contract, the states are the principles,<br />
the federal government is the agent, the employee created by those principles,<br />
to act on their behalf and only to their benefit, then it becomes easy to<br />
understand when the federal government has ranged outside of its constitutional<br />
authority. And if it does, it&#8217;s just like any other employment contract.<br />
The authority of that agent ends at the four corners of the contract,<br />
Right. I have a contract with the John Birch Society. If I go out and start<br />
spewing pro -abortion stuff on, well, they&#8217;re going to fire me.<br />
Why? Well, because we have a corporate policy that we are pro -life.<br />
And so if I start doing that, I violate the terms of the contract and I&#8217;m fired.<br />
And no one would bat an eye at that. Right.<br />
book that they&#8217;re completely forgotten to the point where it almost seems wrong.<br />
When you read these, you&#8217;re like, that can&#8217;t be right. You know,<br />
I mean, serious. What about one nation undivisible? Right. Right. That&#8217;s ridiculous.<br />
Yeah. You know, no founding father would ever, ever be caught dead saying the pledge<br />
of allegiance never it they that was so in nothing much of liberty to sit there<br />
and swear to a an indivisible you know one nation that in fact i mean they even<br />
say that right like the abe de mably says it&#8217;s the great advantage of the americans<br />
that they did not confound their 13 republics into one great nation.<br />
Yeah, it&#8217;s told the the brainwashing that has gone on. It&#8217;s the total. It&#8217;s like<br />
they believe that the Declaration of Independence was quaint, but it no longer<br />
applies after you create a new, like how does that even make sense that we support,<br />
you know, we celebrate the 4th of July, but we think that to ever do that same<br />
thing again would be treasonous. It&#8217;s insane. Oh, it absolutely. It is.<br />
It&#8217;s remarkable, it&#8217;s remarkable the way they were able to,<br />
you know, I always joke about that I&#8217;m going to write this book, Tyranny for<br />
Dummies, and chapter one is going to be get control of the education. Yeah.<br />
Because if I can teach you the wrong words for things. I&#8217;ve got you, man. I have<br />
got you. And so teach, you know, and so we&#8217;ve got a how many generations now under<br />
the, under the tutelage of the Prussian Marxists, what, six generations now?<br />
You know, you, you were probably raised in the public schools like I was.<br />
Yeah, me too. and, you know, I had to unlearn a bunch of stuff when I became,<br />
I mean, seriously, you know, people I was a bad enough student. I didn&#8217;t have to<br />
unlearn as much as maybe.<br />
People often ask me, like, how did, who taught you all of this? And I&#8217;m like,<br />
dude, I, I don&#8217;t know. I think I had to teach myself, which was worse. I mean, I<br />
had a couple of good, I had a couple of good professors, Dick Vetterly at BYU who,<br />
boy, open my eyes to things like the Scottish Enlightenment and and Algernon,<br />
Sydney and people like that. But, but, uh, you know, having to unlearn stuff that<br />
my teachers, they didn&#8217;t<br />
purposely indoctrinate me in the sense that they knew they were doing evil because<br />
they were told to teach. Yeah, this has been going on for six generations. Yeah.<br />
So this, I just want people to, I just, I mean, if you just read it,<br />
and I, and I chose the books that are in there, the documents, essays, based on,<br />
okay, I want simple ones that I think people might actually read.<br />
So, for example, The Abel Upshur, I think Judge Upshur is such a clear writer that<br />
I think that reading his brief inquiry into the true nature and character of the<br />
federal government, I think blows your mind. I think that I think John Taylor of<br />
Caroline is such a careful writer. But, you know, I started out with the catechism.<br />
Yeah, I was just going to get to that. I was going to ask you about that.<br />
She didn&#8217;t have any kids of her own. And so she became the governess of her nieces<br />
and nephews. And she was afraid that they were not going to be taught the correct<br />
nature of the federal union. And so as was the case back then.<br />
And you can go back. And I have a collection of them myself and a lot of people<br />
probably do of these catechisms from early in the you know history of the republic<br />
and this one i just thought boy it is one of the simpler ones that i think is<br />
the most complete because some of them go off on tangents whereas this one i think<br />
miss pinkney was just trying to be concise And I&#8217;m like,<br />
oh, boy, I could put that in there. And everybody just loved. I mean, I&#8217;ve had<br />
school kids, honestly,<br />
get in touch with me, like, email me and stuff and say, I memorize the political<br />
catechism by Mariah Pinckney. And it&#8217;s so cool. And thank you for, you know, that<br />
kind of thing. And that&#8217;s all, that&#8217;s all you want, you know. Yeah. And that&#8217;s<br />
what&#8217;s great about this is what I loved about, I was like, as we just talked about<br />
how the enemies of liberty have completely taken over the government school system.<br />
I mean, of course, because it&#8217;s the government school system. But this really shows<br />
you how much things have changed. This was basically the understanding of all school<br />
kids. Oh, easy. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I mean, like I say, you can go and you can find<br />
tons of these catechisms that were written with the same sort of flair and like i<br />
say none of them to me none of them as concise and direct as as miss pinkneys but<br />
many of them with the same sort of tone and the same purpose yeah because that&#8217;s<br />
the way you taught people right you just taught people by question and answer on<br />
whom must Carolina depend on her hour of peril on the descendants of the Patriot<br />
band who achieve the revolution.<br />
That&#8217;s basically saying the Declaration of Independence still applies. That&#8217;s all she&#8217;s<br />
saying there, but in much more powerful way. And so,<br />
you know, it&#8217;s one of those things. It&#8217;s like that saying Cicero makes you What is<br />
it? Cicero makes you stand and applaud in Demosthenes makes you grab a sword and so<br />
I want to make sure make people want to grab a sword, you know, and show them<br />
through these documents, through these essays that there is a right way, there is a<br />
wrong way, there is a way we were intended to be, and we can get back to that if<br />
we are willing to do the heavy lifting. Yeah.<br />
Of learning. That&#8217;s, you know, the scriptures say that, you know, my people perish<br />
for lack of knowledge. The scriptures are. And so do we want to be a part of the<br />
cause of the perishing because of our lack of knowledge or do we want to use these<br />
materials to be able to secure that problem. And in a recent video that I did, I<br />
actually used your book and I quoted from this political catechism. The third<br />
question, it says, did the states informing the constitution divest themselves of any<br />
part of their sovereignty, right? Did we create a new nation that, and so now each<br />
one of these individual nations gave up their sovereignty? The answer is of not a<br />
particle. So I mean, it goes on into more detail than that, but just of not a<br />
particle, not one, you know, minuscule amount of it, not one atom of their<br />
sovereignty was given up by joining the union. Yeah, and this blew someone&#8217;s mind,<br />
Ben, just, I guess, what was, what is today, Tuesday? So the other day,<br />
I was on a podcast, and the host, I guess,<br />
was trying to trapped me and said, well, what, what is,<br />
what does, how did he say it? Over what does the federal government have<br />
sovereignty? And I said, nothing.<br />
The federal government has zero sovereignty because the word sovereignty implies that<br />
there&#8217;s no one above. And there is always an authority above the feds the feds have<br />
no original sovereignty and this is blue this dude&#8217;s mind he&#8217;s like well with an<br />
idea like that you can&#8217;t have immigration laws i&#8217;m like right yeah yeah you got it<br />
he&#8217;s like well that&#8217;s crazy how are you going to keep people i&#8217;m like have you<br />
heard a property have you heard you know have you heard of state government Texas<br />
you know the governor sent dudes down there to protect do do your thing you know<br />
if you&#8217;re a private property owner secure your property man there&#8217;s there&#8217;s the word<br />
immigration doesn&#8217;t appear in the constitution and this guy and so you just pointed<br />
it out that but imagine if that if we could teach that Ben And I know you<br />
obviously do, and I can&#8217;t thank you enough for all that you do because good grief,<br />
man. You are quite an excellent blow torch of liberty.<br />
I&#8217;m not just blowing smoke up your skirt. You are such a powerful force for good<br />
and, you know, echoing and broadcasting this consistently.<br />
but imagine if we could do that man imagine if you could stand up in a first<br />
grade class in I forgot where you I know you live in Utah but in wherever you<br />
live in Lehigh for the sake of discussion and say you know do the states informing<br />
the Constitution divest themselves of any part of their sovereignty of not a particle<br />
this was for a little kid. This is written for a third grader. I&#8217;m not kidding.<br />
I have this book here. Let&#8217;s see. Right here. This book is called The Scholars<br />
Companion, okay? Do you see it here? Yeah. It&#8217;s published in 1858,<br />
okay? And it&#8217;s supposed to be for like what we would consider third graders. And<br />
it&#8217;s your, all your Latin and Greek root words that you&#8217;re supposed to memorize so<br />
that you can tell what a word means without knowing what that word means,<br />
right? If someone uses the word U -T -O -R, if someone used the word T -U -R -B -A,<br />
you know the source of that in Greek or Latin and you can be intelligent.<br />
This is for third graders, what we would call third graders. To think that we, you<br />
know, to think that we&#8217;re so much smarter now than the pumpkins from 100 years ago,<br />
which is just insanity. It shows how well they&#8217;ve done at dumbing us down,<br />
literally. Oh, that.<br />
And, you know, I don&#8217;t know about you, But when I was in third grade, it was, you<br />
know, rubbish. Garbage pill kids. I mean, it was Encyclopedia Brown.<br />
But here we&#8217;ve got stuff like, L .E, you know, L -E -X means law.<br />
So you know if this word is used, legislature, it means something to do with the<br />
law. Anyway, my point is, we can, children can understand this stuff if we present<br />
it to them uh richard price and i know you know that name because you know the<br />
founder&#8217;s recipe but richard price famously in his uh sermon on the importance of<br />
the american revolution he&#8217;s in 1790 he said uh enlighten men and you will elevate<br />
them And so you can take the smallest child,<br />
and he can be nine years old, understanding Greek and Latin. He can be nine years<br />
old understanding the Mariah Pinckney&#8217;s political catechism.<br />
If you hold him to that standard, if you hold him to the encyclopedia Brown<br />
standard, that&#8217;s where he&#8217;s going. But you know what I mean? Oh, yeah. You will<br />
rise to the level of the challenge. And right now, we don&#8217;t challenge our people,<br />
man. We don&#8217;t challenge our people. And we need to. And that&#8217;s, you know, me and<br />
you. I know you do. I&#8217;m preaching to the choir, to the converted. The royal weed,<br />
right? The royal we. Yeah, the royal we. All of us need to, I mean,<br />
what did I do last night? Last night, just for an example, right, of how everybody<br />
needs to always be learning. I was going back, every year I reread all the books<br />
from Founders&#8217; Recipe, right? And so I was on Grocious,<br />
I was reading Grocious, and he references something from the Aeneid. No, I don&#8217;t<br />
have the Aeneid memorized, man. Like Grocious has it memorized, and he&#8217;s like, he&#8217;s<br />
like, oh, you know how King&#8217;s so and so in the Aeneid and I&#8217;m like no I don&#8217;t<br />
know but I do have a copy of the Aeneid so I go to the library my you know I<br />
go to my bookshelf I pull off the Aeneid what do I discover there I follow the<br />
reference that he uses in in his book and I discover how in the Aeneid one of the<br />
kings is so destructive of the peace and prosperity of his people, that his people<br />
turn on him and run him out of town. Now, why did Grosius mention that?<br />
Well, Grosius mentions it because he said, ultimately, that&#8217;s the right that all of<br />
us have. If a government becomes destructive of our life,<br />
liberty, and property, then it is our natural right to rid ourselves of that<br />
government, right? Just like he says, and it&#8217;s not a great secret, he says,<br />
because look, it happened in the Aeneid, you know, written by Virgil. And it&#8217;s like,<br />
I&#8217;ll be danged. That&#8217;s exactly what it says in book eight of the Aeneid,<br />
line 494, they chased the king off the throne because he&#8217;d become he had used his<br />
power to destructive ends and that&#8217;s what we need to do ben we need to be all of<br />
us anxiously engaged in learning all the time and if we do that we you know you<br />
catch fire with it like you know because you are so good at it man i don&#8217;t i<br />
seriously Sometimes I talk to people about you because I&#8217;m like, I don&#8217;t know how<br />
this dude does it. Like you stay on the grind all the time.<br />
And it&#8217;s one thing. And I mean, maybe this is, you know,<br />
opening the kimono too much. But it&#8217;s one thing to say, Joey does it because I,<br />
that&#8217;s my job. you know what I mean that&#8217;s that&#8217;s my nine to five and I&#8217;m blessed<br />
blessed beyond my worthiness that my passion and my job are the same thing but<br />
that&#8217;s not true of everyone and so you you stay on this grow out of love of<br />
liberty love of moving the needle of trying to set this people free and you know<br />
you will in no wise lose your reward he who sees you will reward you and i hope<br />
you understand that and know how many of us there are that really respect what you<br />
do that means a lot really i mean a lot thank you i mean It&#8217;s not,<br />
and that&#8217;s not just lip service. There&#8217;s, you know, we, it&#8217;s one of those things.<br />
It&#8217;s like if I had my druthers and if I were, you know, Jeff Bezos,<br />
we&#8217;d all be living a different life with, you know, but as it is,<br />
as it is, you will be rewarded by he who sees in secret. Thank you.<br />
It reminded me of some of the stories you just told there about another story you<br />
told in another time about James Madison&#8217;s commonplace book as a young youth and the<br />
things that he wrote in there. And then what was required of him to enter into<br />
Princeton. And so just I think it&#8217;s relevant to both the books that we&#8217;re talking<br />
about and the importance of building our understanding and not being right the not<br />
being the cause of our downfall because of our ignorance tell our the viewers and<br />
listeners what what was in madison&#8217;s commonplace book as a youth and what were the<br />
requirements for him to get into princeton yeah so in one of the first things that<br />
i so i started collecting madison&#8217;s papers and you know i had to do it slowly at<br />
first because they&#8217;re kind of spendy and and before i started before i started<br />
practicing law i would just buy one here one there and um i noticed that at a<br />
very young age he was taking notes in latin and greek and i&#8217;m like that is crazy<br />
by young we&#8217;re not talking like 18 right No, like 9, 10. You know,<br />
you had an annotation from when he was like, I think he was 14. And it said<br />
something like, okay, enough being a boy, I&#8217;ve got to settle down and be a man<br />
now. At 14, you know, he&#8217;s like, enough playing cards and enough hanging out with<br />
my friends. It&#8217;s time to realize that God has some great mission for me to perform<br />
and I&#8217;ve got to settle down and get it done. And you&#8217;re just like, whoa.<br />
And so when you go and you can go to, uh, uh, see what page is it here,<br />
page 10 of the Madison miraculous life and legacy, it says in August 1769,<br />
when he was 17 years old, Madison enrolled at the College of New Jersey.<br />
Today it&#8217;s called Princeton. He was an excellent student known by his peers as<br />
someone who devoted himself more to learning than to any other endeavor. Young James<br />
was right to worry about his studies. Enrolling at a university didn&#8217;t necessarily<br />
mean one would be accepted to the university. All students were required to take an<br />
entrance exam. To be formally accepted, James was required to demonstrate,<br />
now this is all quotations from their instructions to him, that they would have sent<br />
him in advance, the ability to write Latin prose, translate Virgil,<br />
Cicero, and the Greek Gospels, and have a commensurate knowledge of Latin and Greek<br />
grammar. To give a rational account of the Greek and Latin grammars to read three<br />
orations of Cicero and three books of Virgil&#8217;s Aeneid translate the first ten<br />
chapters of the Gospel of John from Greek into Latin.<br />
Now, there is not a single professor at BYU who could do that.<br />
Let alone a student. Yeah, let alone I was 17 -year -old.<br />
Madison not only did that, but he finished all four years of college in two years.<br />
Now, at Princeton, James found the freshman year lessons too easy and requested<br />
permission from the president of the university, John Witherspoon, to take tests that<br />
would allow him to skip the first year classes and go straight into classes for<br />
sophomores. Witherspoon was surprised to see someone so small and so frail,<br />
behaving so bravely, but he gave Madison permission to take the exams and skip<br />
freshman year if he passed them all. In a letter to his former tutor,<br />
Thomas Martin, Madison revealed his readiness to apply him to his studies he said<br />
the near approach of the examination occasions a surprising application to study on<br />
all sides i am perfectly pleased with my present situation and the prospect before<br />
me however terrible it must sound has nothing in it talking about college and he<br />
did two four years of college in two years without any shortcuts he had to do<br />
everything as if it you know yeah as if it were all four years they didn&#8217;t give<br />
him any shortcuts and he says he survived by his quotation is the minimum of sleep<br />
and the maximum of application surely because madison came from a wealthy family that<br />
got them the most expensive tutors<br />
No. And that&#8217;s the thing, man. People think that the founding fathers were well.<br />
I mean, I guess yeah, they were wealthy in the sense that they had a ton of land,<br />
but cash poor for sure. They couldn&#8217;t, you know, they couldn&#8217;t lay their hands on<br />
money. His father to have money for anything had to work really hard in the field<br />
and had to make the trip down to the docks and had to negotiate. And there was<br />
no, you know, no notion of it being wealth the way we know it.<br />
So thank you. I want to recommend and encourage everyone. There will be a link in<br />
the description and in the article of this video on our website. Encourage you to<br />
all of our viewers to get both of these books. Also, If you guys haven&#8217;t picked<br />
up, and we talked about this in the past, the founder&#8217;s recipe, you&#8217;ve got to get<br />
that. If you don&#8217;t homeschool, it doesn&#8217;t matter. Just get it for you so that you<br />
know exactly the ingredients that it took to build a free society. Also,<br />
what degree of madness? Folks need to get that. And then your Article 5 book as<br />
well, all available at shopjBS .org. Thank you so much.</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://treeoflibertysociety.com/by-compact-not-command-the-constitution-they-erased/">By Compact, Not Command: The Constitution They Erased</a> appeared first on <a href="https://treeoflibertysociety.com">Tree of Liberty Society</a>.</p>
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