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>>179838Robert W Malone, MD @RWMaloneMD - 9% of of all the babies born in the USA getting citizenship, based on either birth tourism - mostly from the CCP - or whose mother smuggled herself into this country illegally, is not ok and no way to secure a healthy future for Americans.
If the Supreme Court doesn't restrict birthright citizenship, then Congress must -BEFORE the midterms. This is what the citizens of the United States want and require.
https://x.com/RWMaloneMD/status/2039293883268337853Ron DeSantis @RonDeSantis - What the proper historiography should be is not necessarily what the Founders believed.
Caesar was an epithet to the Founders. The best Anti-Federalist essays were written under the pseudonym Brutus. If Hamilton used “Caesar” instead of “Publius” in The Federalist essays the Constitution wouldn’t have been ratified.
They didn’t see the late republic as healthy and acknowledged the decline due to corruption and the loss of civic virtue, but they imputed noble intentions to those opposing Caesar and believed their goal was to restore the republic to past glory.
Rome was a cautionary tale about the fragility of republics, the need for civic virtue, and the susceptibility of republics to degenerate into tyranny.
Quote
Greg R. Lawson @ConservaWonk
Yes, the Founders did not want Caesar, BUT they also well understood that the Republic was a dessicated husk long before he crossed the Rubicon.
Look at what elites, "Optimates," did to the Gracchi Brothers, both of them on separate occasions. Was that preservation of the Republic?
There was Marius & Sulla before Caesar. Did they preserve the Republic?
No. They showed it was decayed & that order was more necessary than chaos.
We should understand Caesar, & Augustus after him, not as heroes but also not as villains. They were the tragic necessity that happens when institutions decay & faith in then erodes to the point where violence becomes the true currency of the realm & chaos reigns irrespective of what may be argued through clever rhetoric on the Senate floor.
So we should pray our Republic never decays so much that a Caesar becomes the tragic necessity.
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