Institute for Legal, Legislative and Educational Action
It was the reprinting in nearly every newspaper in nearly every city in America of Cato’s Letters that provided our Founding Fathers with the intellectual fuel that fed the fires of armed resistance to tyranny.
John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, the authors of Cato’s Letters, taught our ancestors as young men that kings are not above the law, and that when kings, legislators, or any other political officeholder (“magistrate” in the language of the time) forgets that he is the servant of the people and not their master, then the people are justified in reminding him of his role, peacefully if possible, by force if necessary.
On July 15, 1721, Letter No. 37 was published in London. In it, Thomas Gordon gave his readers several tests which when applied to magistrates would distinguish the “good” ones from the “evil” ones. The source of the standard by which the character of any magistrate could be measured was Algernon Sidney’s Discourses Concerning Government.
Gordon credits quoting Sidney to the latter’s being “an excellent writer” and to his Discourses Concerning Government being “eternally true.” Although it’s nearly unknown today, our Founding Fathers were of like mind when it came to Sidney and his book. In fact, Thomas Jefferson described Discourses Concerning Government as “the best elementary book of the principles of government, as founded in natural right which has ever been published in any language.”
But this isn’t an article in praise of Sidney or Trenchard or Gordon. The influence of those men on our Founding Fathers is proven beyond all question, and the fact that few Americans today know their names or have read their works is more tragic than telling.
The goal of this article is to highlight the acts and attitudes of good and evil magistrates, so that we might learn to apply these standards to candidates asking for our support, as well as to those currently occupying government positions. Having weighed these politicians on Sidney’s scale, we’ll discover how many of our current officeholders are found wanting.
I’m going to use direct quotations sparingly, as the reader is encouraged to read Cato’s Letter No. 37 (as well as Discourses Concerning Government). Instead, I’ll paraphrase their essay, modernizing the language a bit to make it easier to understand and apply to our own time. Here we go.
First, here is Sidney’s list of what makes a man a good political officeholder:
So, those are the traits of a good political officeholder. Perhaps a worthwhile activity would be to ask yourself how your state and federal officials stack up when measured against Sidney’s standards.
Now for the traits of an “evil” politician:
Next, Sidney (by way of Thomas Gordon) describes the kind of people who support good men in office and those who try to keep the corrupt in power.
Supporters of good government officials:
As for those who work to get and keep corrupt people in office, they:
Finally, Sidney, Trenchard, and Gordon warned our Founding Fathers — and are still warning us — what will happen if the people aren’t taught their rights, aren’t taught the source of those rights, and aren’t taught when and how they should rid themselves of lying and corrupt politicians:
When a party comes to be erected upon such a foundation, debauchery, lewdness, and dishonesty are the true badges of it; such as wear them are cherished; but the principal marks of favour are reserved for them who are the most industrious in mischief, either by seducing the people with the allurements of sensual pleasures, or corrupting their understandings with false and slavish doctrines.
Our noble Founding Fathers learned to love liberty and how to spot a tyrant from Algernon Sidney, John Trenchard, and Thomas Gordon — and now it is up to us to do likewise.
https://thenewamerican.com/the-standard-our-founding-fathers-used-to-measure-politicians/