| See ours is not the first by George good government to arise on the world stage,
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| there have been several
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| Rome, Spain, and Greece, and China, and each enjoyed about a hundred and fifty
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| years at its zenith
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| And that’s just about our time in the new world
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| And then each decayed away
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| Not one of them was ever destroyed by anybody else’s marching legions
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| Each rotted away morally, socially, culturally, economically simultaneously
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| You know one of the most cruel paradoxes' of history is this
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| Because each was a good government it bore bountiful fruit and when it bore
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| bountiful fruit the people got fat, and when they got fat they got lazy,
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| and when they got lazy they began to want to absolve themselves of personal
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| responsibility and turn over to government to do for them things which
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| traditionally they had been doing for themselves
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| At first there appears to be nothing wrong asking government to perform some
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| extra service for you
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| But if you ask government for extra services government, in order to perform
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| its increasing function, has to get bigger, right?
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| And as government gets bigger, in order to support its increasing size it has
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| to, what?
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| Tax the individual more, so the individual gets littler
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| And to collect the increased taxes requires more tax collectors so the
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| government gets bigger and in order to pay the additional tax collectors,
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| it has to tax the individual more so the government gets bigger and the
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| individual get littler and the government gets bigger and the individual gets
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| littler, until the government is all powerful and the individual is hardly
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| anything at all
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| Good government bore bountiful fruit and when it bore bountiful fruit the
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| people got fat, and when they got fat they got lazy, and when they got lazy
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| they began to want to absolve themselves of personal responsibility and turn
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| over to government to do for them things which traditionally they had been
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| doing for themselves
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| Some believe that the need is for a vigorous, strong man
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| To rise on the scene
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| To regulate and regiment the affairs of men (REGULATORS!)
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| Yet, history tells us there have been several such
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| Once upon a time there was a nation great and powerful and good
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| Few were suffering from the aftermath of war, from a depression
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| And then came upon the scene a leader, an idealist, self confident,
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| intolerant to criticism
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| A wise lady limited his early activities to combating the financial
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| Depression, nobody could argue with that, but in a while he began to regulate
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| business and establish new rules to govern commerce and finance
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| Some of them in diametrical disagreement with the God-Made laws of supply and
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| demand, but anybody who disagreed with those new rules was promptly fired
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| The new leader saw that under the old system of free enterprise landlords
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| prospered, so he levied new taxes to take away their profits and destroy what
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| he called then «Monopoly of Capital»
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| To please laborers, he controlled prices
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| To win the favor of the farmers, he
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| Gave them loans and subsidies
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| The National Debt mounted, alarmingly
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| Whenever anybody tried to tell him «that governments, even as people,
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| can go broke, when they spend beyond their incomes», he said «They just didn’t
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| understand deficit finance.»
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| Well, what do you say? |
| Did he build on rock or on sand? |
| I say on sand
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| For you see this was the story of Emperor Tsu Tong Phao who led China to its
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| doom more than a Thousand Years Ago
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| Because each was a good government it bore bountiful fruit and when it bore
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| bountiful fruit the people got fat, and when they got fat they got lazy,
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| and when they got lazy they began to want to absolve themselves of personal
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| responsibility and turn over to government to do for them things which
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| traditionally they had been doing for themselves
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| I am satisfied with all my heart that if Uncle Sam ever does get whipped,
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| here too, it will have been an Inside Job
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| It was internal decay, it was not external attack that destroyed the Roman
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| Empire
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| Starting about 146 B.C. |
| internal conditions in Rome were characterized by a
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| welter of class wars and conflicts, street brawls, corrupt governors,
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| lack of personal integrity and moral responsibility
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| Street brawls, corrupt governors, lack of personal integrity and moral
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| Responsibility
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| Street brawls, corrupt governors, lack of personal integrity and moral
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| Responsibility
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| Street brawls, corrupt governors, lack of personal integrity and moral
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| Responsibility
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| Street brawls, corrupt governors, lack of personal integrity and moral
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| Responsibility
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| Street brawls, corrupt governors, lack of personal integrity and moral
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| Responsibility |