Law or Principle
(Originally published
Feb. 12, 1996)
James Fletcher Baxter
Santa Maria, CA 93455
I spent 30 years
as a teacher of youngsters - grades 5 and 6 - and loved it! They were
great years (1957-1986). My constructive teaching career came about
as a direct result of my experiences of death and destruction as a combat
Marine in two wars - World War II and Korea.
I taught my own
four children, and hundreds of other people's children, that legal,
law abiding behavior is desireable. However, in a civilized society,
it is only minimal behavior. Civilization cannot long endure if our
conduct is merely "legal." For civilization to endure and
extend personal liberty, human relations must be characterized by higher
standards of respect, courtesy, good manners, ethics, and morality -
none of which are required by law.
"I didn't break
any laws" has become the hissing cackle of a false humility and
elitist vanity displayed by the puff-adder politician in the White House:
President Clinton, and his "Sit Up! Bark!" emulators in the
stained halls of Congress. He is a walking, talking, contradiction of
everything worthy I taught children for 30 years.
"I didn't break
any laws" is nothing to brag about. Our ancestors were individuals
and families of character - as with most of the American people who
do not measure their daily choices by what is merely legal. They have
lived their moment-by-moment lives with respect for individuals, standards
of ethics, and principles of boundary that transcend mere law. They
believed this was normal and average civilized conduct. When they come
of age, our children and our children's children will agree.
The actor in the
White House is, by repeated acts of misconduct, challenging the statistical
laws of probability and the Creator's sow-reap Laws of Certainty. Lying
and cheating, and getting away with it, appears to be successful. But,
like a speeder on the highway, "Success breeds failure." He
will get caught or crash - or both! Count on it.
The day is coming
when his former supporters will, by hindsight, speak his name as a curse.
Many of us would have preferred foresight. But, after all, foresight
has a prerequisite - it is called "making choices by Principle."
selah