“Who Can you
Trust”, the book by Rachel Botsman, should be required reading for all eligible
voters.
The quick answer to the title question: Engineers!
Our currency says “In God We Trust” but as Thomas Jefferson once quipped
“I tremble for my country when I
reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.”
Given what
our government has done and continues to do to us and others around the world
is there any question about why few trust it.
From the
beginning our government failed to codify the “Laws of Nature and Nature’s God”
when engineering the Constitution, the foundation of our government system and structures.
First it condoned slavery and other injustices against Native Americans leading to a civil
war that cost more American lives than all the wars we have fought since then
combined.
Today our foreign policy and
war fighting strategies still ignore the self-evident truth that all people are created
equal and deserving of the unalienable rights to “Life, Liberty, and the
Pursuit of Happiness”.
Given the
evolution of weaponry and war, the consequences of injustices related to our worshiped
Constitution will be far greater than most people imagine.
So what do we trust?
When we flip a light switch we trust the lights will come on. When we drive over a bridge we trust it won't collapse into the water. When we go
into surgery, we ultimately trust those involved in the operation to rely on
proven medical procedures and medicines, and the hospital systems and
structures intended to keep us safe while we are sedated and long after we
awake.
Why can't we trust our policy makers to enact a fair tax
code? How about a health care system to
protect all children equally? Or the
elderly regardless of their income level.
Can we trust our government to protect the natural systems and
structures we need to ensure every American has access to clean air and water,
nutritious food and a relatively predictable climate?
Most engineers and health professionals swear oaths to
protect public health and safety.
Elected government officials, military leaders, and most public servants swear to protect the
Constitution -- a document that used
political principles but is allowed by 'we the people" to overlook the laws of nature and even nature’s God.
We tend to trust professions that rely on science and engineering but not
those that rely on unscientific principles like “peace through strength”, "if it leads it bleeds" or “if
it feels good do it”.
Some professions may follow a moral or spiritual compass that they might attribute to ‘nature’s God’, the greater good of humanity, or justice (‘golden rule’) as a fundamental principle. But then ignore the laws of
nature and blame God when things don't turn out right. They fail to grasp the self evident truth that nature always
has the last vote.
Too often government laws and policies are based on
alternative principles. Political or
party principles based on hypothetically good, but largely untested, ideas. And then wonder why our government is increasing dysfunctional. Engineers and doctors don’t rely on witchcraft or prayer to
build strong bridges or heal the sick. The
Defense Department doesn’t rely on partisan principles in designing weapons
systems.
In reality, every aspect of our national security depends on
well-functioning systems and reliable structures that are based on fundamental principles. Protecting our freedoms, our
security and our prosperity rely on all systems and structures operating smoothly.
Thomas
Freedman once said “Government moves at the speed of trust”. Our government hasn’t passed a significant
piece of legislation favoring 'justice for all' for decades. According to a survey of US national security
experts two years ago our own government’s dysfunction was the second greatest
threat to our nation, just below terrorism.
Few would dispute that our government’s dysfunction has continued to
worsen since then.
The inevitable lethal consequences of our loss of trust in
government will be calculated in lives lost from the threat from gun nuts or
homegrown lone-wolf terrorists using IEDs or drone delivered chemical or
biological WMD. It is impossible to
protect both our Constitutional rights to bear arms and maintain our
privacy (2nd & 4nd
Amendments) while also protecting our individual/national security.
Our only reliable means of maximizing both our freedom and
national security is by re engineering our government and all of its policies
(foreign and domestic) to responsibly following “the laws of nature and
Nature’s God” and codify the “Truths” that we hold to be “Self-evident”.
It was
69 years ago to the day - of the printing of this Washington Post book review,
Dec. 10, 1948, - that the world attempted to follow the genius of a unique
government design - that put human rights above states’ rights. It was after the horrors of World War II that
all nations agreed to ratify the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to
protect the security of future generations.
Humanity has yet to trust any system of world government and
the creation of structures that would be needed to hold individuals and
governments accountable for violations of human rights or crimes against the
environment on which all life and prosperity depends. But the world has recently agreed on meeting
a comprehensive set of goals called the Sustainable Development Goals. These represent the world’s best path to
maximizing humanities freedoms, security and shared prosperity.
If ‘we the people’ and governments of the world took on this
set of 17 goals to the same degree we invest in our military readiness, we
would spark the transformation of change needed at every level to bring trust
back into the hearts and minds of people worldwide.
Any government constitution that continues to codify
injustices at home or abroad cannot be trusted to deliver freedom, security, or
prosperity indefinitely. That should
now be a ‘self-evident truth’ to any individual who trusts in the Laws of
Nature and Nature’s God”.
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