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Posts tagged ‘Liberty’

Today’s Politically INCORRECT Cartoon by A.F. Branco


Branco Cartoon – Sweet Hitchhiker

A.F. Branco | on November 7, 2025 | https://comicallyincorrect.com/branco-cartoon-sweet-hichhiker/

Liberty Leaving New York City
A Political Cartoon by A.F. Branco 2025

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A.F. Branco Cartoon – Liberty is set to leave New York City, now that  Communist Zohran Mamdani has been elected the mayor.

Branco Toon Store – A.F. Branco 2026 Calendar.  Features exclusive political cartoons from one of America’s most influential cartoonists.

Governor Bill Lee Invites New York Businesses to Escape Socialist Chaos: “Tennessee is Open for Business”

By Jim Hoft – The Gateway Pundit – Nov 6, 2026

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee is making a bold pitch to New York business owners disillusioned by the city’s sharp left turn under its newly elected socialist mayor, Zohran Mamdani.
In a post on X, Lee wrote:
“If you’re a New York business owner who doesn’t like the direction your city is headed, we have a message for you: Tennessee is open for business. Strong economy. Low taxes. Government won’t get in your way. TN is the place for people who value opportunity, security & freedom.”
Accompanying the post was a video where Lee personally invited frustrated New Yorkers to move their businesses, and families, to the Volunteer State.
Lee touted Tennessee’s thriving economy, pro-business tax environment, and strong workforce.
He emphasized that the state’s Department of Economic and Community Development stands ready to assist companies looking to relocate… READ MORE

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A.F. Branco has taken his two greatest passions (art and politics) and translated them into cartoons that have been popular all over the country in various news outlets, including NewsMax, Fox News, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, and “The Washington Post.” He has been recognized by such personalities as Rep. Devin Nunes, Dinesh D’Souza, James Woods, Chris Salcedo, Sarah Palin, Larry Elder, Lars Larson, Rush Limbaugh, Elon Musk, and President Trump.

The left careens down the road toward totalitarianism


LEVINTV | BLAZETV STAFF | August 08, 2023

Read more at https://www.theblaze.com/shows/levintv/marxism-2662969639/

The Democrat Party is intent on destroying our nation from the inside out. And while the leftists might not come bearing physical weapons, they do have a more insidious kind of attack: ideas.

“It’s the battle of ideas. People are persuaded by socialism and Marxism. Why? Because they never produce what they say they’re going to produce. They produce horror, they produce death, they produce impoverishment. But the promises are endless,” Mark Levin explains.

Because Americans have historically enjoyed the greatest freedoms, they are also at the highest risk for giving them away.

“Liberty takes some explanation. Not to those who don’t have it, but to those who do,” Levin says.

If we’re incapable of even understanding the liberty we have, it becomes much harder to stop it from being taken away — and Levin believes that’s what’s happening right now.

“We are definitely on the road to totalitarianism,” he warns.

But he has a solution.

“We have no control over the culture, and so we need to push back. We have to claw our way back. We have to fight our way back.”

“It is important that we are successful, when it comes to the debate over ideas. It is important that we are successful in passing the word along from our family to our friends to our neighbors to our co-workers. It is important that we quietly in our churches and synagogues and mosques or anywhere else explain to the people who may not understand or even engage in debate,” Levin adds.

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Christians Have Done the Most to Promote Liberty and Equality in America


BY: PAUL KRAUSE | MAY 30, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/05/30/christians-have-done-the-most-to-promote-liberty-and-equality-in-america/

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The most uneducated but wildly popular critique of Christianity in America — especially on social media —  is that Christianity has been a bastion of oppression and intolerance. So much so that the advancements made in liberty and equality over the centuries have come only when America and American leaders have rejected Christianity. In his new book Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land, historian Mark David Hall offers a concise corrective to this inaccurate and often ignorant hot-take and popular narrative.

Hatred of Christianity is one of the pillars of the current anti-American ideology that permeates universities and the governing spirit of our ruling elite. Mockery of Christians, especially evangelicals, is also one of the core tenets of progressive culture. This hostility and mockery are unwarranted. Far from being agents of oppression and anti-intellectualism, Hall highlights how Christians have been the bedrock of social activism advancing liberty and equality, as well as promoting education reform, increasing literacy, and publishing newspapers and magazines.

We are all familiar with the asinine proclamations of America as a secular country, that progress, liberty, and equality are atheist ideals, and that committed Christians are the greatest threat to America’s future. Yet, as Hall forcefully rebuts, “it is simply false to claim that liberty and equality have been advanced primarily when America’s leaders embrace progressive manifestations of religion or reject faith altogether.”

Looking at the Puritans, the American Revolution, evangelical social reform prior to the Civil War, and contemporary debates over religious liberty, Hall reveals what used to be well-known: Christianity has been the heart of true social progress and explosive advancements in human liberty, equality, and democratic government.

Puritans and Foundations of Liberty

To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims, Daniel Webster, one of the most important senators the United States ever had, lauded the Pilgrims and Puritans as champions of the liberty that our “civil and religious liberty” grew from. Today, however, it is common to imagine Puritans as petty tyrants, intolerant theocrats, and bah humbug killjoys.

When I was a student at Yale taking classes on American Puritanism, our professor went to great lengths to de-indoctrinate us of the popular stereotypes of the Puritans. The Puritans were among the most educated people at the time, established our most venerable institutions of higher education, promoted the advancement and discoveries of Enlightenment science, vigorously advocated for public literacy, and enjoyed a good laugh, beer, and sex.

The real history of the Puritans that I learned at Yale is covered again by Hall in his opening chapter deconstructing the lies of secularists and anti-Christian writers and hacktivists portraying the Puritans in a dark and inaccurate light. The Puritans, our author reminds us, “valued natural rights, government by the consent of the governed, and limited government; they were convinced that citizens have a right, and perhaps even a duty, to resist tyrannical government.” When traveling through the lands the Puritans helped to build in the 1830s, Alexis de Tocqueville remarked, “Puritanism was not merely a religious doctrine, but corresponded in many points with the most absolute democratic and republican theories.”

As historians and scholars of Puritanism have long asserted, the democratic ethos of congregationalist church politics helped develop the local customs of self-government in New England that would form the basis for “Democracy in America,” as Tocqueville famously put it. But what about the banishment of certain Baptist dissenters and the Salem witch trials, the critic asks? These events did happen, but they are drastically overblown by contemporary critics.

The banishment of a handful of religious dissenters in Massachusetts was only after these rabble-rousing individuals repeatedly, and deliberately, returned to cause trouble and disturb the peace. Also, Hall reminds us, when compared to Europe, where more than 100,000 men and women were prosecuted as witches and half sentenced to death, only 272 individuals in America were ever charged with witchcraft. The Salem witch trials, which happened in 1692, marked the last execution of a witch in North America. In Europe, witches were still executed as late as 1782.

Completing his overview of the Puritans, Hall writes that the Puritans “created political institutions that were more democratic than any the world had ever seen, and they strictly limited civil leaders by law.”

Rebellion to Tyrants Is Obedience to God

Another one of the popular putdowns of Christianity by its critics (and even some Christians) is that Christianity doesn’t permit rebellion to tyrannical government but supports tyrannical government. In a gross and deeply literalist reading of the Apostle Paul in Romans (somewhat ironic all things considered), these critics assert that because a single passage in the New Testament supposedly teaches obedience to government, which is ordained by God, the American revolutionary patriots rejected Christian teachings and had to utilize secular and Enlightenment arguments to advance the cause of liberty during the American Revolution.

Again, this is patently false, as any decently educated person knows. Kody Cooper and Justin Dyer recently published a superb book, The Classical and Christian Origins of American Politics, addressing this myth in detail. Hall, too, quickly covers the problems of this critique. Highlighting Calvinist theological history (something that these critics have no knowledge of, despite their claims of educated intelligence), covering important names known to students of theology, such as John Ponet, John Knox, George Buchanan, Samuel Rutherford, and even John Cotton (grandfather of Cotton Mather), Hall shows that Christian theological history had come to see rebellion to tyrants as obedience to God and Scripture.

Moreover, most of the popular and patriotic arguments for revolution were not conversant with theorists such as John Locke but with Scripture. The Old Testament, especially, was appealed to by the patriotic clergy in favor of revolution. Christians, far from submitting to tyranny, offered complex theological arguments against tyranny and, therefore, helped formulate a political theology of liberty and equality in the process.

Evangelicals Against Oppression

Perhaps the most common trope that our contemporary anti-Christian elite culture pushes is the tyrannical and ignorant evangelical Christian. This, too, is a stereotype with little basis in history. In fact, many of our best institutions of higher learning were founded by evangelical Christians even if they have since departed from that faith that gave birth to them (Harvard, Yale, and Oberlin, to name a few). The first opponents of slavery and proponents of abolition were the heirs of the Puritans, such as the Rev. Samuel Sewall, who published the first anti-slavery writing in 1700.

Motivated by a vigorous religious faith, the Second Great Awakening was the fire that fueled anti-slavery and abolitionist politics in antebellum America. Men and women of Methodist, Baptist, and congregationalist (Puritan) backgrounds were oftentimes the leading champions of liberty and equality for African-Americans and indigenous Americans. As Hall writes, it was American evangelicals, and especially evangelical women, who most actively “oppos[ed] the evils of slavery and Indian removal.”

During the antebellum years, American evangelicals sought to “work together to help end social evils” and established “thousands of organizations aimed at alleviating suffering and reforming society.” Evangelicals were on the front lines of creating new educational institutions, promoting education reforms to advance public literacy, and establishing newspapers as a means of confronting social evils. Furthermore, Evangelicalism, originally a religious minority grouping, was deeply indebted to religious liberty as the means for its social growth and prominence.

This spirit of religious social reform for liberty led to the contemporary defense of religious liberty as the bedrock on which all liberty and equality before the law stands: “Christian legal organizations have been among the best advocates for religious liberty for all, including citizens who embrace non-Christian faiths,” Hall writes.

Why Christianity Matters to America

In Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land, Hall gives us yet another triumphant and important book to correct the polemical, inaccurate, and deeply misleading public presentation of the relationship between Christianity and American politics. Far from the evil bogeyman and religion of oppression that ungrateful critics claim, Christianity has been a positive force for good and the growth of liberty and equality. In fact, America has been best when it has reached into the heart of Christianity for its social reforms and advancement of liberty and equality rather than rejecting Christianity.


Paul Krause is the editor-in-chief of VoegelinView. He is the author of “Finding Arcadia: Wisdom, Truth, and Love in the Classics” (Academica Press, 2023), “The Odyssey of Love: A Christian Guide to the Great Books” (Wipf and Stock, 2021), and contributed to “The College Lecture Today” (Lexington, 2019) and “Making Sense of Diseases and Disasters” (Routledge, 2022).

12 states in for freedom: Missouri votes for Convention of States


Posted May 15, 2017 11:01 AM by Chris Pandolfo

URL of the original posting site: https://www.conservativereview.com/articles/12-states-in-for-freedom-missouri-votes-for-convention-of-states

Missouri Convention of States screenshot / Convention of States Project | YouTube

Last Friday, Missouri became the 12th state to adopt a Convention of States resolution, passing SCR4 on a vote of 26 to 7.  SCR4, sponsored by Senator Mike Kehoe, R-Jefferson City, calls for an Article V Convention of States to propose constitutional amendments “that impose fiscal restraint on the federal government, limit the power and jurisdiction of the federal government, and limit the terms of office for federal officials and members of Congress.”

The Convention of States Project released a video to commemorate the resolution’s passage.

 

“The American people are growing weary of a federal government that is operating outside of its Constitutional bounds,” said Keith Carmichael, Missouri State Director for the Convention of States Project. “Neither party represents the people, but rather outside influences that help them get re-elected, so by calling a Convention of States under Article V, the states can recalibrate the balance between the federal government and return power back to the people—not to mention that a convention of this magnitude would be the biggest civics lesson of our lifetime.”

Conservative Review Editor-in-Chief Mark Levin broke the news on his radio program Friday evening.

“This is a big deal,” Levin said. “We’re more than a third of the way there.” 

Chris Pandolfo is a staff writer and type-shouter for Conservative Review. He holds a B.A. in politics and economics from Hillsdale College. His interests are conservative political philosophy, the American founding, and progressive rock. Follow him on Twitter for doom-saying and great album recommendations @ChrisCPandolfo.

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Liberty Under God’s Law is the Only True Path to Freedom


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http://freedomoutpost.com/2014/03/liberty-gods-law-true-path-freedom/#H3uOhiqMR00pvSsB.99

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As many of you already know, I filed for the County Council campaign this past Monday in the 5th district of Anne Arundel County. It is interesting to watch some of the reactions. There are those who decry my campaign, claiming I would impose a theocracy upon our county. It would appear that they think my belief system is a danger to their liberty; that somehow believing, as our Founders did, that there is a Creator God, the God of the Bible and that our Rights come from Him, and that the sole purpose of human civil government is to secure and protect those God given rights.  They think that is a very dangerous idea.

They think that liberty can only be achieved by a government which denies that God has anything to say regarding the goals, the reach and the powers of human civil government. In other words they like what we have now, godless government with tyrannically reaches into every nook and cranny of our lives, takes a disproportionate amount of the fruit of our labor, controls and regulates everything imaginable, and then some. It appears they would rather have a government that violates the law of God rather than keeps the law of God.

People say they want liberty, yet God’s Word clearly teaches us that liberty under Gods’ law is the only true path to freedom. All else is simply one or another road to serfdom and slavery. Turn to Exodus 13:17-18 where will see this Biblical teaching demonstrated in the Exodus from Egypt;

“When Pharaoh let the people go, God did not lead them on the road through the Philistine country, though that was shorter. For God said, “If they face war, they might change their minds and return to Egypt.” So God led the people around by the desert road toward the Red Sea. The Israelites went up out of Egypt armed for battle.” (Ex 13:17-18;NIV)

The children of Israel were liberated from the bondage of Egypt. But now what would happen to them? They were free, but wandering in a barren trackless desert on their own would quickly exhaust the little food they had brought with them, not to mention the water. Liberty from bondage yes, but without direction, without a superintending providential hand to look out for their best interests they were doomed to become food for jackals.

The route God planned for His people would have taken approximately 3 months, but as we shall see, it turned into 40 years due to the rebelliousness and disobedience of Israel. We learn two important truths from this experience. First, our natural inclinations are not always our best choice – we think we know what is best, but our information is limited, it is finite. But God’s knowledge is all encompassing. He can see things we never even knew were there. I imagine most Israelites had no idea about the Philistines, they had no inkling what it would be like to go up against them in battle.

The second truth we learn in this passage is that God will bring trials into our lives for our ultimate good. The children of Israel were about to leave all civilization behind; they were about to enter a difficult and at times painful trial in the wilderness. So much so that some at times pined to go back to Egypt, back to slavery. Liberty is not a pain free experience. All creature comforts would be stripped away, all the familiar rhythms of life disrupted. Food and water would not be readily available but only provided supernaturally. They would be dependent upon God as never before and God would use the trials of the 40 years of wilderness wandering for the ultimate good of the children of Israel.

What is best in our life, we may not always know. So ultimately it is God’s direction and not our choices that lead to the path of blessing and the path of liberty. This is true not only for us individually, and as families and churches but also civil government. God’s Law is always the best for all because God’s Law is universal, it applies to everyone, everywhere and at all times. What a wonderful Savior is Jesus our Jesus. His law is our delight, for it brings the direction we need in this life.  Indeed His truth is more precious to us than our daily bread. So while the world around us falsely believes that there can be freedom apart from God’s Law, we know differently.  We know true freedom comes in walking the path of liberty under God’s Law.

HEAR Rev. David Whitney’s MESSAGE ON THIS SUBJECT. 40 PLUS MINITES LONG;

God's LawLearn more about your Constitution with Pastor David Whitney and the “Institute on the Constitution” and receive your free gift.

About David Whitney

<br data-mce-bogus=”1″><br data-mce-bogus=”1″><br data-mce-bogus=”1″><br data-mce-bogus=”1″><br data-mce-bogus=”1″><br data-mce-bogus=”1″><br data-mce-bogus=”1″><img alt=” src=’http://1.gravatar.com/avatar/39d23b0ce28b0cc765388903b230bbda?s=68&d=http%3A%2F%2F1.gravatar.com%2Favatar%2Fad516503a11cd5ca435acc9bb6523536%3Fs%3D68&r=G’ class=’avatar avatar-68 photo’ height=’68’ width=’68’ />Rev. David Whitney has been teaching the Christian heritage and history of our country with Institute on the Constitution for over a decade where he serves as Senior Instructor, and Radio show host on Dr. Stan Monteith’s Radio Liberty. David is an Honors Scholar graduate from Rutgers University with a Masters Degree from Denver Seminary. A minister for 32 years he is currently the Pastor of Cornerstone Evangelical Free Church of Pasadena, Maryland.  As an member of Clergy, Activist and Radio personality David has appeared in Washington Times, on Voice of America, Fox, ABC, NBC, CSPAN, BBC, and more…

Read more at http://freedomoutpost.com/2014/03/liberty-gods-law-true-path-freedom/#H3uOhiqMR00pvSsB.99

Freedom at Stake: Would You Vote If Your Liberty Depended On It?


http://clashdaily.com/2014/02/vote-liberty-depended/#Yksys08IGiBLX24T.99

By / 25 February 2014

Liberty_Bell_2

There is no such thing as an American disinterested in liberty.  America is all about liberty. No other word is more closely associated with the idea of America as the word “liberty”.

The Liberty Bell is engraved with a passage taken from Leviticus 25:10:  “ . . . proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants.”

Every U.S. coin bears the word liberty, along with the words “In God We Trust,” and “E. Pluribus Unum.

The word liberty is found in The Pledge: “ . . . with liberty and justice, for all.”

It is foremost in our founding documents.

The Declaration of Independence boldly states:  “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

The Preamble to the Constitution:  “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

The Declaration states liberty is unalienable, a God-given right.  Flowing out of the Declaration, the Constitution was established to “secure the Blessings of Liberty.”  That same Constitution prescribes terms for representative government, voting rights, citizenship duties, the rule of law, and the consent of the governed.

The U.S. government is “of, by and for the people,” according to Abraham Lincoln, echoing original principles.  If the people do not control the government, the government will control the people.

Citizenship duty in America is a privilege and an honor and a duty, because preserving liberty is our aim.   Reading up on the issues and candidates of the day is a duty.

Voting every election is a duty, a sacred duty.

As believers we have a duty to be salt and light in all aspects of our lives.  We have a duty to speak the truth in love.  We have a duty to contend for righteousness in the public square, and we have a duty to protect and defend the sacred rights of others, especially the weak and the dispossessed.  We have a duty to protect and defend the liberty of everyone, even those who oppose us, even those who may even seek our political destruction.    Unless citizens hold politicians accountable by voting, liberty is lost.  Politicians given free reign tend to ignore the consent of the governed, trending toward tyranny.

A true American citizen is interested in preserving liberty, and understands that citizen participation is absolutely essential to its preservation.   For many decades in the community of faith, voter turnout has declined.  There are 58 million evangelicals in our country eligible to vote.  In the 2004 and 2008 presidential elections, only 33 million actually voted.  In 2012 it was worse.  Only 30 million voted:  28 million stayed at home.

We have the power of the vote, and we have the right to use that power to preserve liberty “for ourselves and for our posterity.”   Asking people to vote does not seem like much to ask, especially when you consider that more than 2 million people made the ultimate sacrifice to give us that right.

Register and vote to honor their sacrifice.  Register and vote to protect liberty.  Register and vote to secure the blessings of liberty for our children and grandchildren and great grandchildren.   Register and vote because it’s your sacred duty.

When Benjamin Franklin appeared in public at the end of the Constitutional Convention in 1787, it is said a woman asked him, “What have you given us, a republic or a monarchy?”

Mr. Franklin replied, “A republic, madam – if you can keep it.”

Image: Courtesy of: http://gallery.moeding.net/AroundTheWorld/NorthAmerica/NorthEast/ Philadelphia/

About the author: Allan Erickson

Allan Erickson enjoyed an 11-year career in radio, television and print journalism as a reporter, talk show host, and operations manager. He then turned to sales and marketing for a decade. Ten years ago he started his own training and recruitment company in the Pacific Northwest. Allan & wife Jodi have four children and live in California. He is also the author of “The Cross & the Constitution in the Age of Incoherence,” Tate Publishing, 2012. He is available to speak in churches addressing the topics of faith and freedom.
To contact him, email: allanlerickson@gmail.com

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