Antifederalist No. 29 OBJECTIONS TO NATIONAL CONTROL OF THE MILITIA
"A DEMOCRATIC FEDERALIST," appeared in "the Pennsylvania
Packet," October 23, 1787; following #29, #30 is excerpted from THE ADDRESS
AND REASONS OF DISSENT OF THE MINORITY OF THE CONVENTION OF THE STATE OF
PENNSYLVANIA TO THEIR CONSTITUENTS, December 12, 1787.
Hume, an aristocratical writer, has candidly confessed that an army is a
moral distemper in a government, of which it must at last inevitably perish (2d
Burgh, 349); and the Earl of Oxford (Oxford the friend of France and the
Pretender, the attainted Oxford), said in the British parliament, in a speech on
the mutiny bill, that, "While he had breath he would speak for the
liberties of his country, and against courts martial and a standing army in
peace, as dangerous to the Constitution." (Ibid., page 455.) Such were the
speeches even of the enemies of liberty when Britain had yet a right to be
called free. But, says Mr. [James] Wilson, "It is necessary to maintain
the appearance of strength even in times of the most profound tranquillity."
And what is this more than a threadbare hackneyed argument, which has been
answered over and over in different ages, and does not deserve even the smallest
consideration? Had we a standing army when the British invaded our peaceful
shores? Was it a standing army that gained the battles of Lexington and Bunker
Hill, and took the ill-fated Burgoyne? Is not a well- regulated militia
sufficient for every purpose of internal defense? And which of you, my fellow
citizens, is afraid of any invasion from foreign powers that our brave militia
would not be able immediately to repel?
Mr. Wilson says, that he does not know of any nation in the world which has
not found it necessary to maintain the appearance of strength in a season of the
most profound tranquillity. If by this equivocal assertion he has meant to say
that there is no nation in the world without a standing army in time of peace,
he has been mistaken. I need only adduce the example of Switzerland, which,
like us, is a republic, whose thirteen cantons, like our thirteen States, are
under a federal government, and which besides is surrounded by the most powerful
nations in Europe, all jealous of its liberty and prosperity. And yet that
nation has preserved its freedom for many ages, with the sole help of a militia,
and has never been known to have a standing army, except when in actual war.
Why should we not follow so glorious an example; and are we less able to defend
our liberty without an army, than that brave but small nation which, with its
militia alone has hitherto defied all Europe?
A DEMOCRATIC FEDERALIST
The framers of this constitution appear to have been . . . sensible that no
dependence could be placed on the people for their support; but on the contrary,
that the government must be executed by force. They have therefore made a
provision for this purpose in a permanent standing army and a militia that may
be objected to as strict discipline and government.
A standing army in the hands of a government placed so independent of the
people, may be made a fatal instrument to overturn the public liberties; it may
be employed to enforce the collection of the most oppressive taxes; and to carry
into execution the most arbitrary measures. An ambitious man who may have the
army at his devotion, may step up into the throne, and seize upon absolute
power.
The absolute unqualified command that Congress have over the militia may be
made instrumental to the destruction of all liberty both public and private;
whether of a personal, civil or religious nature.
First, the personal liberty of every man, probably from sixteen to sixty
years of age, may be destroyed by the power Congress have in organizing and
governing of the militia. As militia they may be subjected to fines to any
amount, levied in a military manner; they may be subjected to corporal
punishments of the most disgraceful and humiliating kind; and to death itself,
by the sentence of a court martial. To this our young men will be more
immediately subjected, as a select militia, composed of them, will best answer
the purposes of government.
Secondly, the rights of conscience may be violated, as there is no exemption
of those persons who are conscientiously scrupulous of hearing arms. These
compose a respectable proportion of the community in the State [Pennsylvania].
This is the more remarkable, because even when the distresses of the late war
and the evident disaffection of many citizens of that description inflamed our
passions, and when every person who was obliged to risk his own life must have
been exasperated against such as on any account kept back from the common
danger, yet even then, when outrage and violence might have been expected, the
rights of conscience were held sacred.
At this momentous crisis, the framers of our State Constitution made the
most express and decided declaration and stipulations in favor of the rights of
conscience; but now, when no necessity exists, those dearest rights of men are
left insecure.
Thirdly, the absolute command of Congress over the militia may be
destructive of public liberty; for under the guidance of an arbitrary
government, they may be made the unwilling instruments of tyranny. The militia
of Pennsylvania may be marched to New England or Virginia to quell an
insurrection occasioned by the most galling oppression, and aided by the
standing army, they will no doubt be successful in subduing their liberty and
independency. But in so doing, although the magnanimity of their minds will be
extinguished, yet the meaner passions of resentment and revenge will be
increased, and these in turn will be the ready and obedient instruments of
despotism to enslave the others; and that with an irritated vengeance. Thus may
the militia be made the instruments of crushing the last efforts of expiring
liberty, of riveting the chains of despotism on their fellow-citizens, and on
one another. This power can be exercised not only without violating the
Constitution, but in strict conformity with it; it is calculated for this
express purpose, and will doubtless be executed accordingly.
As this government will not enjoy the confidence of the people, but be
executed by force, it will be a very expensive and burdensome government. The
standing army must be numerous, and as a further support, it wilt be the policy
of this government to multiply officers in every department; judges, collectors,
tax-gatherers, excisemen and the whole host of revenue officers, will swarm over
the land, devouring the hard earnings of the industrious like the locusts of
old, impoverishing and desolating all before them. . . .
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