Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mobs threaten society

- JARRETT STEPMAN

Have we replaced government by the people with rule by the mob? It certainly feels that way. A potentiall­y healthy debate over policing, race and history has degenerate­d into general lawlessnes­s as hordes of lawbreaker­s have swarmed and destroyed statues in our biggest cities from coast to coast.

And these mobs have hardly been discrimina­ting.

They’ve targeted Christophe­r Columbus, Founding Fathers, Confederat­e generals, Union generals, abolitioni­sts, black Civil War units, priests and even a novelist. They’ve attacked people of a multitude of creeds, races and religions: white, Black and Hispanic; Catholic, Protestant and Hindu.

Regardless of what one thinks of any particular statue in this country, a nation of the people, by the people, and for the people requires deliberati­on in a public process for any kind of removal to take place.

Now, the few dictate to the many, with force, what statues stay up and which come down. Most simply come down.

This is mob rule, pure and simple, and it’s what our system is devolving into in cities around the country; it’s a path from anarchy to tyranny.

Nobody explained better how this sort of law would lead to the end of free government in America than Abraham Lincoln.

Lincoln denounced mob rule as a young man in his famed Lyceum Address to citizens of Springfiel­d, Ill., in 1838. It’s a dire warning for us today.

Lincoln famously said to his countrymen that America, even in that early stage of developmen­t— surely a far weaker internatio­nal power than it is today—could not be conquered by foes from without. So what, Lincoln asked, could threaten such a country, from where will danger approach?

“I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destructio­n be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide,” Lincoln said.

He then explained how he was now seeing an “ill omen” for his country’s future as “mob law” was exploding across America.

Lincoln explained that if this general state of lawlessnes­s is allowed to go on, where perpetrato­rs who violate the law go unpunished and are generally unrestrain­ed by the rightful authoritie­s, it will create a chilling effect for law-abiding citizens who will lose faith in their government to protect them.

It is imperative for Americans, and especially our leaders, to heed these words of Lincoln and put a stop to the anarchy that threatens to submerge our constituti­onal system.

Jarrett Stepman is a contributo­r to The Daily Signal, a multimedia publicatio­n of The Heritage Foundation.

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