Government works best when it remembers one simple truth: power belongs to the people—not the other way around.
“People shouldn’t be afraid of their government. Governments should be afraid of their people.”
At its best, government exists for one reason only: to serve the will and well-being of the people. It is not a ruler standing above society, but a steward working on its behalf.
The founders of the United States understood this clearly. Power, they believed, should always flow upward—from the people to those temporarily entrusted to govern. When that flow reverses, something essential is lost. Civic trust erodes. Participation weakens. Cynicism takes root.
Perhaps the solution isn’t louder outrage or deeper division, but renewed civic understanding.
Imagine if every elected official—local, state, or national—were required to periodically step away from policy battles and return to first principles. A civic refresher. A reminder that authority is borrowed, not owned. That leadership is accountability in action, not immunity from it.
A healthy democracy does not depend on fear. It depends on engaged citizens, informed leaders, and mutual responsibility. When people know their rights and leaders remember their role, balance is restored—not through confrontation, but through clarity.
The question is not whether government should be strong or restrained.
The real question is whether it remains faithful to those it was created to serve.
Something to Think About:
What responsibility do we, as citizens, have to stay informed and engaged—so power never quietly drifts away from the people?
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