Someone – not a fan of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s political redoubt – has given us a brief preview of DSA’s political and cultural platform. And here it is: An oxymoron is an impossible combination of terms, such as “square circle” or “democrat socialist.” We know from history that socialism, once matured, is both anti-democratic and anti-republican. The official title of the Soviet Union was “the union of soviet socialistic republics.” In fact, the union was a political construct that demanded at the point of a sword or a grueling stretch in Joseph Stalin’s Gulag Archipelago absolute and unquestioned compliance with an overbearing command state. The central command was Stalin and his Pretorian Guard, or Hitler and his black shirts, ruthlessly anti-democratic and anti-republican by nature. The official shortened title of Germany’s post Weimar Republic under Adolf Hitler was the Nazi Party, the Nationa...
Roger Sherman -- a Connecticut delegate to The Constitutional Convention and the only founding father who signed all four key U.S. founding documents: the Continental Association, Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution -- proposed on July 16, 1787 a plan of governance that solved a seemingly intractable problem. The larger and smaller states had been engaging in a representational debate that had brought the national Convention to a standstill. The solution to the problem, called at the time The Great Compromise or the Connecticut Compromise, was one of those solutions that really did solve a pressing problem. The proposal by Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth, also a delegate to the national convention, answered the question: How should representation in the new Constitutional national Senate be apportioned among large and small states? The large states believed that representation should be based proportionally on the contribution ...